As the number of folds in a katana approaches the infinite, its sharpness begins to reach such an incredible point that it can cut through nothingness as surely as somethingness
But wait, if you cleave nothingness in twain, won't there then be something? Tozan might have been onto something with his three pounds of hemp...good for making twine?
More seriously, I consider myself agnostic. As a child, christianity seemed to be self-evident (even if Finnish culture is generally very secular and very private about religion outside of celebrations like christmas and easter). However, as my worldview expanded and I learned about other beliefs, I started wondering about how so many people are so certain about their beliefs while some are so certain of other, incompatible beliefs. And that went further: gods, as described, are omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent etc.; how are such beings at all comprehensible to humans? If there is a god, surely it is something so incomprehensible, you couldn't make any meaningful description of it or its desires? However, an omnipotent being, by definition, must also be comprehensible to humans. This causes a logical paradox, meaning any god must exist outside of logic, if at all.
As I'm unwilling to abandon logic, it being an important cornerstone of any meaningful knowledge, in my opinion the existence or nonexistence of a god is meaningless for all practical purposes. Due to chaos theory, we can't even sensibly attribute any event to a god, as the inherent random fuckery of the universe could just as well be to blame; determinism and nondeterminism are functionally equivalent.
You have one of two black-box functions, F or G, and you want to know which one it is.
You don't know anything about F.
You know that G always returns a positive value.
You enter an arbitrarily large but finite number of inputs into your function, and they all return a positive value. Can you be certain which function you have after doing this?
The problem in this thought exercise is that while F is not falsifiable and G is, failing to falsify G doesn't prove it true. This is the problem I have with some of the most certain of atheists. Yes, while science has been able to explain pretty much everything that used to be explained by religion, it can't be used to logically disprove something that doesn't follow meaningful logic in the first place.