Wow, a lot to respond to.
But are you willing to acknowledge that your threshold for believing in this phantom atheistic equivalent of Kolbe is exceedingly low, while your threshold for belief in God is extremely high?
No, I wouldn’t say that. Maybe my threshold for believing in God is higher, because belief in God is very consequential while belief in a self-sacrificing atheist hardly seems to mean anything at all (in the same way that believing water is necessary for survival, say, is more consequential than believing that there is at least one red bicycle in Cuba). But I don’t think the bar I set is terribly high. I don’t think that there is more evidence for the existence of God than there is for the existence of a self-sacrificing atheist. (With a caveat: when I say “more evidence,” I really mean something like “stronger evidence.” If I have a thousand pieces of evidence for something but I can find a thousand problems with that evidence, I would say that isn’t very strong evidence. In contrast, if I want to know what’s on the menu at a restaurant I only need to look once).
"Peter Plato:
Could you provide a sufficient reason for your denial of the existence of God that does not also commit you to atheistic materialism and the denial of the existence of other non-material minds?
I don’t want to turn this into an argument about the merits of specific arguments against the existence of God, because this thread isn’t about the existence of God and because threads about atheism are against forum rules. But it’s hard for me to see how the argument from evil or the argument from divine hiddenness would commit someone to materialism. For that matter, there are arguments against the
classical conception of God that can even be made by theists. For example, William Lane Craig thinks that divine simplicity is incoherent. But he still believes in angels, souls, the Trinity, and so on. So if WLC can deny the existence of all kinds of immaterial objects while denying the God of classical theism, why can’t someone deny
more generally the God of theism while affirming various immaterial objects? If WLC can take the God of classical theism and peel away divine simplicity without having to throw out everything else immaterial, why can’t someone peel away a bit more? Or if they can’t, why is it that they can’t peel away that layer, but they can peel away the Divine Simplicity layer?
But it’s almost universal, in all cultures, throughout all of history, that people have held a common belief in a divine being.
That, in itself, is prima facie evidence for the existence of God.
And this segues rather nicely with my current point regarding the curious inconsistency among non-Believers.
This practically universal belief in a divine being is not enough for you to call it prima facie evidence…
But the fact that atheists exist and that “people sacrifice themselves for others” is enough to prove that this PAK exists.
Curious, this double standard.
I can’t for the life of me see how that’s a double standard. First of all, those are different kinds of evidence: on the one hand, you’re citing evidence that
lots of people believe something as evidence that it’s true; on the other hand, I’m citing the fact that there are two considerably-sized sets of people as evidence that there’s probably some overlap. We both agree that, for a claim like “Jesus wasn’t God,” the fact that most people believe it is not good evidence. So why is it different for the claim “There is a divine being”?
Second, I imagine you do this sort of thing all the time and I don’t think either one of us find it very suspicious. If three people came into work and mentioned a terrible traffic accident on the way there, you would not hesitate to believe them. But you could meet a thousand Muslims and you wouldn’t decide that Islam is correct, just because they all think so. Is this an improper double standard? I don’t think so. I think you’d be balancing things like the significance of the claim, the likelihood that the individual people are knowledgeable about the claim, and the likelihood that they’re being truthful. And I think you’re too quick to cry “Double standard!” just because my calculation comes out differently from yours.