Rejecting the assertion that "either one or more gods exist" is akin to stating definitively that no god(s) exist. Or rather than you believe that no god(s) exist, since at present it is impossible to prove that no god(s) exist.
The statement "there is/are no god(s)" is based on belief, not evidence.
You are not getting it.
I'm not making the statemen "there is/are no god(s)", neither are most atheists who have considered the subject in any depth.
Rejection somebody elses assertion isn't the same as making a counter-assertion.
Explains it better than I can.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_and_explicit_atheism
That is somewhat all twisted about. To begin with you can be an atheist and believe in God of some kind...the term atheist is defined by its context..
It depends on the definition, if by atheism you mean "lacks belief in a god/god's" then no, you can't be an atheist and believe in a god.
Also although Agnosticism does concern knowledge, a baby has no knowledge so they are not an atheist (that would require some form of decision to be made by the baby)....they are closer to agnostic if you can ascribe such a label to them at all considering you are assuming what a baby believes or disbelieves or what it is thinking about such things at all. Trying to assign philosophical positions to a baby is an exercise in futility in itself. Effectively a baby neither believes or disbelieves, they are simply ignorant.
A baby isn't agnostic - as agnosticism concerns knowledge & requires a level of understanding to hold that view.
"Agnosticism is the view that the truth values of certain claims—especially claims about the existence or non-existence of any deity, as well as other religious and metaphysical claims—are unknown and (so far as can be judged) unknowable."
A baby can't comprehend the above in any rational way to hold the view that it's unknownable.
But a baby is capable of simple lacking a belief - as lacking something doesn't require any ability or information.
You could just as easily argue that everyone is born with an inherent belief in God that they lose (or don't) as they learn to communicate such complex concepts as they grow
I would love to see somebody try.
It is a common tactic by the anti-religious to try to broaden their particular position to include as many people as possible in an attempt to strengthen that position by dint of numbers of adherents.
Not really, I'm simply pointing out that sub-categories exist & one label isn't sufficient & that the assertion that atheism is a belief system is logically flawed.
Besides you don't have to be religious to believe in God, people seem to consistently confuse or lump atheism in with anti-clericalism and anti-theism. Many people who call themselves atheist are in fact anti-theists rather than simply atheists.
I never mentioned religion so it has no bearing on my point (I was talking about theism/atheism), but yes you are right.
It is these meaningless and circular semantic arguments that make such debates pointless, you can call yourself whatever you want and define it however you want, the whole range of philosophical positions overlap so much that you can justify just about anything. It's better to stick to the specifics and leave the labels out of it except in the broadest of terms.
It does matter when people attempt to change the meaning of a basic term, or imply that you think something that you don't.
I lack a belief in a god/god's, I don't believe that a god exist - neither do I believe a god doesn't exist (As both views would require evidence which does not exist).
Agnosticms isn't some "middle ground", it's a totally different question - I'm agnostic to most religious claims as they are unknowable (But not all are) so it's pendant on the specific theistic claim.
If person X says to me "God exists for certain", I say "I reject your assertion due to the lack of evidence".
If person Y says to me "God does not exist for certain", I say "I reject your assertion due to the lack of evidence".
I retain my default position of not believing in anything, while making no commitments to either side of a futile argument.