"It's wrong because it doesn't pass my smell test — and I am the smeller-in-chief!"Are you quite sure you understand what people are talking about when they use the term, "God"?
I've previously suggested that your style of atheism rests on a Straw Man argument:
Much of atheism amounts to a straw man argument decrying the absurdity of the notion of some higher-powered dude sitting on a cloud. Who, aside from pinheads and atheists, thinks any such thing?But I'm not sure you've made even such flimsy an effort to understand. What, exactly, do you refute, sir? When a devout person prays with a full, poignant heart, kindling a profound sense of peace and consolation and a firm, ongoing present guidance far steadier and wiser than what they know themselves to be capable of, is that something you have personal experience with? If not, then what licenses such confident dismissal? In fact, precisely what are you even dismissing?
To wave such experience away as "mere emotion" is to pretend the label drains the reality. But the thing about the universe, as you know, Dr. Dawkins, is that labels don't have that power. Innumerable essential human experiences which can't be explained by logic could be bundled under that shallow catch-all term. Deliciousness, beauty, forgiveness, insight, et al. Many real phenomena resist logical dissection. This doesn't make them illogical.
A cookie is not delicious because of its 9 grams of fat, 10 grams of sugar, and adequate recipe. All cookies have similar ingredients, and most recipes are adequate, yet a rare special one makes us groan. Given that groaning is possible, why does the overwhelming majority not kindle this effect? Why has it not been formulized? Companies with billion dollar research and development budgets have failed to bottle the lightning, yet the world makes us groan in non-random ways that are impossible to dismiss. And it all makes not a lick of sense.
There are groans you've never groaned. With arrogant tautology fully engaged, one might summarily dismiss all experiences one hasn't experienced. But how could you characterize such visceral dismissal as serious refutation?
I hear the skeleton of your objection as "I haven't experienced it, and it doesn't pass my smell test, hence "NONSENSE!" And this sort of oblivious haughtiness is the epitome of foolishness — and of comedy. Which reminds me to add "funny" to the list of real things that can't be touched, probed, or catalogued — nor flippantly dismissed as "mere emotion".
Perhaps, along with deliciousness, beauty, and forgiveness, humor should be waved breezily into a drawer marked "Emotion". I suspect, though, that you wouldn't be so quick to dismiss "insight" — an essential phenomenon in your day job, despite its uncanny mysteriousness.
One personal note, if I might. I've watched videos of your science lectures, where you stand before classes scrawling nonsensical symbols (most likely runes and incantations representative of your "beliefs"). You fill entire blackboards with ridiculous nonsense that makes NO SENSE AT ALL. Mark me down as a non-believer. Good DAY, sir.