You are obviously misunderstanding my posts. What I said was:
"I used "Homo sapiens sapiens are the only extant members of the hominin clade" as a naturalistic point of reference from which to assert that this definition is an incomplete view of us.
I then directed you to a scholarly resource that answers in detail what, why, and how that is so.
Read: Anthropology in Theological Perspective by Wolfhart Pannenberg as a suggested starting point.
Knowing what I know, someone who falsely asserts we're all born atheists (which was refuted both by the latest scientific studies and atheists themselves including Dawkins) as you did and who also rejects all empirical information about what it means to be human (such as Pannenberg provides in that scholarly resource I cite) beyond the myopia of positive atheism (especially in the context of reductive materialism) either does not know or is in denial with respect to what it means to be human."
The first definition was a reference point only to set the stage for my second assertion which is "Knowing what I know, someone who falsely asserts we're all born atheists (which was refuted both by the latest scientific studies and atheists themselves including Dawkins) as you did and who also rejects all empirical information about what it means to be human (such as Pannenberg provides in that scholarly resource I cite) beyond the myopia of positive atheism (especially in the context of reductive materialism) either does not know or is in denial with respect to what it means to be human."
As
I'm including the entire body of positive atheism's epistemology with respect to what a human is, my assertion is on the mark. And, I'm stating that this is, of course, an incomplete definition of what a human is in reality.
The books to read after 'Lone Survivors' would be 'Who Was Adam?' by Rana and Ross and the one I suggested already. I'd supplement that with 'Did Adam and Eve Really Exist?: Who They Were and Why You Should Care' by C. John Collins.
Hey, I understand it takes time to read through the literature as I read so much myself. Just que everything up, make time for it, and you eventually get it done. That's how I do it

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And, I understand you just fine. As I said before:
"We are
born unaware but with a predisposition to believe to believe in god/gods and the afterlife.
Here's an international Oxford study showing it:
Humans 'predisposed' to believe in gods and the afterlife - University of Oxford in which Dr. Justin Barrett, an academic research at the University of Oxford's Centre for Anthropology and Mind stated, “Children are born believers in God and do not simply acquire religious beliefs through indoctrination.”
Children are born believers in God, academic claims - Telegraph
Even Dawkins admitted that much in 'The God Delusion' though he wrongly attributed it as an evolutionary by-product of various useful psychological adaptations.
So you're wrong that we are "born atheists." We are born unaware but with a predisposition away from atheism as one would expect to see in a species possessing the design attribute of Imago Dei."
As the Encyclopædia Britannica (2011) states under "Atheism," that atheism is "in a broad sense, the rejection of belief in the existence of deities." Note the word REJECTION OF BELIEF. A newborn hasn't rejected God and, in fact, is born with a predisposition against atheism and for a belief in a higher power.
Don't ever tell me that humans are born atheists. It's disingenuous.
Thanks for clarifying. The difficulty is that this was never meant as definition of human. The statement is only making the observation that we are the only extant hominid remaining on the planet. So to claim that it’s an incomplete definition of what it is to be human is really wildly off the mark, for it was never intended as such.
I have a great deal of reading on my plate as it is. I asked if you could give a synopsis. Perhaps if you could provide me with his conclusions? Yesterday I purchased Lone Survivors: How We Came to be the Only Humans on Earth, by Chris Stringer. I expect to be reading this next.
I know that some atheists make the claim that we are all born defacto atheists. All of us are born without a concept of God, ‘tis true, but in my thinking an atheist also is capable of formulating a concept of God, and it is this concept (whatever it may be) that we are denying. Newborns and infants are not capable of contemplating the existence of gods and until they have this capacity I would not ever say we can be declare them atheists. Chimps are also born without a concept of God, but no one, least of all an atheist, would call any chimp an atheist.
There have been no scientific studies that refute the claim that newborns are atheists. There have been no scientific studies examining the matter. Am I misunderstanding you?
You seem frequently to misunderstand me. I have always argued against this claim, as I do above. Lately you’ve been making a number of claims about beliefs I hold that are actually misunderstandings on your part.
I don’t know that I have ever talked on this forum about what it means to be human. What exactly is it you think I am saying? Generally it is only empirical information I accept. So what is it you think I am rejecting?