I would like to go farther than wbarquez. I would like to point out that the theists have been defending God’s existence for thirteen pages now, and not a single argument has been proposed for why there wouldn’t be a God. I would also like to suggest that anyone who denies a belief held by the entire mass of humanity since the dawn of recorded history has the burden of proof on their shoulders.
And even transcending burden-of-proof arguments (which I don’t ever resort as a final argument, since I feel perfectly comfortable producing arguments for everything I believe), I would really like them to choke up a positive argument for atheism, if only for the sake of honest, fair debatesmanship.
May I try? Now, this is only a short list of the arguments I’ve seen during the past year:
First, there’s the argument for the magical nothing that took some “magical” nothing and created the universe and everything else.
Second, there’s the argument for the “magical” something that took some “magical” something and created the universe and everything else.
Third, there’s the argument for the “magical” stuff science has no evidence at all for yet, but, we should wait for its discovery, that created the universe and everything else.
Fourth, there’s the argument for the “’magical’ forces of evolution” that the universe and everything else came to be from.
Fifth, there’s the argument for the postulation of other universes that “magically” already existed before the Big Bang that the current universe and everything else came from.
Sixth, there’s the argument for the lack of evidence for the Christian’s God, which lack, by its very self, is “magically” sufficient to cause the universe and everything else, except God.
Seventh, there’s the argument from “magical” science that, well, really says nothing except that there’s no God.
Eighth, there’s the argument for the “magical” appearance of the singularity, that thing that originally encased the stuff that exploded at the big bang.
Ninth, there’s the argument that the Occam’s Razor quasi-rule somehow “magically” created the universe and everything else.
There are a few others, but, I may need them in the future. Now, I really do not want the above to be construed as being disrespectful (to what, I don’t know) but, really, these are the opposing arguments that I, and everyone else that has been on this forum, have seen, in the past year or more. I am compelled to employ the use of the word, “magical”, because if you truly consider the arguments, you soon realize that they are not from any kind of science, they truly are from magic. I know, I know, but “So is yours”, they will say. But, that is simply not true. Amongst the litter here are the hidden gems, sometimes delivered well, sometimes not, that are profound arguments for God’s existence, proffered by almost every Christian (and some Atheists, too) that have graced these pages.
I, like you, Cecilianus, would like to see at least one really profound anti-God argument. But, please, opponents, don’t use any of the above arguments any more. They do not in any way propel philosophy forward. They waste continuity and time.
jd