Pushtrak wrote: » ... And no. Most atheists are agnostic atheists. The "I don't know, but I don't believe" not the "I believe there are no Gods." Can you see the distinction?
tommy2bad wrote: » And so? Agnostic is what I was pointing out as the position of non belief. (Or suspended belief) Not atheist. Can you see the distinction?
Geomy wrote: » The belief or non belief in God is vulnerable to further experience. ...
Pushtrak wrote: » Most atheists are agnostic atheists so no, not really.http://actok.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Agnostic+v+Gnostic+v+Atheist+v+Theist.png
tommy2bad wrote: » Except I'm not referring to atheists, I am referring to what the term atheist means. So again, Atheist = belief that their is no God
tommy2bad wrote: » Ahh the old trite phrase. The problem is the question, 'do you believe in God' answered with a yes or no, is what is used most commonly to describe some one as theist or atheist. If we rephrase it to 'do you believe their is no God' then atheism becomes the belief and theism the absence of belief. You choose to believe their is or their isn't a God. Else you can park the options and admit that your position is agnosticism or ignostism, ignorance of God (duno if ignostism is a word if it isn't it should be. you can thank me later)
nagirrac wrote: » Except, hold on a minute, how can you trust materialism, a philosophical worldview, and one shared by the majority of atheists, if based on evolutionary biology humans tend to be irrational? Are we to suppose those who hold to materialism are immune from the effects of evolutionary biology, somehow escaped the irrational bit?
Isn't this a significant intellectual challenge to atheists?
If religious beliefs survived because they conferred survival value, but are completely false, and yet they are the most common beliefs humans hold and have held for the history of humans, how can we trust any human beliefs?
tommy2bad wrote: » Except I'm not referring to atheists, I am referring to what the term atheist means. So again, Atheist = belief that their is no God Agnostic = no belief in God Theist = belief in God See how both atheist and theist require belief?
georgesstreet wrote: » Your are, simply, wrong. Atheism is disbelief, or lack of belief, and not belief. The OED defines Atheism thus; noun a person who disbelieves or lacks belief in the existence of God or gods: Atheism is a lack of belief and not as you, incorrectly, claim.
Pushtrak You are just wrong. It does say a lot about how doomed conversation is when both sides can't even come to agreement on terms. I am interested in why you want to stick to this view though. I mean, do you think there is some equivalence then? Something like a/theism are both faith propositions? Is that it? Because I can tell you the reason why you are wrong... Or you can ask for instance in the A&A forum if people can be agnostic and atheist, and if that is what people who are atheist largely are. I suggest A&A as you can get answers from a lot of atheists in one place. If you happen to know a better one, try them out instead/too.
tommy2bad wrote: » What I was trying to point out was that believing their is no God isn't that different from believing their is a god.
Pushtrak wrote: » So both will have a positive claim, and thus something to prove. Afraid it isn't going to work out that well for you.
Pushtrak wrote: » Beliefs aren't to be trusted. That is why in conversation, if you are saying something you think rather than know, one might say, don't quote me on this, or I think, or from what I hear. Some type of qualifier to show that the position isn't necessarily that strong for some reason. It is the onus of the listener to acknowledge that the position doesn't have much weight to support it. Beliefs are interesting, but they aren't of special importance. Not if they can't be demonstrated.
nagirrac wrote: » You do realize that materialism is a human belief right, a metaphysical belief about how the universe we observe actually is? How do you know its true?
How do you know it's not just another aspect of our evolution, and we have biologically evolved this materialistic belief because it's a survival adaptation.
How do you really know that the thing behind your eyes that translates what is outside your eyes is in any way shape or form a true reflection of what is out there?
No point appealing to science as science is an extension of our senses, a bit broader range obviously, but still generally measuring what our senses observe.
There's a lot of evidence from science that strongly suggest what is out there is not what we may think it is and that materialism is as much jabberwocky as beliefs in a spiritual realm appears to materialists.
So again, why would you trust your brain if 95% of human brains are apparently not to be trusted?
Gintonious wrote: » Didn't Hitchens open with a statement like the following: "It may not be said that there is no God, it may be said that there is no reason to believe that there is one."
nagirrac wrote: » So, we are in agreement then, human beliefs are not to be trusted. You do realize that materialism is a human belief right, a metaphysical belief about how the universe we observe actually is? How do you know its true? How do you know it's not just another aspect of our evolution, and we have biologically evolved this materialistic belief because it's a survival adaptation. How do you really know that the thing behind your eyes that translates what is outside your eyes is in any way shape or form a true reflection of what is out there? No point appealing to science as science is an extension of our senses, a bit broader range obviously, but still generally measuring what our senses observe. There's a lot of evidence from science that strongly suggest what is out there is not what we may think it is and that materialism is as much jabberwocky as beliefs in a spiritual realm appears to materialists. So again, why would you trust your brain if 95% of human brains are apparently not to be trusted?
Pushtrak wrote: » I can almost hear the Hitch voice it seems so similar to his manner of speech :pac:
Pushtrak wrote: » Of course, you're coming from a deist perspective, so you aren't as interested in the specfic claims of made by religions. You just have this picture in your head of a deity just start the show and away it went. While the interventionist deities can be challenged on the basis of what they say, the deity you would suggest is less able to be challenged. Have you been a deist for a long time? And why do you give it so much more stock than say, the idea of the universe always existing? Do you give that notion any stock, a little or are you pretty much an all or nothing when it comes to deism?
Jernal wrote: » Finally in a different post you mentioned religion being a survival mechanism. Just because something may have conferred a survival advantage doesn't necessarily mean it's a good thing. You only need to try telling CF or sickle cell anaemia suffers otherwise. In another thread you mentioned depression. Human brains have basically evolved to allow a part of brain to paralyse the entire system. Again, possibly as a result of survival mechanisms that many people are now unfortunate to inherit a higher susceptibility to. If the brain was a programmable computer designed by humans we'd have implemented a timeout-like function that wouldn't let the entire system become paralysed by stress hormones being released. We'd simply have pressed reboot.
nagirrac wrote: » In reality I am closer to what Dawkins' calls a "sexed up atheist" or a pantheist.
I find the concept of a God who pushed the start button and then went back to sleep as uninteresting as you likely do and in actuality find that position indistinguishable from agnostic atheism.
So my concept of God comes from the lineage of Spinoza through Einstein, the universe we observe as part of a manifestation of God.
but I don't hold to a view that the universe is purposeless and blind, in fact the opposite, I think it is an ongoing creation.
I actually also tend to believe the universe is eternal, so there's no need for a God to start it, and that the big bang was just the start of the space-time we observe.
However, living as I do in the US, where in all reality church and state are completely separate, the ongoing battle between a small minority of fundamentalist religious and a small minority of (sorry robin) militant atheists is so loud and so unproductive.
Science is absolutely wonderful, but should not be constrained by ideology.
At the end of the day reductionist materialism is an ideology and should have no more standing in scientific inquiry than any other philosophical ideology. We can't demand that nature conform to the way we think it should be
The latter leads to a lot of pseudoskepticism, where evidence is not even considered or ridiculed because it conflicts with established theory. Consciousness is just an accidental byproduct of our brain activity as an example, we're just "lumps of meat" or a "bunch of neurons". Well, perhaps we are a bit more than that if we start looking at the evidence a little less dogmatically.
tommy2bad wrote: » So again, Atheist = belief that their is no God Agnostic = no belief in God Theist = belief in God
Brian Shanahan wrote: » Wrong. Here are the proper definitions: Gnostic Atheist: "Knows" there's no god. Atheist: Has no belief in god, willing to accept contrary evidence. Agnostic: Don't know, don't care. Deist: Believes there is some sort of being with power commensurate to popular definition of god, but thinks same being is not interested in what the inhabitants of an insignificant speck in his/her/its creation get up to. Is willing to listen to contrary evidence Theist: Believes there is some sort of being with power commensurate to popular definition of god, who is very nosy and expects everyone to follow his/her/its rules on the minutest little things and actively causes stuff to happen. Can be willing to listen to contrary evidence. Gnostic Theist: "Knows" that what a theist believes is true. Please note I'm using god in the generic sense, because we see the whole spectrum regarding every god invented by man. And also please note, there are far fewer gnostic atheists than there are gnostic theists.
tommy2bad wrote: » Brian, we've moved on; http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=87860906&postcount=7840 BTW you forgot ignostic, turns out it is a word, but just to add it in here, it's someone who believes God is unknowable.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignosticism
tommy2bad wrote: » Ahh yes that's the word I forgot. Well spotted. Ah no I'm not sticking with the attempt at all for some reason I completely forgot about the position of disbelief. What I was trying to point out was that believing their is no God isn't that different from believing their is a god. both are beliefs. Disbelief is a better term as it contains not believing rather than believing. So I was chasing a red herring of my own making.
georgesstreet wrote: » You seem simply unable to differentiate or accept that a lack of belief is not a belief. You are simply incorrect and wrong to claim that a lack of belief is a belief in itself.
Brian Shanahan wrote: » And also please note, there are far fewer gnostic atheists than there are gnostic theists.