I joined this site because of the Title, Agnostic.com. I was looking for free thinking people that are open minded to most things. It appears that my understanding of Agnostic differs from many who post.
Agnostic: a person who holds the view that any ultimate reality (such as God) is unknown and probably unknowable; broadly: one who is not committed to believing in either the existence or the nonexistence of God or gods.
Atheist - a person who does not believe in the existence of a god or any gods: one who subscribes to or advocates atheism.
I am not looking to be controversial just asking for my own benefit.
I am curious in what ways that the people posting are indicating that they are not open-minded or free-thinking. Got any examples?
Would be good to have a place to send a post like that. One example I can think of is I am not prejudice then turn around and say I hate Trump he is conservative and republican by that terminology alone people show how to prejudice they are.
@azzow2 everyone has prejudices, it is inevitable. Try again.
@LaylaNoGods Kind of hard to lay this one out. Say that a post said the sky is purple. We all know this as fact that the sky is blue. So the person that posted the sky is purple. Gets some comments the sky is blue because of water molecules in the air magnify and the prism reflecting is blue. So the poster reply would be that is off topic I am talking about the purple sky.
@azzow2 Late to the party-But you are dead wrong. You can be prejudiced base decisions based on race, gender identity physical attributes . And that is wrong.
But you can have knowledge of ideas and it is not prejudice to think they are stupid. The platform of political parties are ideas. Religion is ideas. The fact that some parties hold extremely stupid ideas is a fact. It is not prejudice to call people in that party brainwashed or dumbasses- since they are in fact brainwashed an/or dumbasses .
It is OK to call ideas stupid. It is not nice to call people stupid , even if the demonstrate they are. We have to come up with a way, to inform them in such a way that the see the light. Hard trick to do.
Let's see if this will make sense to you. I am an atheist because I don't believe in a god or gods. I also do not believe in anything else beyond the mundane we all use simply as an aid to navigating the day to day world. I am also agnostic because I cannot claim to have any way of knowing that there are no gods. In other words, the fact that I don't happen to believe in anything supernatural does not mean that I have to assert there is nothing supernatural. My certainty extends out to about 99.999%.
I'm glad it turned out to be a community page, the reason I didn't join sooner was because I thought it was a dating site, and, I dunno, I'm old school I guess, I've never done online dating, it kinda creeps me out. I'm an analog man in a digital world...
@TroyBarber64 Same. I saw an advert on - ahem - a certain inexplicably popular social media site and initially felt no desire to click on it at all, because I too have never felt that online dating would be for me. I'm still not sure why I did click on it, but I've been back every day for six months.
Atheism is a statement of belief, or lack there of. I do not believe in the existence of any gods, because I have been provided no compelling evidence.
Agnostic is a statement of knowledge. You can be either gnostic - I KNOW something to be true, or I have the knowledge that something is true; or agnostic - I DON'T KNOW if it is true, or I don't have enough knowledge to know if it is true.
So you can be an Agnostic Atheist, Gnostic Atheist (very uncommon - because they are claiming a god does not exist), an Agnostic Theist (what has generally been referred to as the colloquial "Agnostics" ), or a Gnostic Theist.
I am an Agnostic Atheist - I don't believe that any gods exist, but I don't claim to know that one doesn't exist. I do put the probability of the existence of any god at 0.00001%, but I can't say I KNOW one doesn't exist.
I also add a little something extra on there, for me, I'm actually an agnostic apatheist - I don't believe that any gods exist, and even if one did exist, I wouldn't care because I don't think any god is worthy of worship, or that eternal life is a good thing.
First of all, welcome, and I hope you enjoy the site. As with others, I generally view the term agnostic as "not knowing, one way or the other", but I also agree that to say "no god(s) exist" is problematic, as others have pointed out - you can't prove the negative any more than religious people can prove the opposite.
I identify as atheist, my position is that there is no evidence to prove the existence of god(s), but that depends on who my conversation is with - if I am annoyed with a conversation and want to shut it down, I will say there is no god, and that usually shuts them up.
Not all atheists are the same either, some of us come from religious backgrounds, so the path away from religion might be more painful for us that have vs. those that had no religion at all.
I like the term "heretic", which from my understanding of the definition means that I have learned your dogma, and reject all of it, which would be between atheist and agnostic, as if to say "I don't know what God is, but I know what it isn't".
My $0.02...
Can I be a heretical agnostic? I do not KNOW there is or isn't a God but I DO know IF there is..........He or she or they cannot be the God of the Bible. What Loving God would plague his children with Cancer or let them die from starvation? I used to be a Deacon in the Southern Baptist Church and once I started thinking for myself I couldn't buy into all the BS!
@KenJ1966 you can be anything you want, your life, your journey, and nobody has the authority to argue otherwise; that is the joy of being a free thinker
I think that your posted definition of agnostic could be simplified by saying:
Agnostic- of knowledge (“lack of” in this case)
Atheist- of belief in gods (also “lack of” in this case)
An agnostic atheist- lacks belief in gods due to lack of knowledge
Knowledge is a subset of belief
that is absurd. knowledge is certainly not a subset of belief. belief is unbounded by reality.
I find atheists who thrust their beliefs on people to be just as disconcerting as Christians who do the same. I say to each his own and I am firmly in the agnostic category that you describe.
Atheists do stick reality in your face which can be cognitively dissonant, but those who abandon fact and reason for superstition are dangerous as you certainly must see in the Trump "core" cohort.
Sounds about right - Agnostic= don't know, Aetheist = don't believe
no no no atheist = rejected as unsupported by evidence. "belief" has no place in a naturalist's epistemology.
In simplist terms I as an Athiest have come to the conclusion that there are no gods and no evidence for an afterlife etc
An agnostic to me is simply someone that says they don't know one way or the other...and don't follow any particular religious dogma.
many so-called agnostics are simply cowardly atheists.
I'm atheist and agnostic. I don't believe there are any gods, but I also don't believe anyone can know whether any gods exist. I don't know there isn't any god, but I simply don't believe there is a god.
I live a good life, and it shouldn't matter if there are any gods or not. Have better things to do than worship a god that may or may not exist. While others are praying, some of us are doing.
We have a lot of sources for determining morality and ethics, besides our civic laws, family values taught by parents and kindergarten teachers, we experience natural consequences in social situations, we have centuries of literature and history, and even memes on social media for reminders of how we should live our lives.
I really don't see much of a moral compass within the pages of the bible. I can determine right from wrong it seems easier than the god of the bible could when considering some of the horrific things it is said that he did. Wow. If he wants me to believe in and worship him, he's going to have to try harder to earn my respect.
There are many differing views here I have discovered which is ideal for this sort of group. If everyone thought the same there would be no point, we would just be jollying each other along with self-congratulatory arrogance and create a closed loop, going nowhere.
We challenge each other and, in the most part, respect each others views and, more importantly, learn from those who have been fortunate to study in the areas that we haven't. We are complementary to each other.
If you are looking for a cosy afternoon chat by the fireside, this is probably not the place. However, if you want to be challenged and expand your intellectual boundaries, there is nowhere better.
I consider myself to be an agnostic, simply because I don’t write anything in stone and so if it was proven in some future time that god existed...I would have to accept facts! But, at this moment in time there is no rational reason to believe in a god! Of note here, I have suddenly come to think that there might be life on other planets and that happened at 78 yr of age! It never occurred to me that if there is one earth, why would there not be one or more other types of earths in a vast universe! It is amazing what happens to your mind, when you escape the indoctrination of a religion!
I think "agnosticism" in the Bertand Russell sense that you are using it here is no longer a viable position. Since his times the scientific world-view has shifted from the "clockwork universe" Newtonian perspective that absolute truths exist to the Quantum Mechanical perspective that NOTHING is certain and everything is a matter of probability. Under the former view the idea that things whose existence cannot be totally eliminated must remain as "maybes" while under the later "IS" is a rather arbitrary selection of some probabilistic threshold. In other words the modern thinker weighs the evidence and when his/her personal "truth threshold" is reached the hypothesis is judged as true. In the case of the existence of supernatural entities, the probability is so vanishingly small that only a special case (i.e. irrational) "truth threshhold" would not be exceeded. The math comes down to p = .999...1 (one chance in infinity) which as the calculus-wise among you know is ZERO. In a nutshell, if you are intellectually honest you will answer "NO" to both questions: "do you believe the sun revolves around the Earth" and "do you believe in the existence of a god" .
@GodlessBastard I guess...from your judgment call, I am ‘intellectually dishonest,’ and for this moment in time, I will keep it that way! If something out of normal comes up...maybe you will get wind of it! I guess discussing deep intellectual ideas is not my forete...your level is out of my range of mental capacity.
@GodlessBastard a foot note...in a younger day, I would quote statistics and people studying specific matters...but in these latter years, I look at the ‘big picture’ combining accumulated information obtained in my life time! So I really would not be a person that you could use all your figures on! That is not where I am in life! I don’t pour information into my brain...I hear it, then I will watch for other connecting information and eventually I will determine MY OWN idea on the matter! It seems to work as well as what other people are doing, who may come to a different conclusion, ...so sometimes, I measure and cut the board to short...’you win a few and you loose a few!’
I’m a true agnostic. Most of the members are atheistic.
I think that most, if not all, are Agnostic A-theist. That will describe me and until some credible evidence, facts and data is presented in support of the existence of any god(s), then non exists.
They have to pick a name for the site, and agnosticsandatheistsanddoubtingbelievers was a bit harder to remember. But the site caters to all of those categories, to provide a service to people not served by the sites like christianmingle or equallyyoked. Every user has tags on the popup when you hover over their name: atheist, agnostic, antitheist, skeptic, secularist, etc.
"just asking for my own benefit" - was there a question in your post? Because there weren't any actual question marks.
In the words of Monty Python: Well I've always said, There's nothing an agnostic can't do if he really doesn't know whether he believes in anything or not.
I don’t know if the standard labels tell the whole story. As I see it, if you say either that you believe there is a God or you do not believe there is a God, you are talking about yourself. There is no obligation to prove or even explain statements about yourself. If you state that there is a God, or that there is no God, you have made a bald-faced assertion that will need justification if you are to maintain credibility. If you are a Canadian you can just add “aye” at the end of your assertion, thereby turning the statement into a question and slithering away without having to present an argument.
But there are different confidence levels of any belief. Contrary to what is often said, there is almost always SOME evidence for a belief. How much credence a person gives that evidence determines the strength of the belief. Except for a few superficial identities nothing is known with absolute certainty.
I am in the uncomfortable position of being a theist of sorts. So far I haven’t been driven off the site—I’m holding my breath. I lean toward the idea of universal consciousness, with a confidence level of 95%. Whether “universal consciousness” is God is an open question, but it really boils down to semantics. Perhaps the subject will be subjected to scientific investigation at some point.
No need to be uncomfortable, William. You stay right where you are. In my experience thus far universal consciousness seems the most likely, especially when you draw together many of the ancient world's philosophies. Perhaps gods do exist as some form of guiding force as the CEO's, directors and managers of larger corporations. Perhaps there is a plan. Imagine trying to explain Hegel's thoughts on the Trinity to your dog. If he's like mine he'd say "...and how does that effect my dinner and my walk?" Simply put, 'we don't know' or Agnostic.
@Geoffrey51 Thanks for your support sir.
Hi Reelax99
In the end, after an edit or two, I'm not entirely sure how I personally would define agnosticism, so it's a bit hard for me to articulate my views. Also, although it's nice to have a quick sound bite from Jillette above, I don't think this fully gets at the lengthier video comments I seem to remember hearing from him.
If that is a cheap or petty or overly-easy argument and someone wants to say, well, maybe not all-powerful, but very powerful, I'll say, yeah, but even if we take a fraction of a fraction, I just don't see it as possible. I may be using term incorrectly, but I think of this as an inductive argument of a sort (and again, I'm not sure if that's correct) wherein I try to imagine a supernatural entity that controls x, and then expand the "job" of that entity, and it rapidly becomes untenable (IMO).
So, I think there is an argument that can be made that agnosticism and atheism could be construed as being at odds with each other.
Anyway, regardless of all from my personal point of view, your question spurred in me to go and read the page "about us" area and if it hasn't been done already, I encourage it:
I am not that inclined to spend a lot of time on it, but my first impression is that one can reasonably read this to be a page of some intentional inclusiveness, so there should be room here not only for 100% non-believers but for folks who are themselves unsure or who believe certainty isn't possible. As well, I noticed in the profile area where we fill things out, one can self-identify as having something less than 100% certainty that there is no god.
So, I don't think we are really on the same page on some major points (as to god) but I do think this area we find ourselves in seems welcoming to both of us and I hope you're able to find good discussion and meet people here.
Atheism and agnosticism are different is correct. But you have the definitions slightly wrong.
Agnostic is a position of knowledge, Atheism is a position of belief. Technically most are agnostic atheists.
It’s currently the most intellectually honest position to hold.
I am Atheist to the current stock of god myths humanity has conjured as they lack credibility. Not one stands up to any kind of scrutiny and religions continued dominance is sustained by poor education and dogmatism.
No true free thinker would say with 100% certainty that a supernatural being with unknown attributes could not or does not exist. We don’t know enough. And considering the size of our universe the possibilities are beyond imagination.
An atheist today could say with some degree of certainty that the current stock of God’s myths don’t exist (position of knowledge) as the characteristics and events they are responsible for don’t have evidence.
Old-think. Get into the modern world my friend.
@GodlessBastard you lost me. Understanding the definitions of atheism and agnostic is not old thinking. It’s acutally up to date. If anything making definitions clear is important more now than ever before. Social media, fake news and echo chambers of ignorance perpetrating a misunderstanding of atheism and agnosticism.
Your definition of Agnostic as shown in the threadstarter is how I understand the term. I consider myself Agnostic. I KNOW a lot of things but when it comes to the existence of a God or Gods I just feel I've never had any experience that tilted me in the direction of belief and nobody has presented objective, reproducible evidence of the existence of same. I'm 100% ok with saying "I don't know and as far as I'm concerned, neither does anyone else". I guess when I die I'll find out. Or maybe not. In any event, I would THINK a real deity would be a little more obvious about it.
Yeah, some people here take the differences seriously and become offended if they are mislabeled, while most seem to have an atheist/agnostic blend of beliefs.
Most seem to be more atheist-oriented, however.
By the way, this website has a bit of a learning curve so here is some information that might be helpful for dating here.
New members are encouraged to earn website points, and help other members get to know them better, by writing an informational profile that includes their hobbies and interests, and answering all the profile questions, since that's the first place many people look when they see a new member.
The website uses profile algorithms to find member matches, so the more details one includes, the better the match.
Also many women prefer to see a written profile talking about interests, hobbies, and backgrounds that can be quickly perused to find compatible partners.
People make comments and write their own posts to earn more points and privileges; for instance, at level two someone can private email people. There are different perks with each level, and when you reach level eight you get an agnostic T-shirt.
To find members near you, click on the "Meet" button at the top of the page, then on "Members," and enter your preferred search parameters.
Or click on the "About" button at the top of the page to find links to FAQ or the website tutorial.
Click on the 'Meet" button to find member matches
Levels are mostly a way to help identify and reward those who contribute to the growth of the community. The website also gives more access and benefits depending on level.[agnostic.com]
Links to FAQ: [agnostic.com],
and a website tutorial: [agnostic.com]