A baby doesn't have the emotional stance of a believer. A baby is acting on animalistic needs: hungry? Cry. Uncomfortable full-nappy? Cry. Over time, the shapes that it sees (parents' faces) are associated with good things happening (the cessation of the need to cry) and comforting. During all of this, the baby has no concept of godhood, does not worship its parents, so it cannot therefore be described as theistic. The parents-as-gods concept is such a clumsy and back-arsed way of looking at the relationship.MiM wrote:I started out with trying to say that a baby has the emotional stance of a believer. You didn't acknowledge my spelled out change of viewpoint at all, but went on with sophistery about the the term (a)theist, so I thought "let's have it your way then"
Church, scripture and theism are secondary. The only valid of your points is "does he have a God" You say no. I say how do you know that? And please define what "have a God" means.
How do I know that my dog has no gods? He doesn't know what gods are. I mean, you can claim that he does, but extraordinary claims require extraordinary proofs. Until you can provide such a thing, I'll happily keep to his default state of a lack of theism. Which makes him an atheist. Unless you can prove otherwise.



