Despite us both being atheists, my roommate and I had a disagreement on the usage of the word atheist - are babies born atheists, having a lack of belief in any gods, or do we enter the world with insufficient knowledge of the question to be labeled one way or the other..? I recognize this is a semantic query and not terribly important, but it does go towards clarifying the usage of the word "atheist," and I'm curious to hear opinions/insight. Thoughts..?
People are forever messed up on the use of the word atheist. The atheist/agnostic argument is insane. I am an agnostic atheist. Just call me an un-believer if you like.
On to babies and how they are born. A baby has no way of knowing anything unless you teach it to them. It is how you indoctrinate a child as to whether it will be a believer or not.
Please stop fighting the "atheist/agnostic" argument. I am "against theism or without theism". This is what atheist means. Without gods. You may call yourself agnostic but a lot of them are in churches. They have doubts. I have no doubts but I do not know everything. I cannot answer the god question and neither can you.
Nobody wins when arguing semantics.
Atheist: Noun: a person who disbelieves or lacks belief in the existence of God or gods
Babies lack belief in god therefore babies are Atheist
Agnostic: Noun: a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God or of anything beyond material phenomena; a person who claims neither faith nor disbelief in God.
Babies claim neither faith nor disbelief in god therefore babies are Agnostic
However, babies are ignorant of the possibility of god or gods, therefore babies can be neither Atheist, Theist, Agnostic or Gnostic.
All of these things are true. None of these things are true.
Nobody wins when arguing semantics.
Again i gotta say that Killbot point is pretty spot on. Not a fan of being executed by AI. But he is a pretty good algorithm for pertinent points.
That is the wordiest description of agnostic that I've ever seen. Agnostic just means "no knowledge". Babies can only be agnostic, as they have no knowledge.
@nastynifty I copy and pasted this definition straight from the online Oxford dictionary when you google "Agnostic definition"
If we assume it's true that babies are agnostic, then that means they must claim neither faith nor disbelief in god or gods, babies do not therefore they can not be agnostic.
if we assume it is true that babies are not agnostic, then that means they know for a fact about the existence of god or gods, babies do not therefore they must be agnostic.
This is why no one wins arguing semantics.
They’re not born believing anything. Atheism is a lack of a belief in deities rather than an assertion that there are none. Just as they’re not born democrats, republicans, or any other value structure, they are born without a belief structure. These things are all learned later on
@Jenn_S The question then becomes do you hold the same “lack of belief” vs “belief in a lack of” distinction for any mythical creature be it aliens, Bigfoot, fairies, the Loch Ness monster, etc.? It relates back to the idea that you can’t prove a negative (I know that true “proofs” only exist in mathematics, but for simplicity’s sake I’ll use the term in place of provide significant evidence for). I can’t prove that fairies don’t exist, there is just no reason to believe that they do. God is in the same category.
A theist is someone who actively believes in the existence of a god. An atheist is 'not a theist' (rather than someone who ACTIVELY disbelieves).
Does a new-born actively believe in the existence of a god? No. Therefore the new-born is 'not a theist' - an atheist.
@TheMiddleWay Sorry - ridiculous!
For a new-born child to actively believe in the existence if god, that child must actually KNOW of the CONCEPT of god - and as a new-born child is not yet capable communicating such concepts, there is no means by which that child could have become aware of that concept.
So to say a new-born child does not actively believe in god is valid - because there is no available mechanism by which it could be otherwise.
@TheMiddleWay No no - that's the POINT.
An atheist is not someone who ACTIVELY EXPRESSES disbelief.
An atheist is just someone who is NOT A THEIST. And a theist ACTIVELY EXPRESSES positive belief in the existence if god. So to be a theist the child would have to express active belief in god - which he/she cannot. And not being a theist means he/she is an atheist, because atheist, MEANS 'not theist'.
Cats are not many things. They are not dogs, they are not opera singers and they are not 'active believers in the existence of god'.
If there was a word defined as 'not dog', then cats would certainly be that thing. If there was a word defined as 'not opera singer' then they would be that as well.
However there IS a word defined as not 'active believer in the existence of god' because there IS a word for such an active believer (theist) and atheist means 'not a theist'.
Anything that is not a theist is, by definition, an atheist. So are cats theists? No - therefore they are 'not theists' - and that's what an atheist is.
And so is the new-born child.
You misunderstand.
Theist/atheist is a matter of whether you believe in the existence of god or not. Gnostic/agnostic is a matter of whether you believe that existence or non existence can be PROVEN.
Does a pink fairy called Esmerelda live at the bottom of my garden?
I cannot PROVE she's not there - so I'm an 'Esmerelda agnostic', but that still doesn't mean I actually believe she is, so I am ALSO an 'Esmerelda atheist'.
You can be theist and gnostic (I actively believe god exists, and I believe his status is provable).
You can be theist and agnostic (I actively believe god exists, but I do not believe his status is provable).
You can be an atheist and a gnostic (I am not an active believer in god, and I believe his status is provable).
You can be an atheist and an agnostic (I am not an active believer in god, but I do not believe his status is provable).
Being a theist or atheist does not mean you can't be gnostic or agnostic AS WELL. The concepts are not mutually incompatible - in any combination. The terms refer to entirely different aspects of your perception of reality - theist/atheist refers to your belief in GOD, gnostic/agnostic refers to your belief in PROOF.
Atheist has exactly the same 'a (meaning 'not' ) plus something else' roots as 'amoral' (not moral), 'asymptomatic' (not symptomatic), 'apolitical' (not political), 'asexual' (not sexual) and so on.
Lots of people make all sorts of assumptions about what the word 'atheist' means, and add to it all sorts of other stuff that actually is nothing to do with the word atheist at all.
There is nothing in the word 'atheist' which says you actively disbelieve - only that you are not a theist, meaning you do NOT actively BELIEVE.
It really is a remarkably simple definition. Are you a theist? No? Then you are a 'non theist' - an atheist.
All the other assumed stuff - 'atheists are X', 'atheists are Y', 'atheists are Z' - are just that, assumed stuff. Not anything to do with the actual word atheist - just ADDITIONAL CHARACTERISTICS that some, but not all, atheists may display in addition to their 'non theist-ness'.
And add to that "anti-theist" where a person actively is against believing in god/s. Babies can't be anti-theist, just like they can't be Catholic, Jewish or Muslim.
So basically all we're arguing about is the definition of a word.
You define 'atheist' as being 'active non believer' - and by that definition you are not an atheist, and neither are cats, and neither are new-born children.
I define 'atheist' as being 'not a theist' and by that definition you are an atheist, so are cats, and so are new-borns.
I'm sure both of us fervently believe our own definition correct, but ultimately this disagreement has nothing to do with the actual nature of you, me, cats, new-borns, or god - we're both just playing a game of 'I want to write the dictionary'.
'Except that by ascribing atheism to an object that cannot be atheistic'
I am not ascribing atheism to anything. I am taking a definition of atheism, and stating that a particular object either meets or does not meet that definition - this is EXACTLY the same as having a definition of 'human', and declaring a new-born child meets that definition and is therefore human.
It is no less valid to say 'a new-born child meets (my) definition of atheism - and therefore that new-born child is atheist' than it is to say 'a new-born child meets the definitition of a living thing - and therefore that new-born child is alive'.
Taking a definition of a word, and then saying something is correctly described by that word, is what we do every time we say X is Y. For all Xs and all Ys.
The word 'atheism' does not have 'magical properties' which means you can no longer say if someone or something meets the terms of its definition. It has a definition (about which we may disagree, but whatever that definition is, it has one) and you may ask the question 'does X meet the terms of that definition?' in exactly the same way as you can with any other word.
A new-born child does not meet the definition for a rock - so that child is not a rock, and saying that child is not a rock is not 'ascribing a status to that child that only the child themself should be allowed to ascribe'. It is simply a matter of correctly describing the child, by saying that child is not a rock.
Atheism is the 'property of an object' - either posessed by that object, or not possessed by that object.
Whether that object meets the definition is just a matter of comparing reality to the definition and saying 'Does it match?'
The answer is yes or no - like any and every other defined word, which either matches reality (and is therefore true) or does not (making it false).
Your whole position is that we can describe a child in all cases and ways EXCEPT whether that child is atheist.
We can call that child human (because it meets the definition of human), we can call it alive (because it meets the definition of alive), we can declare it is not a cat (because it does not meet the definition of cat), we can declare it is not a poem by William Shakespeare (because it does not meet the definition of a poem by William Shakespeare) - but for some miraculously unexplained reason, even if we have a definition of 'atheist', we are not permitted to compare the child to the definition and say whether or not they match.
So what characteristic does the word 'atheism' have, that makes it unjustified to compare its definition to a child and say 'match' or 'no match'?
But I can choose to call myself anything I want.
I can choose to call myself a human - and in doing so I am making a statement that actually correlates with the evidence. I call myself a human and guess what? I'm right.
I can choose to call myself a rabbit - and in doing so I am making a statement that does not correlate with the evidence. I call myself a rabbit and guess what? I'm wrong.
Truth depends on correlation to evidence - it does not depend of whether an individual human being 'wants it to be true'. The 'truth is what I want it to be' concept is exactly where religious delusion comes from - 'I want to believe in god, therefore my desire warps truth to match my wishes'.
Whether a person is an atheist is not their choice - they believe what they believe, and if those beliefs are consistent with the definition of atheism then they're an atheist. They may not know it, they may choose to deny it, they may not care - but being an atheist is a matter of what your beliefs about god are, not what you choose to declare yourself.
If your belief system is atheistic, then you are an atheist. The only way you're not an atheist is by BEING A THEIST.
Again - we are disagreeing about DEFINITIONS, not about what is actually real ir not.
You define words differently to the way I define words. This debate is purely about linguistic definition, and the application thereof.
Babies are born both athiest and agnostic. They are born not believing(atheist) and not knowing (agnostic) that god exists. This is how I use these words.
Stop arguing over arbitrary labels and talk about the actual ideas.
@TheMiddleWay It IS the pedantry of some that produces discussions/debates such as this imho.
We are what WE decide to be BUT there are those who seemingly WISH to place labels upon us simply for their means and ends to attempt to rationalize everything and everyone.
I, personally, am an A-Theist in the true dictionary meaning of the word, ergo I live freely and happily WITHOUT any belief that a God/s or deities exist or have ever existed.
@TheMiddleWay To clarify, when I said ‘Stop arguing over...’ it was not a command or an expression condemning the discussion of semantics. It was more a remedy for the problem that was described. We of course need labels and discussion about them. The poll does’t really do much to answer the question about what how the labels are used.
Babies are born neither. They have no point of reference from which to establish a belief or lack there of. A newborn baby's world is limited to consuming breast milk, pissing and shitting. The cognitive capacity to formulate opinions amd beliefs develops slowly over time.
I do not think it genuine to label infants to any philosophical, religious, political or aesthetic school of thought. Even were we to accept any such label it would be inconsequential.
Of course they're born atheists. There's no way they can believe in crazy stuff until it's taught to them.
Babies know nothing. Because of that, you can’t really say they disbelieve in anything. Of these choices, agnostic is the closest, since they neither believe nor disbelieve. But I don’t think atheism / agnosticism applies to them since they’re too young for such complex thought.
You are quite correct, Kathleen. (In my opinion.)
Definition is "rejection of belief in any deities". "Lack of" (usually/always) implies a deficiency. Atheism is not a deficiency.
Even defining atheism as "absence of belief in any deities" is inadequate, because it is TOO broad. There are all sorts of things without a belief in deities, eg: infants, ants, rocks, mathematics, stamp-collecting. It is not "absence" of belief that makes something an atheist or atheistic, it is the personal rejection of belief. Neither biology nor Darwinism is indubitably atheistic, but Marxism is (because it rejects theism). Though belief in any deities is absent from mathematics, Darwinism, stamp-collecting, ants, carrots, and rocks, maintaining they are atheistic is being susceptible to a false consistency.
Just as it is bogus for theists to claim infants are theists, so too is it bogus to claim infants & zygotes are atheists. "Atheism is a conscious position" ; the only implicit atheists are agnostics who do not realize they have rejected belief, not merely suspended it.
"Disbelief" is not the same as "unbelief". Disbelief indicates some kind of difficulty believing something.
I agree that atheism may not be a simple matter of choice, but atheists ought to not LACK the courage to recognize that it is a personal judgement about theism.
Do you believe in petterpewtilli? You don't know what it is, so you don't believe in it or disbelieve in it. Its just a word you haven't learned in order to form an opinion about it. Do babies come with abstract ideas and opinions?..If they could tell us, that would be pretty freaky. LOL
As a Trained and Practicing Mid-Wife, and YES I am a man also and a Straight one as well, I can safely state that new born babies have absolutely no knowledge of God/Gods or any other Deities what-so-ever.
Al a baby is truly awe of, so to speak, is that they need feeding, nurturing and comfort from adults and their parent/s, religious knowledge/instruction ONLY impacts upon them IF and WHEN either society or the parent/s begin to impose it upon them later in their life such as when they actually develop the ability required to understand what they have been told by others around them.
All babies are born Atheists despite IF they are the offspring of Atheist or religious parents.
@TheMiddleWay Well, for one example I have never EVER seen a new-born baby actually emerge from its mother praying or giving thanks for its safe arrival into this world to anyone, anything or God/Deity.
@TheMiddleWay Yes, I have seen over 164 babies I have helped to deliver express their discomfort by emerging from the womb which has a nice, comfortable ambient temp of around 37.2 degrees Celsius into a vast space that is at room temperature, less than that they had for most of the 40 weeks they were living in. They usually start crying from that uncomfortable temperature as well as the 'trauma' of being 'ejected' from the birth canal as well.
Babies do have cognitive responses, they also begin to learn a lot faster than we told to believe, for example they CAN differentiate immediately as to who is their mother by her personal smell, her voice, by her individual heart beat and even by the actual feel of her skin upon theirs.
The actual act of giving birth IS a marvelous thing BUT sadly demeaned and often dismissed by men quite often. That is why the old rule of fathers being disallowed from attending the birth was changed many years ago.
I do not like to use labels, precisely because they can start useless discussions just due to semantics, when people ask me I just say I do not believe in any god or any religion, period. I heard once that coming up with labels for non believers is as futile as making up a word or a label for people who don't believe, lets say in the tooth fairy, what would that word be?
Why are you angry with the tooth fairy?
Babies are born with original sin. Jesus died for.... Wait... I'm sorry. Wrong forum.
Lol
I think it’s pretty hard to use language to fully describe a babies cognition and experiences. Since we know that they don’t conceive of the world with language. Language and defined words are very limited in describing experience and Reality.Definitions only work when the Communication of it is a shared experience. For instance a new flavor or smell or a painting that’s abstract really cannot be described by words it needs to be experience to understand it. And since none of us remember our experience in infancy it’s impossible to define.
Babies, non-human animals,etc., are implicit atheists: they lack the capacity to believe because they don't understand the concept. Others, like you and your roommate, are explicit atheists: you don't believe and have a clear understanding of what that means. Explicit atheists are of two basic types: positive and negative (also referred to as strong and weak, or hard and soft). Positive/strong/hard atheism is the claim that no God or gods exist. Negative/weak/soft atheism is the denial that the claims for God of gods are supported satisfactorily. Does that help clarify?
@TheMiddleWay They still lack belief — the broader sense of atheism (as opposed to explicit, positive atheism which makes the active claim that no God or gods exist). There's no belief on which to hang the "implicit" moniker. It's the fact that they haven't the belief and haven't the conceptualization that makes it implicit.
There is an argument that could be made for implicit theism, which is even one I made 20+ years ago in college (though for a different purpose) when I was a believer: It could be said that we're hardwired to believe in the supernatural, as a coping mechanism (materialist explanation) or through divine agency (gnostic argument). While no active belief is present, it could be stated that babies have the wiring in place for belief and therefore there's implicit theism. There's still the problem that there's currently a lack of belief, but I can see that argument being made in good faith.
Ignosticism seems like it could fit loosely, in the sense that babies cannot understand so it's a meaningless question to them, but ignostics make the claim that the question itself is meaningless because the definitions for God are too vague, imprecise, or arbitrary, not because they lack the capacity to understand an otherwise cogent concept. But I get what you're saying. Maybe we could coin it "implicit ignosticism."
Babies are born without beliefs of any kind. That does not make them atheists. Being an atheist is a conscious choice.
Atheism is a lack of religious belief. Whether you are informed about religion and made the choice to reject it or are totally oblivious to it as babies are, you lack religious belief and are therefore an atheist.
We are definitely born with insufficient knowledge of the question. I've spoke with atheists and religious people both that still have insufficient knowledge of the question as adults.
Personally, I lean more towards the belief that children are born innocent. For me it is their respective circle of influence (family, friends, church) that teaches either enlightenment that promotes Love and happiness for all or darkness that promotes hate and fear of the other. As the child matures in mind and body the best we can hope for is that the majority will choose enlightenment.
Laws have been passed in my lifetime chipping away at specific kinds of religious abuse/neglect of children....as far as that goes with teachers amongst MANDATORY REPORTERS the religious perpetrators have fought back watering down sex education and evolution biology classes textbooks promoting creationism as "science" there is a global movement to prohibit "hereditary religions" that sexually mutilate baby boys and young girls....we need to be VISIBLE INVITING CHILDREN out of the cults doing more than just "hope"
The recent Charleston Post&Courier story about the "conversion therapy" = anti-gay cult brainwashing is another example how the news media will NOT allow any hint of Atheism as the refuge for gays lesbians escaping cults....California and other states passed laws against perpetrators abusing gays/lesbians under age 18 but tax exemptions to these so called ministries only escalates religious abuse of sexual minorities who are adults
The word Atheist means "without god". There is no evidence for a god, we only have a god concept. Babies do not have a concept of a god, therefore babies are atheists.
The hippocampus, which is involved in the formation of memory for facts and events, is not fully grown at birth and early childhood, and so memory of birth is improbable.
"Human memory is notoriously unreliable, especially when it comes to details. Scientists have found that prompting an eyewitness to remember more can generate details that are outright false but that feel just as correct to the witness as actual memories."
However, the amygdala, the brain structure for emotional memory, is mature in infancy, so, these two facts show that a significant emotional event during pregnancy may have an effect on the behavior of a child even though they are not capable of remembering that specific event.
I had to think on this one. I think to be an atheist some thought has to go into the god issue. Babies have no opinion, one way or another and all religionists were at this stage in their life. Obviously they were swayed. I don't think a true atheist could be convinced there are gods.
It's just a label and has no meaning until it means something to them.