Religion
In reply to the discussion: Why I'm Not an Atheist: The Case for Agnosticism [View all]Gore1FL
(22,997 posts)I admit not knowing all things, and rather enjoy the discover that science employs to find out what is real and what is not real. I crave real certainty, though. Provable, repeatable, calculated, understood, evidence-based certainty. Relying on the revelations bestowed upon us by iron-age peasants doesn't do it for me.
I consider myself an Atheist. That doesn't mean I know there is not God. What it means is that there is no reason to believe there is a God. No evidence exists that there is a Tooth Fairy, a teapot in orbit around the sun between Earth and Mars. No evidence exists of an all-knowing fish in the South Pacific. They are all so highly unlikely, that it isn't worth the time to contemplate any of them.
Atheism does not equate to a closed mind. I rejected Christianity because I find the Abrahamic religions to be unrealistic, contradictory, and stories that make that God a moral train wreck. Don't mistake my researched conclusions for a closed mind.
Let me conclude by pointing out your post was rather judgemental in tone. Doesn't that conflict with Matthew 7:1-5?