
Originally Posted by
billl
I'm pretty sure "atheist" has always been meant to refer to a type of person. By using it to refer to rocks and plants, you would be expanding it to include things that don't have the capacity for belief. Therefore, etc. = What?
The point made that any people who were around before belief systems including God came about would be atheists stands, and would be evidence that "lack of belief" needn't be the result of the rejection of something. (I don't see us coming up with physical evidence for such pre-historic people, but it isn't completely random and goofy to suggest that there might have been some. Not crazy to point to religion being around in pretty much every culture too, though.) Anyhow, "lack of belief in god(s)" is a VERY popular position among atheists today.
It's true, though, that these kinds of atheists today end up, when the rubber hits the road, often resorting to out-of-nowhere-but-very-very-low percentage probabilities that God might exist (because they can't be sure he doesn't), and maybe call themselves agnostic-atheists, and so on. Because, in the end, they are in a discussion with people who believe in God, and are taking the opposite position (they don't have such beliefs...). But the fact that they see no reason to hold such beliefs (in god(s)) is something that would simply be the case, if there weren't people walking around saying that there is a god.
Could theists simply "get on with things" and abandon their theism (their belief) once it was no longer necessary to deal with any "atheists" still running around? Because atheists could pretty much drop the topic altogether if there weren't any more theists. Even though they (apart from the occasional John Lennons) wouldn't imagine it happening any time soon, I think this is the sort of thing they're shooting for, this is I think the stance they're trying to take. And this is the possibility the hypothetical pre-historic pre-theism human example is meant to illuminate. Nothing about trees and rocks.
It might seem beside the point, since there are theists all over the place, and atheists are, indeed, aware of the concept of a God, and they are often arguing against people who are believers in the existence of God. But it isn't beside the point, and not allowing them this common (these days) definition of themselves sets them up for traps that rightly seem unfair to them, enmeshing them in discussion of doubt, certainty, and faith about something that in itself they aren't really too interested in (except when others' belief in it is affecting their governments and schools, say).