Caveat: Delusions of Skepticism

I spent time surfing around online yesterday, and have also been reading Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion.  Dawkins is a vaguely militant atheist, but upon reading his book and thinking about what he has to say, I would say his skepticism trumps his atheism, and I think it's important, as he does, to make a clear distinction.

If I understand Dawkins' argument clearly, scientifically well-founded skepticism disallows a 100% atheism, but inevitably leads to a 99.99% atheism.  But a skeptic will always say:  "show me the evidence, and I will change my mind."  A 100% atheist will affirm that no evidence will ever be found:  that's what I like to call "faith-based atheism." 

My wanderings online led me to wikipedia (inevitably) where I found an article on mereological nihilism.  As I have understood it, it's a sort of extreme anti-platonism – a denial of the objective reality of all composite objects (which is to say, only philosophically "simple" objects are actually "real" – e.g. quarks and photons and such indivisibles). 

Is this a true anti-platonism?  Unless I very much misunderstand, it seems an almost perfect inversion of the parable of the cave…  In the cave, the "real" reality lies in the transcendent perfect prototypes (i.e. pre-existent images of the compositional objects), and the illusion is in the grainy shadow-projections on the wall.  But all these prototypes (categories, or sets, e.g. sets of  "simples arranged tablewise" standing for "table") are just illusion under mereological nihilism.  I think I may be a mereological nihilist, on top of being a godless atheist and metaskeptic (i.e. I'm skeptical of skepticism).  In any event, it sounds cool.

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