jno, it�s not a good idea to give us that Chesterton quote, one of the most fatuous remarks ever made on the subject : (a) it is demonstrably not true and, (b) it is obviously the reverse of the truth. Just consider:
I don�t believe in God, and here are some of the other things I don�t believe in:
Acupuncture, afterlife, alchemy, alien abductions, angels, astrology, Bermuda triangle, channeling, chiropractic, clairvoyance, creationism, crystal-gazing, devils, ESP, evil spirits, fairies, faith-healing, flat earth, fortune-telling, Freudian dream analysis, ghosts, goblins, hell, heaven, holocaust denial, homeopathy, intelligent design, irreducible complexity, Jesus story, levitation, Loch Ness monster, Lourdes cures, lucky numbers/stones/dates/colours etc., magic carpets/spells/rings/cloaks etc., magnet therapy, miracles, naturopathy, numerology, osteopathy, palmistry, phrenology, prayer, psychokinesis, psychoanalysis, reflexology, reincarnation, resurrection, roulette systems, Santa Claus, souls, spiritualism, spoon-bending, stigmata, tarot cards, tealeaf-reading, telepathy, Tony Blair�s integrity, Tooth Fairy, unicorns, virgin births, weeping statues�
I could probably double or treble this list, but I think the point is made. The fact that I don�t believe in God does not mean that I would believe in anything.
The remark is the reverse of the truth because it should be obvious that the sort of mind that would believe in a supernatural being who does magical things and for whose existence there is not a scrap of evidence is precisely the sort of mind that would believe in other weird things. Just check the above list and note how many of the items are believed in by religionists.
Better quote: �He that believes in God would believe in anything.� � chakka 35