Religion.. Again.. (beat that horse dead-er)
I've reached a point where I just want one religion to "win". And by win I mean everyone converts to that religion.
If that were to happen, maybe, by some divine force (See: oxymoron) people involved in religious activity would realize that nothing would change. People would still fight, still kill each other, still be retarded, etc. I vote for Scientology. |
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Agnosticism is the only relevant assumption based on facts. Nobody knows.
Christians, Jews, Muslims are all wrong. They can prove nothing. Athiests and multiple theists are all wrong, they can prove nothing. The only thing that makes rational sense is Agnosticism. If you are an Atheist, you are just as big of a problem as anybody who claim religion. edit: I guess there's a church of 'Apathetic Agnostic'. They must pay a lot in Google Search engine optimization. |
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Although this would never come to pass. Humanity thrives in individuality over conformity. |
Dev, you're using the common yet insidious definition of atheism and agnosticism. The atheist from your definition is a straw-man that is easily attacked and brought down. In reality the vast majority of people who self-identify as atheists fit your definition of agnostic. Let's first clarify how I, and most of the self-identified atheists, would define the term and then look at why I label the definition you're using as insidious.
The common definition of these terms assumes a religiosity spectrum with atheism and theism diametrically opposed and with agnosticism as a middle ground. Instead, let's define atheism/theism and agnosticism/gnosticism as two binaries that answer completely separate questions. If you are asked whether or not you believed in God you would use the first binary, and if asked whether or not you are certain of God's existence/nonexistence you would use the second binary. In other words, a theist is someone who believes in God. If you are asked the question, "Do you believe in God," unless you can answer with an affirmation, you are an atheist. If you are certain of your answer to the previous question you are a gnostic. Otherwise, you are an agnostic. So you can either be a gnostic theist, gnostic atheist, agnostic theist, or an agnostic atheist. At this point it should be pointed out that those who express gnosticism are almost exclusively theists. Now that my definition of these terms is clear, let's address why my definition is superior to yours. First of all, it is etymologically correct. If you break the word atheism apart it literally means without theism. Furthermore, if you look at the word gnosticism it means pertaining to knowledge. Theism and gnosticism inherently address fundamentally different things, so your definition seems incorrect to use them as part of the same spectrum. Secondly, my definition is more consistent with the way things actually are since my definition of atheist includes both gnostic atheists and agnostic atheists, whereas your definition of atheist is limited to just gnostic atheists. As I've already pointed out, the gnostic atheist is a beast not really found in nature. Thirdly, my definition provides more information than your definition as your definition offers a triad of options about your knowledge/faith whereas my definition offers a tetrad of options. Finally, my definition does not allow the straw-man fallacy to be used as I show below. Since the etymology of the terms has been established, it should be clear that the theists have hijacked the word "atheist" for their own purposes. Because, as you correctly identified, the certainty of the nonexistence of God is as illogical as the certainty of his existence, your definition allows the theist to put atheism on a philosophical foundation as questionable as theism itself. The almost nonexistent (gnostic) atheist is easily brought down, and then the claim is made that (both gnostic and agnostic) atheism is philosophically foolish. This is obviously a pernicious abuse of language, and should not be allowed to stand. This is why I have long advocated for the use of my definition, and why I call your definition insidious. So in light of what we've discussed, it seems to be the gnostics that are the issue according to you, not the atheist or the theist. I point out again, however, that gnosticism is implicitly linked with faith. You can't definitively say anything about the supernatural without a rigid belief in something. All atheists say is that we have no evidence for God. So if gnosticism is the problem, the theists are exponentially worse than the atheists. But what about the agnostics? Are the agnostic atheists as bad as the agnostic theists? Even here, I would argue that the theists are on epistemically shakier grounds than atheists. I could point out things like burden of proof, or use science in conjunction with Occam's Razor to make this point, however that is a discussion for a different thread. But ultimately the point to this post is that atheism and theism are different. They make entirely different points using entirely different arguments. Equating the two is specious. |
Denying the existence of God is Atheism, right. I get the definition. Having no proof is still the same regardless of how much you want to regurgitate hipster ideologies.
If you don't claim to have the answer, you should "self-identify" as an agnostic. Quote:
I myself do not believe in God in a biblical sense, but I won't deny that some superior intelligence could have created the universe - I have no knowledge either way. Claiming to have knowledge that you don't is just moronic, you should know this. Quote:
And why are you arguing definitions? You completely avoided my point and context. Quote:
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Until we can conduct more experiments on the subject of the Big Bang, we can't prove much. And even then, a simple play on words will make literally any religion match up, such as "how long IS Seven Days in God's eyes?" or any religion where a deity ejaculated, and the universe was born. If I'm correct, Islam scientists, and Buddhism both do their best to match proven science with their own ideas, and any newage group is basically just a rewrite of old ideas with news ideas thrown in. tl;dr Agnostic is the way to go, since death is the only proof atm. |
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Religion is just a way to get soldiers into the army; after that the army doesn't care why they kill. 9/11 = muslim = hate all muslims = go get oil The war was over oil, the warriors were religious. Assuming the world was all one religion, or non-religious, we would just be more open about it. "We want oil, let's go fuck a nigger country in the ass" |
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I guess I don't understand the difference of saying that "God doesn't exist" and "I have no knowledge if God exists or not"
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This and similar charts explain it pretty well.
http://www.skepticink.com/incredulou...3/08/nb2mO.jpg Basically, a/gnostic determines whether you claim to have proof/knowledge, while a/theist determines whether you claim a belief. I don't believe God (or a God) exists, but I don't claim to have proof/knowledge of that, therefore agnostic atheist. The types that argue that God does not exist as if that statement is somehow factual would be considered gnostic atheists. Desmethones seemed to be approximately that in the past IIRC, though I could be recalling incorrectly and I wouldn't be surprised if his views have shifted over time (as mine have.) |
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When an atheist says, "there is no God," it is not meant to be taken as an epistemologically rigorous statement. This is the main difference in the thought process between an atheist and many theists. When a theist states that, "God exists," he can mean that to be an epistemologically rigorous statement since theists believe that a priori knowledge exists. In other words, they believe knowledge can come by means other than empiricism, such as revelation. The typical atheist is not willing to accept this. This epistemological difference is why atheism is more logical than that particular brand of (gnostic) theism. Your problem isn't with atheism's logic, which makes no assertions of certainty. Your problem is with our PR department, which has not yet corrected this colloquial misconception. That's what I was trying to point out in my previous post. In your initial post you seemed to be insisting that the atheist's statement is epistemologically rigorous. My response was meant to point out that your statement was incorrect with respect to the vast majority of atheists. It is why I went off on the seemingly tangential discussion about definitions. The equivocation inherent to your definition of atheist, along with the other reasons I listed, is why I insist on using my definition. Quote:
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This is why I feel Athiests and Theists are legitimately the same problem. They all claim to know without proof, and gnostics are even worse because they claim to have evidence when it's all conjecture. |
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The evidence that I have available leads me to believe that no supreme being (AKA God) exists. I don't claim to know that God doesn't exist, I just claim the belief. Thus I'm agnostic atheist. If I were claiming that the evidence I have available is proof that God doesn't exist (or at least proof enough for me) then I'd be a gnostic atheist. |
I think where you're trying to get at is philosophical. I don't care about philosophy when it comes to this, I'm basing my philosophy on evidence. There is no evidence in favor and there is no evidence against. Until there is I will remain with the same mindset.
I believe that God could potentially exist and feel that it is absolutely pointless to identify oneself particularly on either spectrum given that the evidence is insufficient. I am agnostic. I have a hard time believing that as infinite as our Universe is, fuck - even our galaxy, completely beyond any human comprehension (currently) on a scale so grand that it seems unfathomable to consider that there is nothing above our realm of existence. But again, this divulges into philosophy, and ain't nobody got time for dat. Edit: I apologize if this is aggravating because you feel as I'm missing the point. I promise, I'm not. I choose not to address either belief or claim either one BECAUSE of the lack of knowledge. |
D3V, I think this has less to do with philosophy and more to do with definitions. Most atheists such as myself (and I believe KA) define an atheist as anyone who is not a theist. In other words, if one cannot affirmatively answer the question, "Do you believe in God," then he is an atheist. By that definition, based on what you've said in this thread, you are an atheist whether you reject that label or not.
You seem to take the position that there is no evidence for nor against God. Fair enough. However, KA and I have repeatedly pointed out that an atheist is not one who rejects the possibility of God. Therefore, it seems to me you want to reject that label because of the connotations associated with that word. However, by accepting those connotations you are perpetuating a negative and false stereotype of what an atheist is. My recommendation is to accept that label. Correct any misconceptions people have of that label. Wear it with pride. Hold on to your agnosticism, but be proud of your atheism too. It is the logical position on the question regarding belief precisely because there is no evidence one way or the other. I really would challenge you to look at my initial reply to you and actually address what I said there. I put forth plenty of reasons as to why I think my definition is more appropriate. If you disagree with my reasoning, I'm interested as to why. |
Another point of yours that nobody seems to be addressing is this
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1.) You have accepted the idea that a lack of evidence disproving something need not be present to not believe in it. In that case, welcome to our ranks. 2.) You believe that the idea of Russell's teapot is ludicrous, however the idea of God is not. However, the argument based on your quote is exactly the same against God as it is against the teapot. So in this case, there has to be some argument beyond just, "There is no evidence in favor and there is no evidence against," that causes you to not find the idea of God ludicrous if you wish to remain logically consistent. I'm interested in what that argument would be. 3.) You believe that a cosmic teapot is a very real possibility. In this case, I give up. |
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I understand the definition, I understand the difference between theism and atheism; However, implying that it has to applied or you are either one or the other is false. It's not a black and white issue, it's a belief system. It's completely philosophical to one on how they individually decide to view the two sides. http://www.irreligion.org/wp-content...0/09/wGl13.jpg I choose not to definite myself as atheist or theist because I feel 50/50 on the issue. Which would make it irrelevant to call myself an Agnostic Atheist or Agnostic Theist. I'm just agnostic. I don't identify with a belief system. Quote:
But since you guys are obsessed with having to identify more than 50/50 because God forbid something isn't stereotyped - I would claim Theism over Atheism for the sheer fact of how little we know, might not ever know and will never know. I feel the debate slows down progress of the human race creating false divides that are unnecessary and could hamper, if even for a spec of time in the grand scheme of our existence. Saying "I don't know" seems reasonably plausible instead of saying "Yes God" or "No God" [Theism / Atheism] |
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I believe that is called circular logic, the same that Christians use to justify God:
http://blogforthelordjesuscurrenteve...the-cycle4.jpg Which is 100% why I choose not to claim Atheism or Theism. It's equally retarded. I'm Agnostic and nothing else. |
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