Quote:Look guys, if you go back and read all my posts here, you will see that I NEVER told you you couldn't use your definition of atheism. I only came back repeatedly when you would revert back to your definition as the only one. I see this conversation as going round and round because you two and others like Olympus Mons would come in after we had basically amicably settled the whole spectrum of atheisms thing and revive it by (once again) asserting that your weak, "agnostic atheism" was the correct way to use the term.
I continue to assert that "agnostic" does not fit in between atheist and theist... but I don't say my way is the only way of looking at it, actually I've conceded a couple of times that I don't view it as important, but I keep going back to it because you insist that it is not a legitimate way of viewing things by saying things like...
Quote:Anyway, have at it. I hope this clarifies to some extent what is meant by the term god. As well as what it truly means to be an atheist.
Don't you see the hypocrisy of accusing us of being rigid with our definitions and then claiming you know the "true" meaning? Like I said, I've conceded a couple of times that I think words are malleable and that I don't think it's of great importance.
The odd thing to me is that you recognize weak atheism and strong atheism, but for some reason there is a disconnect and you tell yourself that weak atheism isn't atheism.
Quote:If you self-identify as an atheist, you may not be ready to join an association of atheists, but you are certainly not simply the guy who has less than certain belief, acknowledges the possibility but finds there to be not enough evidence... and certainly not someone with a total lack of any belief.
Again you claim to have some kind of certainty about what someone who identifies as an atheist is saying about themselves. I definitely AM a guy who has less than certain belief. I DO acknowledge the possibility but find no evidence. Granted I don't have a total lack of belief with regards to claims made by people... but in regards to the "vague abstraction that is "god"" I have no belief because I don't know what that means. I don't see how you people find it so hard to understand that my brain just doesn't assign a truth value to some abstract concept that I don't have any experience of and that doesn't manifest in reality (and if it does it is indistinguishable to me from something that doesn't)
Quote:I acknowledge your right to use broad versions of terms that I feel would be better left narrow, especially when there are other words that already describe said usage of the term. But I will still stick to terms that describe more accurately what I am talking about. I find that, by and large, self proclaimed atheists nearly always disbelieve in gods... often with some equivocation about not being able to be 100% sure, but still 99.99999% certain that gods don't exist any more than Santa or the Easter Bunny.
Right but why is it you feel they should be left narrow? You claim things like you are using "theological definitions", could you show those to me? You claim philosophy is on your side, I can't really comment on that since most of the philosophy I have read uses the same definition of atheist as me, so I guess I could say philosophy is on my side too. You say history is on your side, well the word agnostic doesn't date back very long at all... unlike the atheist vs theist debate. You seem to have failed to acknowledge that.
I do disbelieve in gods, I disbelieve in the Abrahamic god... but I don't disbelieve in the concept of god outright. Again, I just don't understand why you find that so difficult to grasp. The gods that have been presented, to me, are not backed up by anything substantial and are internally contradictory in their teachings. So I disbelieve. The abstract notion of some entity outside our universe who had some kind of hand in creating our universe is NOT something I have any way of knowing one way or the other, and I have no way of even assessing the probability in any meaningful way... so why would I hold a belief on it? Or rather, how could I hold a belief on it? If you mean just go on gut feeling, I have no gut feeling about it. Same as if someone asked me who was going to win in a football match between two teams I had never heard of, I would have no gut feeling. In this instance the two teams are "there are some kind of god/s" and "there are no kind of god/s", I have no knowledge of anything outside my universe, so for all intents and purposes these two teams are equally matched (when it is the nondescript god without a bunch of specific characteristics).
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However, when they smell a debate in the air, a lot of them are sharp enough to realize that you can not successfully debate the strong atheist position, so they revert to a weak stance for the purpose of argument as it places them on more solid ground. It is rather disingenuous IMO, and I think that if you want to defend agnosticism defend agnosticism... Only, no one ever debates against agnosticism. If you have no belief, or believe you can't know, people tend to accept that as a rational position and move on.
I think you are just hearing what you want to hear in these debates. My position is always fairly consistent I think, and the majority of debates I have watched are the same.
Quote:Atheists nearly always fall back on this ludicrous "burden of proof" argument. As if they are sitting in a hall of learning and some theists just rushed in with wild new claims. Fact is, that belief in gods goes back to before there was written history. There has never actually been a human civilization that was devoid of theism... and most of them were actually centered around theism.
So truth is determined by age? The fact that a claim was made by people thousands of years ago, with a lot less understanding of their surroundings than we have, means it has some weight in terms of validity? That seems counter-intuitive at best.
This ludicrous "burden of proof" argument is really very simple. If someone asserts something, they must provide evidence of their assertion. Otherwise I have no reason to take them seriously. That is why atheists reject the specific claims made by religions, and it doesn't matter if you think people don't need to provide evidence for their claims... people like me will still require it anyway
You hold a position on it, but you hold it based on subjective experience and you don't seem to expect others to share your belief, you admit it is based on subjective experience. That's fine, you don't need to prove your own experiences to me... but your experiences do not dictate reality. You could be right, you could be wrong. If you tell me you are right and I am wrong, that is a claim that is either true or false and has a burden of proof on your part, which if you do not meet I will dismiss your claim... not assert that you are wrong, just not accept your claim.
Quote:Atheism is actually the newcomer on the block. And yet, theists generally don't try to shift the burden of proof onto the atheist. Why? Because theists are comfortable with the idea that these things are not provable. They have faith for the most part (something I don't ascribe to at all BTW). The fact of the matter is that most theists are ALSO agnostics. Therefore conducting a debate between theism and atheism and then attempting to corner agnosticism for the atheists is a clumsy and unhelpful debate technique. I would say 90% of the theists in the world do not hold certain beliefs in the existence of deities either.
I don't find that anyone steps into a theological debate wanting to debate whether or not it is rational to not accept other people's unfounded claims about deities. The lines of debate are generally "Are there such things as G*d and/or gods?" "Is it rational to be 'gnostic' one way or another on this subject?" etc. Someone with no belief whatsoever is generally not asked to debate that subject.
I think we are watching different debates, lol. I always see theists shifting the burden of proof. I also see many theists attempting to prove god with logic, or makinf claims about the contents of certain books proving that those books are accurate. There probably are many theists who are comfortable with the idea that these things are not provable, but there are also barrel loads of theists who believe they have proof and that we should all believe them. Philosophical debates are all well and good, but they really don't seem to get us any closer to the truth. I have never seen a convincing philosophical argument for the existence of a god, or really for the non-existence of god either (as in, the abstract, non-specific god... I've seen plenty of convincing arguments for the non-existence of specific gods).
Quote:You asked for some links...
Some random atheist who happens to be a strong atheist. Ok great, so we have established that there are strong atheists in the world. I can live with that
Penn jillette... another strong atheist, for sure. Also an anti-theist, a position I don't necessarily hold but I can certainly understand it.
The next one is a debate Matt Slick, I have watched a full unedited debate between him and Matt Dillahunty on youtube, Matt Slick is a joke and is incredibly dishonest. I'm not even inclined to accept that conversation as something that definitely happened, I think it is entirely likely Matt Slick just made that whole thing up. But that is irrelevant, it could just as easily be true and that would be an example of a gnostic atheist with a rather heavy burden of proof to meet. I rare thing indeed.
The next one is a mainstream american media piece written by the author of "The Human Christ: The Search for the Historical Jesus".
So in response to my asking you to present some atheists backing up your definition of atheism you have presented me with a nobody, a magician and two christians. I should probably have been more specific. I'm looking for things that back up your position that strong atheism is the true atheism and weak atheism is not atheism, backed up by well known atheists... one's who have written books, or taken part in serious theological debates. I could just as easily find some internet nobody who would make any number of claims about the meaning of the word "theism". If you like you could just show me the "theological definitions" you are using, since "theological definitions" is not a term i had heard before you used it.
Quote:Read the arrogant quotes from Hitchens & Dawkins for a clear example of what a "real" published atheist has to say.
I agree they can sometimes be quite arrogant, but they definitely agree with my view of the word atheism. As i've said, Dawkins has identified himself as an atheist, an agnostic and an agnostic atheist on several occasions. I actually don't really like the way Hitchens and Dawkins are. I do believe they feel they are certain, although they would not admit such a thing in a debate. I'm not convinced you have done any serious reading from either of them though.
Quote:I could point you to reams of books, videos, interviews and texts... but I have other things to do. Google any theological debate on atheism going back to the middle ages. I think you will find that weak atheism is merely a fallback position for atheists or an attempt to define agnostics as atheists for the most part. Those people who stand up and claim to be atheists nearly always have a strong belief that there are no gods.
In the middle ages the term agnostic did not exist, and I don't doubt there were plenty of strong atheists back then as well as plenty of weak atheists. But the mere fact that you keep invoking centuries old history seems to just make your position of atheism - agnosticism - theism even harder to hold to, since back then it was just atheism - theism, with theism being believing in a god and atheism being not believing in a god. The word agnostic was only introduced in the late 1800's.
Again you say that people who claim to be atheists nearly always have a strong belief that there are no gods... seriously? Which atheists are you talking to, and are you actually listening to them? No atheist in this thread has taken that position, so it is certainly not true of most atheists in this thread. Most of the atheists I have spoken to, and ALL of the atheists I know in real life (almost all, if not all of my friends are atheist) do not hold a strong belief that there are no gods.
Quote:Perhaps you could point me to the plethora of websites, journals, books and forums which promote a purely agnostic view of atheism?
I am not going to point you to a plethora of books, journals and sites that promote a purely agnostic view of atheism, since I am not asserting that there is no such thing as strong (or even gnostic) atheism. If you just mean point you to writings etc by people who hold an agnostic atheist position, I will just point you to every popular atheist of the day. The "strong belief" part (if that is what you insist on calling it) is when specific claims are made about specific gods and specific books, which not only fail to meet their burden of proof but also give a multitude of reasons to think they are false.
As much as i am enjoying this HF, I don't think I have the energy to keep doing it. You keep saying one thing, I keep saying the other. No doubt your response will just be a re-hashing of what has already been said (same as this one by me more or less was) and then my next response would just be the same. I am happy to keep going round and round, and probably whatever response you give me I will be compelled to answer
But really I'm quite happy to just agree to disagree, if you will stop asserting that you are "correct" and I am "incorrect" and that the definition of atheism I am using is flawed where yours is not flawed. I am not saying you are completely wrong, I'm just saying that my view (a view held by the majority of atheists i have spoken to, on and offline and also in this thread) is at least as valid