Answering Questions
What about those that have decided to believe there is no god? Is that a neutral or default position of choice?
Depends on what "believe there is no god" means. If we're talking about the gnostic atheist then no, that isn't a neutral or default position. If we're talking about the weak agnostic atheist then yes, that'd be a neutral or default position. (the strong agnostic is up in the air. I'd personally say he doesn't belong to the default position even if theologically he stays there)
How can it be default when a decision was made to choose what to believe or disbelieve?
Because the decision is not (necessarily) one of subscribing to atheism. The decision is not about whether you stay atheist or not. It is about whether you convert to Christianity or not when presented it or you read about it, whether to convert to Islam or not when presented it, same for other religions, and even potentially secularly, whether you elect to believe a God in this universe exists or not.
It is not necessary for atheism itself to be part of the decision making process for you to be atheist.
This applies even to the weak agnostic atheist (who admittedly, is a bit stronger on average than his sub-category the undecided atheist), because the weak agnostic's decision to stay in the default position, is not born from reasoning that regards directly to the strength of staying in his spot. Due to the absence of reasoning or information that regards moving to another position, like Christianity, Islam or secular theism.
So if I was a theist , then now I'm an atheist. How can I be something I wasn't before without becoming that something now?
Because you don't need to move to atheism (or to the thinking of atheism) to be one. If you were theist, all that would be needed is for you to become not theist.
Technically you still 'become' atheist even in this process. But what I mean by *become* and it not necessarily applying to atheism is that, you don't need to actively move yourself into the position of atheism. Simply by lacking a position of believe, which potentially involves moving yourself out of a position of theism if you have one, do you end up landing in the position of atheism.
The belief in no god is present. True or false.
False for the agnostic atheist, true for the gnostic atheist.
Relevant Arguments
I will continue to split my arguments into points I consider relevant and points I consider not so for the same reasons described in my previous round's argument.
Direct Responses
Ok that is what you consider a person that does not know whether to believe in God or not. From my experience of hearing atheists, they describe themselves as somebody that believe there is no God. Never have I heard an atheist say he or she doesn't know or is undecided.
So I refer to people that don't know or undecided as agnostic. I have heard a person say he doesn't know but leans to disbelief anyway so he took on the title agnostic atheist.
If we're presenting personal anecdotes I'll present mine. Most of my non-religious friends say they don't know and use atheist or agnostic atheist when identifying oneself. Those fell under, what for the purpose of this debate is the weak agnostic atheist. Only two people ever among them I've known were gnostic atheists.
You have to understand what laveyan satanism truly represents.
Every atheist that believes in no judge higher than that of man, the atheist believes the power alone in man.
You attempt to make the connection but still miss the point. People can believe in western Judeo-Christian values without needing to be Christian or Jewish.
Indeed laveyan satanists might believe "man is superior because laveyan said so", akin to religious worship. However again, that does not represent atheists or atheism. Most atheists don't have that belief or even know who Lavey is in the first place.
Furthermore, while laveyan satanism might actively encourage the things you described, atheism doesn't. Atheism does not actively encourage anything at all. The atheist might, compared to the Christian or the Muslim, be less likely to have "theft is wrong" and "murder is wrong" as fundamental moral axioms. But that is not because atheism discourages this, its because atheism lacks the encouragement Christianity and Islam has for them.
And even more beyond that, levayan satanism represents more than what you've described, among which it actively encourages and promotes hedonism and sinfulness, it promotes the 7 sins as positive character traits.
Atheists have faith there are no gods. That's religious.
The agnostic atheist does not, refer back to my lectures about both types of the agnostic atheist for the elaboration as to why. And your response does not at all properly address what you're responding to.
Atheism is just another religion like all the others. Laveyan satanism is a religion.
If you're saying "A is true since B is true", then you are performing a form of "affirming the consequent" that is already addressed by the very thing you're responding to. Laveyan Satanism is a sub-category of gnostic atheism, which in itself is a sub-category of atheism.
If you're not saying "A is true since B is true" then you're simply reiterating your view without addressing what you're responding to or adding anything to the argument.
Well also to summarize for the atheist period, there is a presence in believing there is no god.
There isn't. This is already explained under many sections but most prominently under Lack of belief vs Belief in the opposite
The belief in no god is present. True or false.
If you say false, you're saying the opposite is true which there is no belief in no god existing which the two negatives make a positive saying the atheist believes in god which contradicts.
If you say true, then you concede that atheism qualifies as a faith.
You make a false connection. Saying that something is false is not the same as saying the opposite is true, this is already addressed under several sections including the fittingly named Lack of belief vs Belief in the opposite
Lacking the belief that no god exists doesn't mean that you believe God exists. All it means is you're not a gnostic atheist. The double negative logic does not apply here.
The belief in no god can be false and the belief in god can be false as well, both at the same time without contradiction.
And beyond this, this potentially contradicts your prior statements of, what you'd call the "agnostic" (let's set aside your misunderstanding of what agnosticism means), as being a reasonable position. Given what you've ruled regarding the conditions for "The belief in no god is present", that both true or false are unreasonable conditions to have. One wonders what condition you think the "agnostic" in your terminology has. Because if true then you'd conclude that the agnostic follows a belief system (or more in line with what you said, concede that agnosticism qualifies as a faith), and if false you'd conclude the opposite is true and via the double negative logic agnostic believes in God. This exact same line of logic you use to try to corner the lack of belief atheist into a belief system regardless of the answer can have your term of the "agnostic" land into the same pitfall.
I'll ask directly. For the agnostic the belief in no god is present. True or false?
This does not make sense. In order to be different from one thing to another , you become that thing. So if I was a theist , then now I'm an atheist. How can I be something I wasn't before without becoming that something now?
Clearly you've missed the point in regards to what I've said. When I say *become*, I am referring to directly changing into.
The answer is in the very thing you responded to, if you were a theist, then now you're an atheist. You can be an atheist without actively making the effort to move into the atheist position because all that is needed is to move out of the theist position. This is what I mean by atheist is also the default return position. It is the default position you return to or end up in if you lack other positions. If you wish to be completely lingually stringent, you can become atheist without needing to directly *become* atheist. "I believe in no Gods" never needs to be a cognitive part of the thought process.
Maybe this will help. Think of Unemployment. In order to be unemployed, all you need to be is without a job. Everyone starts out unemployed. Let's say you became an engineer. Now you're no longer unemployed by virtue of having a job. Now for you to go back to being unemployed, you don't need to directly actively *become* unemployed to indirectly be (or become) unemployed, all that's needed is for you to stop being an engineer. If you want to become a doctor, you need to *become* a doctor, you can't just simply land into it by quitting from your prior line of work.
Of course unemployment is not exactly the same as atheism, you could be fired from your job and some other differences exist. But hopefully this has demonstrated more understandably what I mean by "default position" and "default return position".
Courts have ruled atheism to be considered a religion. At least in the United States.
Can you provide your evidence or source?
This proves again that atheism , the facet I'm dealing with at least is not default. Why? You had to decide to start believing there is no god . First you started to stop believing there is no existence of god, you became theist. Then you decided again. An agnostic is neutral as the person can't go either way. A theist doesn't believe there is no existence while an atheist believes there is no existence.
There is so much wrong with this let's break it down.
This proves again that atheism , the facet I'm dealing with at least is not default. Why?
The facet you're dealing with includes the agnostic atheist, this is due to our agreement prior to the debate which I elaborated on under Opening context
You had to decide to start believing there is no god .
No you don't. This is addressed under Types of Atheists and its follow ups. (2)
First you started to stop believing there is no existence of god, you became theist.
Becoming theist is not merely the absence of the gnostic atheist viewpoint. Becoming a theist requires believing in God. (1)
An agnostic is neutral as the person can't go either way.
You reiterate your false use of the word agnostic, already explained under Agnostic vs Atheist
A theist doesn't believe there is no existence while an atheist believes there is no existence.
Responses (1) and (2) address the first and second half of this statement respectively.
The focus of the debate
How can it be default when a decision was made to choose what to believe or disbelieve? This is the facet that you're not giving your attention to. See, the topic says " Atheists that believe no God exists due to no evidence known is a weak basis."
You've clearly have not argued against this because there's no rebuttal. You believe something, you have faith in it. No doubt or guess work about it and simply because there's no evidence is not a strong position because there are many things that appear to not be evident but the possibility is not exhausted.
I have been arguing against it this whole time, however I shall make it more clear and make clear why the agnostic atheist position is included in that and why this follows.
The agreed upon premise
Firstly, while the topic title might say Atheists that believe no God exists due to no evidence known is a weak basis. The context behind Opening context establishes why "Atheists that believe no God exists" that is told in the topic title can include the agnostic atheist.
When you had invited me to this debate with the topic title, I had posted the comment you and people can read in the comments section. Asking that by "Atheists that believe no God exists" whether you were talking about the gnostic atheist, the strong agnostic atheist, the weak agnostic atheist, all of them(any that would fit the broader umbrella term) or a different specific type of atheist.
You answered "All types". Under no (reasonably) uncertain terms had you not only agreed to all types of Atheists, but had also ,as a result of what you were directly responding to, agreed that the 3 types I'd named and described are included under that umbrella and in regards to what "Atheists that believe no God exists" refers to.
Lack of rebuttal
The reason there isn't (or is rarely) a defense specifically geared to defending the position of the non-believer is because you've never attacked the position of the reasonability of the (weak) non-believer. You've always been attacking the position of the opposite-believer (and sometimes the strong non-believer). Your arguments have been not against the position of lack of belief but rather against the premise itself, arguing that it representing a part of atheism is faulty.
Like in your true or false question, you don't attempt to demonstrate that lack of belief is unreasonable. You attempt to demonstrate that lack of belief *is* belief.
But now that you've asked for an explanation for this. It is time for me to elaborate on why Ending up in the weak agnostic position due to a lack of evidence is reasonable.
Reasonable lack of evidence
Given the Opening context further elaborated on by The agreed upon premise. Among the positions you argue are a weak basis if their only argument is lack of evidence, I will argue for the reasonability of ending up in the weak agnostic position as a result of lack of evidence.
Plenty was already addressed under The Burden of Proof, however I will add further.
When a person is first presented with a question in mind "Does God exist?", he has several choices he can make, and even after making the choice he can always make a different choice later on. Those choices can vary from "No", "Yes" , "Maybe" , "Maybe not" , "I don't know" , "Yes, and it is the God whose words are in the Bible today" , "Yes and it is the God whose words are in the Quran today", and several other possible choices.
What qualifies within what would make you end up as an agnostic atheist is when you either give a weak "No", or an "I don't know", or the responses in between such as "Maybe" and "Maybe not". As long as your answer does not include a "Yes". (Being undecided and refusing to give any answer at all is the even weaker form of agnostic atheist we'd previously talked about when you asked what an undecided is)
Theft and Defamation
Now here's a case example. A complete stranger comes to me, Max, he says that Alex stole from him 500 dollars. He wishes to make an arrest against Alex for theft and asks that I believe him and for my support. Now being that I have no evidence of this other than Max's own testimony, that I don't have enough evidence beyond reasonable doubt, I decide to disbelieve Max's claim due to my lack of belief in it.
Now after we depart, Alex comes to me and he says that Max is spreading lies about him. That Max is falsely accusing him of theft. He wishes to make an arrest against Max for defamation of character and asks that I believe him and for my support. Now being that I have no evidence of this other than Alex's own testimony, that I don't have enough evidence beyond reasonable doubt, I decide to disbelieve Alex's claim due to my lack of belief in it.
I did not believe there is enough evidence (that I could personally examine) that Alex committed theft, or that Max committed defamation of character. So I simply decided to disbelieve both claims. It is possible that the evidence exists and that it is findable, maybe the police can find it, the possibility is not exhausted. But with the information at hand in my current position, I decide not to personally provide support for either side due to a lack of evidence from my personal perception.
The Flying Spaghetti Monster
This is a classic from the atheist playbook. The flying spaghetti monster is a man made being/deity/something invented for the promotion of atheist rhetoric. Obviously nobody believe such a monster exists and that's the point.
Now, the funny thing is, despite the flying spaghetti monster being admittingly conjured up from imagination and fiction. It is possible that there exists in our universe, by sheer coincidence, a flying spaghetti monster exactly as described by the people who invented him. The flying spaghetti monster *could* exist, as you've said, the possibility is not exhausted.
However, a not exhausted imaginable possibility does not mean that disbelieving it, or dismissing it is unreasonable. When asked "Do you believe in the flying spaghetti monster"(and not "do you know whether the flying spaghetti monster exists or doesn't exist"), my answer is "no" because I don't enough evidence or information to conclude beyond reasonable doubt that the flying spaghetti monster exists in order for me to personally believe in it. The possibility is not exhausted, but its not unreasonable to disbelieve.
Reasonable lack of evidence pt.2
"Beyond reasonable doubt" means by its very own definition, evidence/reasoning strong enough that any doubt that might yet exist is unreasonable. That its unreasonable to disbelieve it. And likewise, the absence of "Beyond reasonable doubt" would mean that there exists doubt that is reasonable. Going by the premise of "Beyond reasonable doubt". Unless the argument for theism is made with strong enough evidence/reasoning/info that it can qualify as a claim that is "Beyond reasonable doubt", there exists doubt against it that is reasonable. Doubt that is not an unreasonable (and by extension, not a weak) basis for disbelieve.
Beyond Reasonable Doubt in Theology
Here I defend the usage of the premise of 'Beyond reasonable doubt' in matters of theology. Including in regards to dismissing claims not sufficiently enough supported by evidence.
Admittedly, and ironically enough, the motivation lies in part with my pure and honest belief in Islam as the true message of God and the one true faith. I want people to find God. And I personally believe that the only (or best) way they can do that is through Islam. And I imagined two worlds, a world where people act theologically without the premise of 'Beyond reasonable doubt', and a world where people act theologically with the premise of 'Beyond reasonable doubt'.
Without the premise we have less atheists, in fact we might even have no atheists at all. But people join religions without needing strong reasoning to believe that its message was the one sent by God. And by extension the truthfulness of the message of a religion has less bearing on how likely it is to be selected by someone. There will be a higher likelihood of people who join religions on a whim. And people who join Islam or Christianity lightly will leave it (for another religion) on just as lightly of a premise. Even if blind faith (or semi-blind faith, with weak evidence) lands some people in our faiths, it doesn't have a strong foundation of keeping them there.
With the premise we have more atheists, and less people join religions. But when they do, they do so on needing strong reasoning, a strong foundation for their belief. And by extension the truthfulness of the message of a religion has more bearing, not only on how likely it is to be selected by someone, but also on how likely someone who grew up under that religion is going to leave it. More people are going to leave false religions and works of fiction. And while we might end with less overall theists. I'd argue that the number of people of join the one true faith will be larger under this premise. And also under this premise they'll be more likely to stay under that faith.
The foundation of Islam came with telling people not to believe in something simply because it was tradition or taught to them since childhood. The greatest enemy of Islam was not atheism, it was polytheism.
I believe that finding the one true faith, being more likely to find the one true faith, requires the mechanism 'Beyond reasonable doubt' to be in play. For religion to have the burden of proof. For weak agnostic atheism to be the default position. And that necessitates viewing the personally perceived lack of enough evidence (for 'beyond a reasonable doubt) as better than a weak basis for holding the agnostic atheist viewpoint.
And even, even, in a universe where Islam is not the true message of God, my sentiment still applies. I believe 'Beyond reasonable doubt' is the mechanism under which we're most likely to strongly arrive at the one true faith.
Not Very Relevant Arguments
This mostly involves talking about another debate Mall had with someone else.
Direct Responses
So if find something wrong with a thing to do what it is supposed to do, that function is non existent. Something wrong with a tire, it will not function as it will or would.
Not only are you incorrect, the example fails. Imperfect does not mean the function is completely non existent. And an imperfect tire doesn't mean it won't keep my bike steady and going. It just means that its not perfect.
The wording was intended to be contradictions in a imperfect book. Not imperfect contradictions in a book. See how that's worded consistently with the opposing side's position of that debate.
But your opponent never said "imperfect contradictions". He said "contradictions are imperfect". Which I'd already explained in the statement you responded to why it makes sense in the same way as "Fast food is unhealthy" and "Mistakes are bad" intuitively make sense.
Again, one has to wonder how I was able to immediately arrive (even without first reading your opponent's argument) at the correct interpretation of your opponent's argument if the correct interpretation was so elusive due to faulty wording.
False equivalency and I didn't say anything about "must be wrong about everything else". I said inadmissible. I believe that's what I said which means disqualification.
You're just going to utter false equivalency without elaborating on why or how that's the case? I at least elaborated on how the comparison make sense.
Also I didn't say "must be wrong about everything else", I said "must be wrong about everything else that has to do with [x]". And if that changes nothing then could you then elaborate on what it is exactly you meant by disqualification then?
At the end of it, if you haven't proved a spirit to be false, you're no more closer to evidence than understanding the writings you're vilifying. Now you being a theist , you think fumbling with the Quran is going to disprove Allah? Do you actually believe in Allah because Qur'an writings make sense to you?
If a sufficiently enough argument beyond reasonable doubt is made that the Quran is imperfect. Then that would sufficiently prove that the Quran (that we have) was not written by God. Which would be enough reason for me to conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the God (Allah) that is exactly described in the Quran does not exist in this universe....ok, technically, since the Bible and Torah share the same God. Those would need to also be shown imperfect beyond reasonable doubt as well. I convey this sentiment more easily under The Flying Spaghetti Monster pt.2
And I do believe in Allah because of the Quran, the Quran is my own personal evidence of his existence. I do not wish to further elaborate on or defend this position as that could be a whole debate topic on its own. (And one I do not currently wish to participate in). I am merely answering your question.
Since you mentioned perception, it is always the perception of the opposing side to see whatever I say is not presented strongly enough leaving you to be no exception.
Funny enough, even within the parameters of an opposition debate, this is not always true. "whatever I say" is not the case, even demonstrably in regards to my debates against you. On the topic of 9-5 and slavery I did not dispute that people have to use money to live. And in the current topic, I did not dispute that the gnostic atheist stance is an unreasonable one. (Especially if one arrives at the gnostic atheist stance from lack of evidence)
Hell, in the topic that we are referring to, your opponent's concession that one of their contradictions was unfounded is another example of humble concession.
See in other words, if a person has truly done the research on what was read, the person would of had a rebuttal to my rebuttal that presented a non contradiction point proving it back to be a contradiction again perhaps more so solidifying that it's not a perceived contradiction with a stronger counter rebuttal.
Why does he have to make a rebuttal against *all* of your counterpoints?
If what you mean to say is "if he had truly done his research he wouldn't have made that mistake in the first place", that's not true. People who put in serious effort still make mistakes.
If what you mean to say is "this demonstrates we can't rely solely on the credibility of his research" which cycles back to the argument you responded to. Just like credibility of the researcher on its is not enough to prove an argument. Damage of credibility is not enough to disprove it either. You are continuing to perform the genetic fallacy.
Here the person admits the lack of reading the scripture. Just based on this alone, if somebody knows less than me because I demonstrated texts the person wasn't prepared for, would I not be a qualified judge over this person for what is an actual contradiction?
Indeed isolated from any other context or argument substance, you are a more qualified judge of the bible than your opponent, and probably more than myself as well. By virtue of having read it more and having more experience with it.
But the argument is not isolated to the credibility of the people making the argument. You're performing Ad hominem and Appeal to authority at the same time.
It would be a lack because all the other supposed contradictions received the same biblically based explanation/explanation that was not ruled out.
This is fallacy of composition. You're reaching the conclusion that he made an error in perceiving a contradiction, we should come to the conclusion that he made an error in his other proposed contradictions.
If you don't believe the opposing side from that topic disproved Allah, you shouldn't be supporting what the person said.
I am not supporting that your opposition's argument was true. I am opposing the notion that his mistake is good enough evidence on its own to counter his whole argument. And his arguments were specific to the Bible.
What the person said was no evidence which is pretty weak to take the position of atheism.
The argument your opponent was making wasn't (merely) atheist, it was anti-Christian. It is different from our current debate.
For you to say you don't have to take the position of atheism and that you are that by default, then that debate was pointless and things used to try to prove God false are pointless. Why try to prove something to take a position on when you've already taken it without proving?
Because the agnostic atheist position is different from the anti-Christian position. The anti-Christian position that your opponent held needs to satisfy the burden of proof.
Sufficient enough proof for a negative
You have not dis-proven a negative in this case. You have not proven a negative and or a spirit to be false. You have not proven who physically wrote the writings did not make a flaw. You have not proven you understood context of what you read. You have not proven the text you received was not manipulated, corrupted, etc. or if you were actually mentally coherent at the time of research.
You'll notice that most, if not all these points have already been addressed in exactly what you've responded to, but I'll elaborate. Even if a conceivable enough grasping at straw arguments could be made for the existence of something. For the negative of a spirit. Sufficient enough argument 'beyond reasonable doubt' can be made to prove that negative, I present to you:
The Flying Spaghetti Monster pt.2
Now previously under The Flying Spaghetti Monster I had used the fictional deity to convey lack of 'Beyond reasonable doubt' in its existence to arrive to the conclusion that you should dismiss the existence of a deity.
Here, I will use that same deity to convey the presence of 'Beyond reasonable doubt' in its non-existence to arrive to the conclusion that you should conclude in a the non-existence of a specific deity.
In this case the argument is simple. This is a parody "church", the founders of this "belief" admittedly created this as fiction same as sleeping beauty or snow white were written. This alone is evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a specific deity that falls under the descriptions that fit the flying spaghetti monster does not exist
There still exists imaginable arguments for how such a deity could existence, a sheer coincidence is possible. However that possibility and these arguments are unreasonable. Unreasonable enough that one can positively with intellectual confidence conclude affirmatively that the non-existence of the flying spaghetti monster is true
A bit more imaginable arguments can be made for Ra, as people actually once worshipped him. However he also I would say, falls under the umbrella of specific deities we can affirmatively argue the non-existence of.
To be clear, specific to the God of the Bible, I do not agree with the conclusion he doesn't exist, in fact as a Muslim I could not as he is the same God who made the Quran, I believe the opposite conclusion is the truth.
However I would disagree that he is unreasonably unfalsifiable even in the case of the Quran, Bible and Torah all being (reasonably enough) falsified. And I do not agree that 'beyond a shadow of a doubt' renders 'beyond reasonable doubt' pointless.
I don't know how what you said inspires "boldness", all there is is mockery without substance.
You can be humble and still bold as a lion.
Sincerely, learn some humility. At least before you reach 450 debates.
We only got one lost one here, where are the rest of you?
There is no known evidence to prove the non existence of God so it is no way the strongest point for atheism fools.
Scripture say the FOOL has said in his heart there is no God.
Why? He doesn't have evidence for it so you don't know. Scripture say speak on what you know.
I read the argument again and I wish to make a correction to a mistyping. I said "I don't think anyone, theist or atheist, will argue that theists believe in God.", I of course instead meant "I don't think anyone, theist or atheist, will argue against the fact that theists believe in God."
Not that relevant to the argument. But I can't believe that "how can I look at you as reliable after being wrong just once?" and "once is too many already." are legitimately sentences written unironically in an argument. This is normally the kind of thing you expect to see in a straw man.
Watching you slam your head into a wall over and over is getting boring, so I’ll cut this short:
Oxford’s Dictionary describes Atheism as “The disbelief or lack of belief in the existence of a God or gods.
It describes religion as “the belief in and worship of a superhuman power or powers, especially a God or gods.”
I don’t care what you personally define these as, nor what some random internet troll defines them as, but so far the world has agreed that Atheism is definitively not a religion.
If you would like to discuss the actual question in the title, I can explain how that is a terrible statement, but that has been bugging me this whole time.
I am surprised by this invitation, but gladly so. I was under the impression that our previous encounter was unpleasant to you.
I would like to say first that I am a Muslim, so while I am perfectly willing to adopt the mantle of atheism (to the best of my abilities) to be your opponent. I wished to convey this first in case you personally wished to debate an actual atheist on this topic. Otherwise if my being religious is not an issue to you then we are all good in this regard.
Additionally, I wanted to ask about an elaboration regarding the atheists framed in the topic title. "Atheists that believe no God exists".
Are we talking about Atheists in general, any that would fit under the broader umbrella term?
Are we talking about the Gnostic atheist? An atheist that actively proclaims through evidence, reasoning, or whatever other means/motives that "God does not exist" is an actively true statement. ("I know that aliens do not exist in outer-space")
Are we talking about the Agnostic strong atheist? An atheist that dismisses claims of God's existence by actively proclaiming that "Evidence that God exists doesn't exist" is an actively true statement. ("I dismiss that aliens exist, because I know that we'll never have enough information to conclude that aliens exist in outer-space")
Are we talking about the Agnostic weak atheist? An atheist that personally dismisses claims of God's existence. Not actively proclaiming "Evidence that God exists doesn't exist" is a true statement. But coming to their own current dismissive conclusion because they are not personally aware of the evidence (or sufficient reasoning) that God exists. If such evidence and/or reasoning does indeed exist. ("I dismiss that aliens exist, because at present I am unaware of sufficient information of their existence, if such information exists")
Or are we talking about a specific brand of Atheist not described (or only partially described) by my previous examples?