Atheism is a religion in the same way baldness is a hair colour.
I quite like that statement. It's so easy everyone can understand it, and it gets the exact point across.
It's false, though. You can have a religion that incorporates - or is consistent with - atheism; but you can't have a hair colour that incorporates or is consistent with baldness (assuming that baldness involves a total lack of hair).
Atheism is not a religion or the absence of religion, just as theism is not a religion or the absence of religion. Both theism and atheism are
beliefs. A religion is a complex sociological phenomenon which involves, among many other things, beliefs. Any given religion may number theism among its beliefs or indeed atheism (such as certain forms of Buddhism). Most religions don't number either.
However, in the west we're so used to the Abrahamic religions, for which theism is a very important component, that we tend to equate theism and religion, and think that atheism is the absence of religion. But that's just western bias, and it's not even true among all western religions anyway - there's such as thing as Christian atheism, for example.
Civ2 said:
Peety...
If something is unprovable in PRESENT day facts - it's a theory.
And every theory is a belief in itself.
Sceintists ASSUME things there's no PRESENT proof for - so it's their BELIEF.
Honestly, how do you think science works?
Certainly science can't
prove claims about the past, such as the claim that flying birds evolved from flightless dinosaurs. However, that doesn't mean there's no
evidence for such claims. Compare claims about history. If a historian says that Wellington defeated Napoleon at Waterloo, would you call that an ASSUMPTION or mere BELIEF? After all, it cannot be proven. You cannot observe Wellington defeating Napoleon without a time machine. Yet there is a vast amount of evidence for the claim, which makes it certain to all intents and purposes that Wellington did defeat Napoleon, and we can reasonably say that we know he did. Similarly, of course you can't go back and observe the course of natural history to verify claims that biologists make about it, but there are vast amounts of evidence to support those claims. This is not the case with religious claims like the claim that God created all currently existing species as they currently are; there aren't mountains of evidence for that. That is why it is not legitimate to say that scientific claims and religious claims are epistemologically identical, because they quite blatantly are not. If your argument depends upon the claim that they are, then your argument is never going to be worth very much. If you want to argue for young Earth creationism in a rational way then you must begin by accepting that scientific claims are not arbitrary, but are made on the basis of evidence. Now you may, perhaps, argue that, although they are made on the basis of the evidence, they are nevertheless mistaken, perhaps because scientists have misinterpreted the evidence. That might not seem very probable, but it is possible. But if you won't even accept that scientists base their claims on evidence in the first place, you're not engaging with the real world at all.