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I am a Devout Agnostic. I am absolutely sure that I have no sure idea whether there is a 'god' or reasonable facsimile thereof. Nor do I find it directly relevant. Religion, whether it be atheist or theist, is a symptom of the human condition to understand the (so far) un-understandable. Thank you for your support.

JohnnyThorazine 7 Nov 26
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I agree

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atheism is not a religion, just as bald is not a hair colour. atheism simply means you do not believe in a god, The only reason you have doubt in the non existence of god/gods is because so many other people tell you there is one, do you really think you bedroom is full of invisible pink unicorns that move out of the way before you can touch them, because there's no way to prove that its not, or there's stealth goblins that gather around and watch every time you masturbate.... i can't say for certain that these things arn't real, but the possibility is so ludicrously low that its not worth considering.

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Posts like this, while probably sincerely intended, do my head in.

'Scuse me while I turn my brain off and float for a while:

While, undoubtedly, lavender and crossroads are the best explosive, the scabbard of pork opinion is a celery of no compass.

And your addition to the comment is pensive and valuable. hehe....I master de bater I am sure. I have nothing to offer yet I feel the need to open my mouth....perhaps you should just yawn and save us all the noise?

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un-understandable is a perfectly awesome new word....the kids are all raving about it....hehe. As for the idea of the nature of things: I think only an atheist would argue that that atheism is the 'lack of belief in a god'....I know lots of atheists, and all of them are rather vehement in their belief of there not being a god....a faith in the 'fact' that there is no god...as for the television channel/bald/abstinence argument....all those already presume there is a state of being besides off/bald/abstinence, so it would mean you are a non-practicing religious person, like, your average catholic....hehe...now, I saved the peter pan idea for last: there are two states to all things, probable and possible....both of which are subjective. He could be Peter Pan...you may have assessed this as being very low on the probability scale, as to having to decide whether John Doe is a danger to himself or others, or having to decide that he just is choosing not to fly at the moment because he is an obstinate asshat who won't share his secret with you....but somewhere in there is your subjective assessment. (I write this all in a flow, without editing, so I am excited to see what I wrote!)

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You don't know, or you know it (the nature of ultimate reality) is unknowable -- or un-understandable, as you put it?

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Most people are agnostic — theist and atheist alike — and, though some small percentage believe they're gnostic, we accept that we don't have proof one way or the other. But here seems to be the sticking point: how we definitely theism and atheism. Theism is the belief in a God or gods. Atheism is the lack of belief in same. Atheism includes everyone from those who don't accept theistic claims to those who believe theistic claims are false (which isn't the same thing).

Let's say a man approaches you and tells you that he is Peter Pan and has magic fairy dust that lets him fly. Do you
(a) believe his claim
🍺 not believe his claim
☕ believe his claim is false?

In regard to your answer to that question, do you
(a) know whether his claim is valid
🍺 no know whether his claim is valid?

Belief and knowledge are distinct. I, for example, am an agnostic atheist in regard to general claims about God or gods, and a gnostic atheist regarding some specific specific gods.

And that brings us to the issue of definitions. Before we can discuss whether we believe and what we know, we have to be clear about what we're talking about. We need a clear definition for God or gods from the claimant. If the concept lacks form and is just too vague, there's no reason to discuss further. If, however, we're given some basic traits, characteristics, and parameters, that at least gives us a starting point for determining the validity of the claim, whether its falsifiable, etc.

To the point about atheism being a religion, I feel the need to make a series of humorous analogies:
Atheism is a religion just like

  • off is a television channel
  • bald is a hair color
  • abstinence is a sex position

"Agnostic atheist" is not a specific position. Those 4 position models a-theists pass around are absolute nonsense. And, no, most people are not agnostics, using the broad definition the OP appears to be using.

You want to be come to some kind of agreement about definitions, but start out just asserting your own definitions.

P = god

Objectively: P or ~P

Subjectively:

Do you believe P?
Do you believe ~P?

YN: P + ist (someone who believes P)
NN: agnost-ic (someone with no knowledge, or belief, either way)
NY: ~P + ist (someone who believes ~P)

There are 3 positions of belief/non-belief, before even getting into adding knowledge questions. You even seemed to indicate that yourself.

Huxley was a scientist, above all else. He defined his ism, agnosticism, as a form of demarcation. No objective testable evidence = a subjective unfalsifiable claim. Results: unscientific and inconclusive. No belief as to the truth, or falsehood, of the claim. Incompatible with the(os)-ism, the belief a god exist. Incompatible with athe(os)-ism, the belief no gods exist.

"Agnosticism is of the essence of science, whether ancient or modern. It simply means that a man shall not say he knows or believes that which he has no scientific grounds for professing to know or believe." ~ Thomas Huxley, 1884

It should be quite obvious, to anyone, that the OP is using a narrow definition of "atheism" and a broad definition of "agnosticism", that are incompatible, and considers "atheism" to be a belief. You're just pulling out a broad definition of "atheism" and creating a straw man to mock.

So, then came those who changed ~P + ist into ~ + Pist = not someone who believes P. They fully acknowledged theirs was a new, or uncommon, use of the word, as well as fully acknowledging that it was hijacking agnosticism into a-theism.

"In this interpretation an atheist becomes: not someone who positively asserts the non-existence of God; but someone who is simply not a theist. Let us, for future ready reference, introduce the labels ‘positive atheist’ for the former and ‘negative atheist’ for the latter.

The introduction of this new interpretation of the word ‘atheism’ may appear to be a piece of perverse Humpty-Dumptyism, going arbitrarily against established common usage. ‘Whyever’, it could be asked, ‘don’t you make it not the presumption of atheism but the presumption of agnosticism?’" ~ Antony Flew, 1984

Using the broader definition, we got ...

YN: the-ist
NN: weak or negative a-theist
NY: strong or positive a-theist

People also started turning agnost-ic into a-gnostic, not a gnostic, making it compatible with belief, and added gnostic positions. Except, most a-theists seem to toss around the false dilemma, 4 position, model.

Do you believe P?
Do you know P?
Do you know ~P?

YYN: gnostic the-ist
YNN: a-gnostic the-ist
NNN: a-gnostic a-theist
NNY: gnostic a-theist

^As can clearly be seen, they drop asking beliefs about ~P, and only ask a knowledge question, leaving two groups of people mashed together, while pretending to be offering all the belief/knowledge options.

Do you believe P?
Do you believe ~P?
Do you know P?
Do you know ~P?

YNYN: theo-gnostic (or gnostic the-ist)
YNNN: the-ist (or a-gnostic the-ist)
NNNN: agnost-ic (or a-gnostic weak/negative a-theist)
NYNN: athe-ist (or a-gnostic strong/positive a-theist)
NYNY: atheo-gnostic (or gnostic strong/positive a-theist)

And, no, belief and knowledge are not distinct. Knowledge is a justified true belief. A belief you can provide objective justification for, indicating it is true.

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Religion: The belief in and worship of a superhuman controlling power, especially a personal God or gods

Atheist: Lack of the belief in and worship of a superhuman controlling power, especially a personal God or gods

gearl Level 8 Nov 26, 2017
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Well thats cool... i kind of feel the same way. alrighty!

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