Atheism is not the absence of a position but a philosophical tradition with its own long history — from the Cārvāka school of ancient India to the Epicurean naturalism of Rome, from the radical Enlightenment of Spinoza to the materialist critiques of Marx and Feuerbach to the contemporary philosophy of Daniel Dennett and Iris Murdoch. It asks serious questions that every tradition must take seriously: questions about evidence, about the origins of religious belief, about the way power shapes theology, about the possibility of a fully human ethics grounded in the world as it is. Atheism at its best is not contempt for the religious impulse but rigorous insistence that the truth is not served by claims that cannot be sustained.
Each step builds on the last.