Quote:You're the one claiming something exists. The burden of proof is therefore on you.
My god is made of wood. I bought it in Africa. It cost me about $50. I knocked him down from about $150. He tried to get me to buy two for $100, but I didn't need two
I'd really like to see you prove that it doesn't exist, because I can touch it, feel it and smell it, and I was assured by the person who sold it to me that it was a genuine African god. I've since seen one on Ebay that was very similar, so I'm convinced that such gods exist, and that people call them gods.
While I don't believe that it has supernatural powers, I believe that some people believe it does, and the collective effects of the brains of the people who do believe in it result in some things happening that would not ordinarily happen. Perfectly healthy people can get sick or die as a result of this god. I don't claim that to be an effect of the lump of timber, but as a result of the beliefs. Can that be defined as supernatural? I don't know. Define supernatural, and while you're at it, define god and define religion.
It's much the same idea with the Christian god for that matter. Religions exist and gods exist as psycho-social phenomona.
I therefore claim to be a theist and an atheist. To be precise, every second Thursday, I'm neither, because I'm a Buddhist. Prove me wrong. Remember the burden of proof is on you, but in order to prove it, you need to come up with a definition of god that works for all theistic religions, otherwise you can only claim to be an atheist of the Christian denomination. Don't go on about bible bashers, because I'm not one, and we don't have any here any more.
Sprint - feel free to split this thread.