Yeah, that'd be called "being a douche". It's still not like the majority of atheists would do that though...
Yeah,
those atheists. Those are the ones that piss me off. Regardless of the majority of atheists not doing that, they're the loudest atheist voice around and they're impossible to avoid on the internet.
thus the idea should not be believed unless evidence is produced.
Exactly what you said right there and no further. As soon as you step into the realm of "the idea is false" then you're out of bounds, and right where you are is already in the grey. Anything stronger than "should" and it's no longer just an opinion.
X has not been observed
Therefore we can dismiss X as a possibility until it is.
"Dismiss as a possibility" is about as close as you can get to saying "is false" without actually saying that. Saying something is impossible, as in not a possibility, is essentially saying it is false. You're going to deny this, but we can put it up to a vote for other people if you like. Secondly, the "until it is" part is somewhat contradictory. It implies that "it could become possible". "Something is false until it is proven true" is a better way of wording what you implied. What you have there is:
X has not been observed
Therefore it is false (*until proven true)
Right?
That still contains the original fallacy in the conclusion. You can't conclude it is false or impossible while X has not been observed without the negative proof fallacy. Removing the slant that X is false, while retaining the idea that the actual nature of it's truth will develop, and merged with the sister fallacy:
X has not been observed
Therefore it could be true or it could be false.
And that is the conclusion to be drawn from the negative proof fallac
ies. Occam's razor selecting one theory over another is a temporary false, note your disclaimer *until proven true, generally used in selecting priority for which deserves attention. Doesn't actually disprove a theorem itself, as in it's impossible that it's true, just says to not accept it. Once you factor in Occam being temporary, the long term opinion on a developing hypothesis that is guaranteed to be right is that it may be correct or it may be false.
On the not so absoluteness of Occam:
There are many examples where Occam’s razor would have picked the wrong theory given the available data. Simplicity principles are useful philosophical preferences for choosing a more likely theory from among several possibilities that are each consistent with available data. However, anyone invoking Occam’s razor to support a model should be aware that additional data may well falsify the model currently favored by Occam’s razor. One accurate observation of a white crow falsifies the theory that “all crows are black”. Likewise, a single instance of Occam’s razor picking a wrong theory falsifies the razor as a general principle[7]. Note however that this only applies if the razor is meant to pick the correct theory for all time; if this is not the case, and it is only applied to pick the simplest theory which fits all the currently known data and it is understood that, should new data arise, the razor will have to be reapplied, then the principle keeps its validity.
So then the real question is, are you applying Occam to religion to pick the correct theory, or for picking the simplest that fits known data?
It seems... pointless, to me, though. God isn't any more likely than a lot of other things... so I say I don't believe in him, making me an atheist. To me an agnostic would be someone who cannot decide whether to believe or not.
It's in the personal approach, honestly. By definition an agnostic is "uncertain", generally as he accepts both options as a possibility.
Occam's Razor is neither necessary nor appropriate for this.
You'd be very surprised what "being a douche" does to your application of the ideas of dead philosophers.
I'm not attempting to do anything of the sort. I regard it as the equivalent of responding to someone in real life
It's the equivalent of interrupting them every other sentence. Kind of like what I'm doing right now. That one time where I summarized all my thoughts into a single proposal seemed more manageable.
I'm not even sure where you got that idea from.
The people you call douchebags.
I haven't really been doing much except correcting generalizations about atheists :/.
You'd get better results exterminating the douchbags rather than trying to fix people's impressions of them.