Kathinka said:
reminds me of this one comic..where is it..ah yes^^
in all seriousnes though: yes you can prove the nonexistence of something by evidence. how hard this evidence is to find might be another story.
Ugh, where to start.
First off, religion - at least the kind practised by people with degrees - has moved beyond the whole notion of the Gottesbeweis, or proof of the existence of a god. Benedict XVI doesn't believe in a bearded man in the sky any more than you do - the idea of a personal god actually got knocked into a cocked hat as early as the mid-14th century.
What's left are ideas. And you cannot prove the absence of an idea, because the second you think it, it comes into existence. So, at the most basic level, the views of religious folk are governed by the idea that there is a Will behind the universe. The Will itself may or may not be real - good luck disproving that - but the idea manifestly exists.
Around 2,000 years ago, there lived a man who was hugely influential on Western thought throughout the ages, and remains so to this day. His ideas, speeches, dialogues, actions etc, as transcribed by those closest to him, have been a part of the founding principles of the United States of America and the modern nations of Europe. People have been constantly re-interpreting his words to fit them to the paradigms of their age, sometimes with great success, sometimes with catastrophic results. His ideas, while by themselves not actually original, condensed much of the philosophical thought which had occurred before him, and became the cornerstone of an IDEA that reverberates through Western societies. And being the greatest living symbol of those ideas, when the winds of power shifted, he was killed for them, because his ideas were considered dangerous.
His name was Marcus Tullius Cicero, by the way. And if faith as an idea isn't real, then neither is democracy.