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THERE ARE NO ATHEIST BABIES

(from an atheist website)

...

"There are no atheist babies. There are no Christian babies. There are no Muslim babies. There are just blank templates awaiting programming.

If we take this definition a step further to how some of the “New Atheism” movement describe atheism, as without a belief in God(s), and say babies are without a belief in god, it doesn’t matter if they can consider the proposition or not as by definition they have no belief in god so are atheist… this then applies to rocks, trees, testicles, computers, dogs, cabbages, people in comas with no brain activity (even if theist beforehand) etc are also all atheists.

Do you really want to broaden the spectrum of atheism to such an absurd level that anything without a belief in god is classified as an atheist? Do you really want a theist to compare the cognitive skills of an atheist to that of a cabbage? Is it fair to give philosophers such as Hume the same credence as a testicle?"

"Saying we are all born atheist, regardless of your definition of atheism, is an incredibly weak and pointless statement. Making this argument makes you sound silly and that you are arguing for ideological reasons.

We are all born without any beliefs one way or the other, nor awareness of any of the topics to “lack belief” in.

If you HAVE to define a default position, an innocent or blank template is best, but if you want to use one of the 3 epistemological answers, the closest is agnosticism (but even that is wrong). It is only once a position has been considered and responded to can we truly say one is an atheist, theist or agnostic. Babies do not have the ability to do this. Yes, once a baby develops it can hold beliefs and it may be indoctrinated into a particular belief or allowed to research and make its own mind up (which could still lead it to theism). Till that point though, it is unfair to say it holds an active belief position.

We really shouldn’t be making these definitional changes and weak arguments to suit our narrative/ideology."

[answers-in-reason.com]

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skado 9 Jan 29
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13 comments

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0

If we go back to our primitive ancestors. They might have easily surmised that the world was made for them. After all, food grows on trees, caves make great shelters and I don't make anything if it's not "for" something, ie. an axe or knife. So obviously the world was made for me. The trouble with that mindset (which unfortunately still persists) is... Consider a puddle, and for the sake of argument, we give it consciousness. There it sits and surmises that the hole it resides in was made for them, after all, it fits them perfectly. What the puddle does not realise is that the sun is shining and they are steadily drying up and shrinking.

…unlike theists, who are growing worldwide as a percentage of the population as well as in absolute numbers, according to Pew Research..

0

It's probably safe to say that all babies are born agnostic.

Newborn babies don't have the ability to identify themselves as agnostic because they are not capable of processing thoughts on whether a god exists or not. They are not capable of having 'thoughts' in the first place.

@Ryo1 Of course they don't identify as anything. I was just being a bit tongue-in-cheek, playing with the Greek etymology of the term agnostic, i.e. not knowing. 😂

@Flyingsaucesir You dodge well.

@Ryo1 You troll transparently. 😂

I would think of the baby as Schrodinger's cat.

The definition is : In the thought experiment, a hypothetical cat may be considered simultaneously both alive and dead, (atheist, believer or agnostic) while it is unobserved in a closed box, as a result of its fate being linked to a random subatomic event that may or may not occur.

This explains the lack of general knowledge (not having seen a cat), the lack of intelligence thru experience and experiments, and lack maturity in general, and a creator in specifics.

0

Could say all people are born anarchist. Meaning Noone below me or above me. Better choice than alway up or down.

1

All babies are born atheist and agnostic. They don't have any knowledge of a god or believe in any god.

Atheism is belief that there is (are) no god(s). I doubt the issue ever crosses a newborn's mind.

In order to identify yourself as atheist or agnostic, you have to have the premise that a god exists. Newborn babies are incapable of having logical and rational thoughts. They don't even have the awareness of their own exisatance. Labeling whether a baby is to be theist or atheists, or whatever, is what adults do for the baby, not by the baby itself.

@Flyingsaucesir No - to be theist is to believe in at least one god(dess). To be atheist is to not be theist.

There is no requirement for an atheist to actively NOT believe in god(s), indeed there is no requirement to know of the conceot of god(s) - all an atheist has to do is not be someone who actively believes.

@ToakReon I just had this debate a cople days ago, and it ended with my supplying definitions of the word "atheist" that say it is belief in the non-existence of a deity. And that was not the first time. Do I have to repeat the task again? I'm beginning to feel like Sysephus.

@Flyingsaucesir You may repeat as much as you like. 'A' - as in 'amoral', not moral. 'Theist'.

It really is very simple.

@ToakReon Maybe not as simple as you think.

@Flyingsaucesir No, it really is that simple. It's just that many people have chosen to use the term 'atheist' and apply to it their own modified meanings.

Then you get impassioned discussion (argument) that CLAIMS to be about god and his existence/non-existence, but is actually nothing of the sort. Just two people with different definitions of words, unable to agree on what those words mean.

"If you're an atheist then bla, bla, bla."

"No, if you're an atheist then blo, blo, blo."

Great - an argument about English usage. About word definition. An argument that explores and debates nothing whatever about the reality of god and whether he's actually there.

And yes, I'm guilty myself. I've engaged in such an argument with you, even though I recognise that the argument is ultimately meaningless, pointless and of no value.

@ToakReon I would not say pointless. It is important to have good, clear definitions for things. The field of semantics is far more important than any discussion of the existence of an imaginary entity for which there never has, nor is there ever likely to be, a shred of credible evidence. Semantics has practical application. God is pure speculation. I entreat you to read this article, then tell me if you still think that the definition of "atheist" is a simple matter.
[plato.stanford.edu]

2

"Atheist" is certainly a bad choice of word as its main interpretation is someone who believes there is no God rather than being undecided. Babies are all agnostic, but even that word can be objected to on the basis that they've never even considered the issue. Babies don't care about God at all as it's a concept with no meaning for them. I don't know of any word that describes that state, so the best we can do with existing vocabularly (if we want to be concise) appears to be the word agnostic. To call babies atheists automatically leads religious people to see that as a sign of stupidity and it sets them more firmly in their beliefs.

2

Be aren’t born completely blank. We have predispositions that can become expressed in ways such as seeking something greater than ourselves (transcendence or oceanic feeling) or to avoid or cheat death (terror management). Not quite a god shaped hole, but a spandrel we can doodle our culturally specific impressions of divinity upon. Add to that a tendency to trust in the impressions transmitted from our parents.

Yes, the author further clarifies his statement in the longer, linked version.

1

I think we are all born predisposed to knowing what everything is. We are learning from day one but want to know what everything is and where we came from. We strive for this and many fall in with others who say they found it in some ancient book. Your entire existence is exposed and planned out by some mystical being and for some reason people who go this route think that ancient humans had to know more than we do now, so they accept it as truth. This is quite a step from the blank slate that we started with. The fact that all of us have different experiences along the way is also proof that there is really no free will that so many talk about. This is because we are not the same and our experiences are not the same. One person at the end of their rope does not hold true for all of us. Whether you are religious or not examine your belief system and you will see how it has changed over time. Some call this growth.

3

We are born with a blank sheet on to which a mixture of beliefs and facts are imprinted as time passes. The wide eyed stare of babies as they look around them and hear the background sounds which are meaningless because they have not yet learned to speak. The words cat and dog are meaningless to six month old babies. Gradually, a language is learned and with it comes a mixed bag of beliefs and facts that initially reflect the values of the parents.

I do not think that there is any predisposition to belief or non belief in human beings. The gaps in knowledge are either filled with belief or an honest admission that we do not know something. A sense of identity is gradually formed on the basis of beliefs and knowledge. Our frame of reference may become centred on a belief or expand with the acquisition of knowledge.

As far as beliefs are concerned I do think that we are born a blank sheet yes. But we are not a complete blank sheet, we are born with instincts, emotions, drives and hungers, which are hard wired, for without those we would just sit passive, until we faded away.

We are born with a tendency toward agency detection which may and often does misfire. It’s sort of like that theory of mind some folks tout. We model what we presume is going through the minds of others. It’s a minor step to anthropomorphize as animism or even theism, that there is a being like us behind the curtain of existence.

1

That is all very true. But I have little interest in arguments about how people define words. Each person may do so as they wish. The only really honest obligation is to make the definition you are using plain at the outset, if there is likely to be confusion. So that if you are defining atheist to be a character of adult humans who are aware enough to make an informed choice, then you should say so, and if you are taking it to mean anything, like a cabbage, which does not have active beliefs, or anything to believe with, then you should say that too at the outset. No problem then.

But cabbages and babies do have one other important thing in common. Which is that, not only are they not capable of holding an informed opinion, but they are also not capable of expressing one. So that their inclusion, or not, within a religion, is decided for them by others. A priest may take a cabbage. Which is held by the cult to be unclean, because it was grown and handled by an unclean member of another religion. Then wash it in holy water, and declare it to be clean, and therefore our cabbage, fit to be eaten at the cults holy feast on their holy day.

So too a baby may be declared to be a Christian baby, a Jewish baby or an animist baby etc. Without it having any say so, and then just like the cabbage, it may be denied some medical treatments, starved and beaten for ritual reasons, and even have bits cut off it at the whim of those who decided it religion for it.

I agree with clarification of the meaning of a word(s) or concept at the outset, however, as you well know, words and concepts are often parroted by the speaker or writer as though they contained the weight of a universal truth and often merely reflect beliefs.

@ASTRALMAX Yes linguistic sophistry, the belief that language is a source of truth and wisdom, or even that others can be fooled into thinking it is. Is a very common failing or dishonesty.

@Fernapple The Second Sin by Thomas Szasz is freely available online for download in Pdf format. It is a highly condensed version of his works and can be read in one sitting, see the chapter on language.

“If you simplify your English, you are freed from the worst follies of orthodoxy. You cannot speak any of the necessary dialects, and when you make a stupid remark its stupidity will be obvious, even to yourself.” George Orwell

5

I can see there is a flaw to the premise that babies are born atheist. Being theist or atheist is kinda conscious description of oneself. Babies are born without being aware of anything, even themselves. In fact they take many years before they finally become aware of their own existence. They also gradually develop the sense of 'sameness' with which they gradually identify themselves through interactions with others, the environment they are growing up in, clarification and sharing of their feelings and thoughts, etc., etc. Consciousness is self-awareness, so I don't think it applies to rocks, trees, testicles, computers, dogs, cabbages, people in comas with no brain activity.

Ryo1 Level 8 Jan 29, 2023
2

Now you have me wondering whether or not abstract nouns are capable of belief in themselves.

Discussions centred on supernatural beings whose putative existence is untestable scientifically may be philosophically vapid irrespective of how various definitions are couched.

Any behavior that any species (especially our own) consistently exhibits across time and across location, which has measurable consequences, especially sometimes destructive ones, should be the subject of scientific and philosophical scrutiny, regardless of, and perhaps especially because of, its apparent absurdity upon casual observation. Nothing should be off-limits to science.

And the definitions of words are the foundations of our communication and understanding of these elusive subjects.

If people weren’t torturing and killing each other over these misunderstandings it might be different, but they are, and probably will, well into the future.

@skado Atheist babies is obviously flawed logic.

Scientific evaluation of cognitive belief is valuable.

Focus on the existence or otherwise of supernatural beings was perhaps too narrow and as limited as the intent of the article to dismiss belief in gods.

Is religiosity really just a cultural construct attaching to the innate trait of an ability and desire to learn about the world?

@waitingforgodo
I would guess that trait surely figures in to the cocktail. I think there may be several more. Not least among them the cultural need, in post agricultural revolution times, to counterbalance the evolutionary mismatch generated by moving from nomadic to agrarian lifestyles. And at least a half dozen other genetic, cultural, and environmental influences.

@skado My Home and Garden magazine madness is cultural and convenient but is that desire for comfort an evolutionary mismatch?

Societal imperatives are profound but unless and until the god gene is gleaned from the genome some may consider religion a belief and behaviour that is learned rather than being innate.

@waitingforgodo
Mismatch is between organism and environment. Traits that evolved in one environment being maladaptive in a new or changed environment.

Religions are not about gods. Gods are a superfluous and interchangeable means to an end. Some religions use them - some don’t. All religions provide counterbalance to mismatch. The specific means are learned. The need and aptitude are innate.

3

I approach this differently. In my view, sadly, unfortunately, regrettably, people are born with a wired predisposition to religion -- actually non rational beliefs and mysticism-- ranging from very low to nill ( like me) to moderate to extreme dependence and adherence ( religious fundamentalists), just as people are born with other predispositions. I am the first to admit this is a topic of contention amongst some atheists, who like to think we are 'all born atheists but socialisation does the rest', and a sore point with religionists, pseudo religionists and alike who see this as atheist arrogance. My understanding is that the clinical study of this suggests that people are born predisposed to mysticism more than others, but in any case this remains one of those issues that gets people's feathers flying. In the end, all I'd like see is religion reduced to a personal internal habit, like pornography, which, if you absolutely have to have, then keep it at home and away from the children until they're old enough to decide for themselves. In other words, goodbye formal religion. My dream. Best we could hope for.

I’m with you up to the point of what to do about it. All evidence I have seen suggests that the religious impulse is not only innate, but innate at the level of group, rather than at individual, selection. So I doubt it can ever be confined to individual behavior. For this reason I support a reform, rather than an abolition approach. Religion has always changed with the times, so it can again, but it has never gone away or been an individual-only, rather than a social, practice.

0

Simple is it not???

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