falsifiedhypothesi
Bluelight Crew
^^^^^^^^^^
There is a redefining of words going on with Atheists - it's like they have decided that maybe being believers of the antithesis of Theists is somehow demeaning and they are trying to abrogate the position of Agnostics. An Atheist is 'against God' and in the actual meaning, denies God. If Atheists are not certain they are, again by definition, not Atheists but Agnostics.A lot of our scientific knowledge has directly contradicted religious claims and the confidence Atheists have is high, concerning the probability of a particular set of beliefs being completely wrong. This translates into not holding those beliefs and certainly not practices which require unnecessary obligations.
Theistic beliefs are not objective phenomena that can be studied or tested, not any rational ones anyway. There is virtually no evidence to support them. We have witnessed many common sense ideas, seemingly, with better evidence supporting them, none the less, objectively disproven.
Atheism need not come about from any kind of certainty in what doesn't exist but can simply leave the unknown as is. One can still conjecture and imagine, naturally, and hold other beliefs. Atheism is a reaction to Theism, which would also include Gnosticism, making Atheists Agnostics as well.
Atheism does not necessarily apply to all religions, especially ones the Atheist is simply unfamiliar with.
EDIT: Gnosticism seems to be a religion unto itself, not simply a viewpoint applied to another religion or irreligion.
Regarding it as a theistic religion makes Atheism necessarily Agnostic.
As terms dealing in absolute certainty, Gnostic, or conversely, Agnostic, do not matter to Atheism. Whether you have absolute certainty or not these views are both atheistic.
There is a redefining of words going on with Atheists - it's like they have decided that maybe being believers of the antithesis of Theists is somehow demeaning and they are trying to abrogate the position of Agnostics. An Atheist is 'against God' and in the actual meaning, denies God. If Atheists are not certain they are, again by definition, not Atheists but Agnostics.
My main issue with some Atheists/skeptics, are the ones that seem very vocal on the internet that want to claim that Atheism/Skepticism is so radically different than Fundamentalist Christianity, Islam, Judaism, all other religions/spiritualities, etc.; but then they want to convert other people, proselytize others, and lead other people into Atheism/skepticism. They also completely ignore and discount the spiritual and religious experiences of others.
Also, some of them seem skeptical, and extremely argumentative about pretty much everything, just for the sake of being skeptical, extremely argumentative, and clearly are not into free thinking, actually being intelligent, or looking at actual facts at all.
I have friends who are Atheist, and they are not like this at all. Some are completely Atheist while others are Atheist or more Agnostic yet spiritual.
Journeyman said:If they want to step away from the positive belief that there is no God, they need to start calling themselves Agnostic and being a little less vehement about those who do believe in God.
There is a redefining of words going on with Atheists - it's like they have decided that maybe being believers of the antithesis of Theists is somehow demeaning and they are trying to abrogate the position of Agnostics. An Atheist is 'against God' and in the actual meaning, denies God. If Atheists are not certain they are, again by definition, not Atheists but Agnostics.
So let's not start redefining words as some kind of squib reaction to being found out to be believers, let's stick with the actual meanings and make Atheists decide if they wish to remain God-Deniers or move into the 'I don't know' camp.
I think we have more than enough PC word-changing going on in our world - let's not add more to the mess?
I find it rather hypocritical since that's what people of all religions/spiritualities, or even political parties want to do.Is there anything wrong with this ?
I have friends who are Atheist, some of who were actually raised Atheist by their parents
I'm not sure how I missed answering this... maybe I saw Ebola's and Replied there first...So because I am not absolutely 100% certain there is no God, and there is no way I could know for sure, that means I have to be an agnostic, not an atheist? I believe there is no God but I admit that I could not prove that no gods exist, (depending on how you define god) that makes me an agnostic atheist. Those two positions are not mutually exclusive, no one is trying to dodge the baggage that the label atheist carries with it. Maybe some are trying to get away from the label atheist, but claiming to be agnostic will not accomplish that and makes them look stupid.
but it doesn't seem valid with how the Theists, Atheists and Agnostics tend to see themselves.
Richard Dawkins, for example, is almost violently Atheist but he tries very hard to attain the confusion between Atheist and Agnostic
Atheist has a specific definition and I think modern Atheists are trying to dodge the fanaticism that definition implies.
Interesting. As an aside, I don't actually know anyone who was raised "atheist". Usually, the process is something more like, "What happens when we die?" "Well, I don't know, and no one really does. Some think x. Some think y. What do you think?" Cosmological questions tend to be treated similarly.
ebola
Atheist has a specific definition and I think modern Atheists are trying to dodge the fanaticism that definition implies.
Maybe so...Ah. This will likely betray my own arrogance
This is your basic assumption. You cannot explain or claim something in such a naive way.Science tries to describe the material world and religion tries to describe the spiritual world. It's kind of crazy we're being told we have to choose one (and even worse fight between us about it).