The existence of such a point is all I need for my point.
No, not really. You can't just say that there is a cut off point for something being someone's starting position and then say that how this starting point is defined is unimportant. This is a premise that your entire argument is built upon. As it is you haven't even established that such a point exists.
Children undergo mental development.
Mental development eventually stops.
Adults can be rational.
Children are not completely rational.
Rationality is refined as part of mental development.
Therefore there exists a point where rationality is fully developed.
I did not say how the starting point is defined is unimportant. I said it is important but not to my argument. I said that Psychologists would be the best source for an accurate definition if you were interested in going more in depth to mental development. My argument uses the premise that people have a collection of beliefs/disbeliefs at the moment they become fully rationally that is infulenced by upbringing rather than rationality.
So far you have not supported your claim that people with positive starting positions should take the time to evaluate a lack of evidence against their position and be convinced to change positions.
You keep presenting straw men as if they were my arguments. Please don't do this. I had hoped for a rational discussion of the issues, but that will be impossible to do if you keep making up viewpoints for me and then arguing against those, rather than what I've actually said.
I did not intend to create a strawman. Where did I misunderstand your point?
I said people have starting positions. Some of these starting positions are beliefs rather than disbeliefs. Some of these beliefs are on topics where there is no possibility of evidence either way. You said the rational position is disbelief until evidence even in the case where evidence cannot exist. Therefore you are suggesting these people should take time to evaluate these beliefs that have no evidence against them and the lack of evidence is not evidence of lack. Therefore you are suggesting these people take time evaluating beliefs with no evidence either way to justify changing their position.
You claimed that the existence of a theist is an assertion of theism. This is a very inflammatory claim because it equates all theists as the type that go around asserting theism. This prejudice was enraging.
The expansion you have above seems to indicate that you do not believe the existence of a theist is the same as the existence of a theist asserting theism. If you do believe these are the same thing then I see no reason to discuss with you.
If however you agree that someone needs to assert a claim to be asserting a claim and merely believing a claim is not the same as asserting a claim, then we can discuss the nuance of the burden of proof if any that exists for those that believe but are not asserting claims.
This is starting to become a little bizarre. I've explained how I'm defining the word "assert" in this conversation, yet you seem to have ignored that. Perhaps for clarity's sake you should define how you are using the term in the above sentences.
A) There is a theist standing on a corner. This theist exists.
B) There is a theist standing on a corner making the claim that god exists. This theist exists and is asserting theism.
There exist A that are B however not all A are B.
Therefore the existence of a theist is not an assertion of theism. The theist must be claiming god exist rather than merely silently believing god exists for it to be an assertion.
A) There is a kantian standing on a corner. This kantian exists.
B) There is a kantian standing on a corner making the claim that Kant was correct about deontology. This kantian exists and is asserting deontology.
There exist A that are B however not all A are B.
Therefore the existence of a believer of X is not an assertion of X. The believer of X must be claiming X is true rather than merely silently believing X is true for it to be an assertion.
See wikipedia link (or further links) as a source describing parsimony as not being evidence.
I wonder if you've actually read all of that Wikipedia page? Perhaps you should read the section where it talks about Occam's own application of his Razor to the question of God's existence or otherwise. Are you claiming the Occam did not understand the Razor correctly?
In the philosophy of religion, Occam's razor is sometimes applied to the existence of God; if the concept of a God does not help to explain the universe better, then the idea is that atheism should be preferred (Schmitt 2005).
1) There is no claim that Occam used it this way.
2) As seen above Occam's razor is not used that way(preferring between models) in science, why would it be used that way in theology?
As discussed in binary probability. The probability of an existing religion being correct is 100% or 0%. Not infinitesimal.
This is another straw man. Please read and respond to what I've actually posted.
How is this a strawman?
I initially claimed that past events had a fixed nature (100% or 0%). You said stuff about non binary probabilities and then agreed that past events have a fixed nature. An existent theory about the past is either correct or incorrect it is not some non binary probability of being correct. It does not have a 50% chance of being correct. It does not have an infinitesimal chance of being correct. It is either correct or incorrect.