Having grown up as a fundamentalist Christian, I still really love symbolism. I think it's why I enjoy coding, encryption, and illustrative, allegorical writing so much. So if the title to this essay seems a bit presumptive, here's what "Atheism is True" means from an initial, strictly logical, mathematical perspective:
Atheism exists.
We’re often told life is about choosing a side. You either believe or you don’t. You either say yes or no, true or false, right or wrong. But what if that’s not the whole picture? Some people aren’t choosing a set of beliefs—because those answers, for them, just aren't there to choose from.
In the disciplines of Data Science and Discrete Mathematics, there’s a concept that explains this, if you aren't seeing the bigger picture.
When examining a data structure that contains a boolean—which is a simple True or False choice—there aren’t just two options. The structure can contain either that True or False value, or it can simply be empty. When that happens, we describe the emptiness as "Null." That doesn’t mean zero. It doesn’t mean false. It means undefined. It means no value has been provided. The field is blank.
And if a computer program looks for a True or False answer without recognizing that the structure might be Null—it might be empty—the program can literally fail. It won’t know what to do without the missing information—unless it’s been encoded to expect that possibility.
This is essentially what many atheists are trying to express in real life.
Atheism describes the consideration of God as a structure—as an entity or institution—and it isn’t necessarily claiming “False.” Instead—as you've probably heard but maybe had a hard time wrapping your head around—atheism is the absence of belief.
A-belief. A-theism.
Atheism, as a concept, isn’t saying “False.” It’s saying “Null.” It’s saying there is no real True or False information available. The structure is simply empty of data that can be evaluated. It’s not a denial. It’s not a rebellion. It’s a recognition: the field has not been filled.
The data structure for God, from this view, just doesn’t contain evidence that can be classified one way or the other.
And this isn’t just a technical point. It matters in real life—in families, in classrooms, in communities. When people are pressured to take a position they don’t actually hold—or to claim belief where none exists—it can create distance, even harm. Some of the deepest tensions in our culture come from that push to choose, when all someone really wants is to be honest: I don’t know. I don’t believe. I haven’t seen the data.
This doesn’t mean all atheists think alike. Some do actively claim that the God proposition is False. That’s often referred to as strong atheism. But what I'm describing here is the actual definition of atheism—the absence of belief. Sometimes called implicit or common atheism. Atheism in its clearest conceptual form.
And when you understand that, you see why the pressure to declare True or False can feel so off. For atheists like myself, the identity doesn't stem from refusing to believe, and it shouldn’t be framed as something negative. It’s a way of holding space for the unknown. Some people are just living with Null.
And there is meaning in recognizing Null. It's honest. It’s real. It's utility within the structure of our cultures—available to hold any True or False information the future. And it's just as valid if it never does, even if some refuse to see it that way.