That is just the logical way to look at reality. You work with what you can observe and draw conclusions based from that data.
I think you totally missed the point of me saying that. Anyway...
A good example is the one someone else brought up. Do you believe an invisible tea pot orbits around Jupiter?
Well, let start here: I see no evidence of an invisible teapot because there is no evidence to postulate that one could possibly exists. And why is that? Well of course, its
arbitrary, and thus, cannot be a valid analogy to the existence of the [Christian] God....since this is the one we're referring to.
Yaweh/Jehovah isn't some 19th centrury imagined being as Russell's teapot is because those who wrote the Bible, according to the Bible anyway, didn't believe in God until some evidence of his existence was put forth, and then they believed, and wrote it down.
Why is this distinction important? Because we
know Russell's teapot is a completely arbitrary, imagined...thing. However, I do not think the same thing can be
factually said about the God of the Bible because we cannot say for certain that the miracles put forth to support the existence of God didn't happen.
We can speak to the improbablility of those things not happening, sure. But it's another thing to say "those things
didn't happen". You simply don't believe them, and I however, do.
What does this boil down to? The Bible writers wrote down what they "allegedly" saw (for the sake of argument), whereas Russell didn't see anything, nor did the FSM creators...those are simply imagined enities put forth in a effort to say the Bible writers did exactly the same thing, but one thing is missing to make that conclusion true...and that's something called "evidence". (Yeah, you need that too)
We know Russell saw no evidence of a Teapot, but can we factually say that about the Bible writers?
I think that's the ultimate question, in my opinion.