The word "God" is just a placeholder for what we cannot know. So both atheists and believers, with their opposing responses (no or yes) to the question, "Is there a God?" are wrong. Because neither they, nor anyone else, is likely to agree on an answer to the second necessary question: "What do you mean by "God"? To define God is to put limits around that concept, dividing what (he, she or it) is from what it is not. But if God is all in all, any such definition is balderdash. It might be better for scientists and philosophers alike to abandon these meaningless questions about the nature, existence, or nonexistence, of "God." As Shakespeare mockingly wrote, "That that is is."