Kartikay wrote:nen888 wrote:..thanks Kartikay, juz wondering how this differs from the old term..'agnostic'...?
The technical definition of Agnosticism is the belief that religious claims are "unknowable," whereas Possibilianism says that it may be knowable, but we don't know yet.
David Eagleman (author of the great little book “Sum”) is the person who coined the term “Possibilianism”. (See
his Possibilianism site ).
I think Possibilianism is an active, creative, and imaginative approach to exploring new ideas. Agnosticism doesn’t necessarily take the position that religious claims are unknowable, and that characteristic certainly isn’t what distinguishes Possibilianism from Agnosticism.
If the book “Sum” is any indication of Eagleman’s intent in creating the new term, then I think that Possibilianism is more a creative, imaginative approach to exploring the unknown rather than a way of simply declaring one’s conviction that certain things can’t be known. He considers “Agnosticism” to be too weak a term, because, to paraphrase him, too many Agnostics are simply uncertain about whether or not God exists, and they assume it’s a simple dichotomy. This may be true of some Agnostics, but it isn’t how Agnosticism is defined.
Take a look at the thread
“The Improbability of Hyperspace” for my take on “Possibilianism” and Agnosticism.
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