↪Frank Apisa
1 - well, according to your way of defining atheism you are not an atheist but according to the proper usage of the term you are. I know that irritates you, and you want to dodge the label by redefining the word, and thats fine. We can talk about what the most sensible definition is, and see if maybe you have improved the definition but you are incorrect to act as though your way of defining atheism is standard, proper, or accepted by actual atheists.
2 im asking you that because you are lost in semantics, so I was walking you through the semantics. We can just focus on what the most sensible definition of atheism if you want instead if you like, these are two separate counter-points to your current position. — DingoJones
Show my position some respect
— Frank Apisa
I respect you. I respect your position. It's your intellect that sucks. — god must be atheist
I am an agnostic who has clearly stated my agnostic position...and anyone supposing I am a closet theists is just being an asshole.
— Frank Apisa
I am an asshole and you are CLEARLY a theist. Not even a closet theist, but a full-blown, all-out theist. — god must be atheist
There are many wrong things in your post that merely concern meaning and nothing else. I have pointed out many times before in other threads by other closet theists, similar to you, where their mistakes, identical to yours, CLEARLY lie.
I am just fed up with the theists who think every discipline of thought is a religion.
I shan't touch your thread, because you will learn nothing from it.
Like many others, Frank A, you confuse yourself about "atheism" by conflating its meta-statements (re: theism) with theism's object-statements (re: g/G). :point:
An "atheist" is a person who either "believes" there are no gods...or who "believes it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one."
— Frank Apisa
I'm an atheist insofar as I claim that 'theism is false'.
And if this claim is warranted (which, at minimum both conceptually & physically, it is), then every theistic g/G is necessarily an empty name - cannot refer (like e.g. five-sided triangles, a fish ice-skating on the sun, the Great Cthulhu, etc).
In other words, I neither "believe" that there exists nor "believe" that there does not exist a g/G; but rather assert that the theistic claims about, or predicates ascribed to, g/G, according to scripture, creed, or dogmatic theology, are easily - like shooting fish in a barrel - falsified. Thus, "YHWH", "Ahura Mazda", "Shakti", "Zeus", "Quetzalcoatl", "Aten", "Vishnu", "Mithras", "Wotan", "Allāh", etc are merely (ritualized) fictions. For atheists like me, theistic-talk is nothing but (occasionally placebo effect-inducing) babytalk, or fetishistic gibberish (e.g. WOO-of-the-gaps); and, in this sense, I follow the via negationis of the apophatic tradition. — 180 Proof
Its etymology CLEARLY indicates it was meant to denote “being without a god” (not being without a “belief” in a god)…and that was the use of the word throughout history. (Until debating atheists got hold of it.)
— Frank Apisa
Of course it was always about belief. Wait, unless there are KNOWN god(s) I haven't been told about?
Just because people in the past KNEW there was a god(s), doesn't mean we can't KNOW that their knowledge was actually just belief. — ZhouBoTong
This nonsense (insistence by some atheists) that anyone lacking a belief (in) god is an atheist…is an insult to reason and logic.
— Frank Apisa
Wait, so someone who lacks belief is a theist? Whatever else we add to "atheist", "not a theist" seems accurate, no?
I guess then we are just arguing whether all non-theists are atheists...so, then we are just arguing whether there is room for a third option (and once we admit a third we should probably admit an infinite spectrum of possibilities). And this will just boil down to semantics and our interpretations of words.
Atheists would leave the agnostics alone if they didn't often sound like theists who are just unsure of which god(s) to believe in :razz:
Babies are very much the perfect atheists. For them, the question of God(s) - like every other question of course - is simply unintelligible. As it should be. The tragedy of it is that most are brought up to believe that the very question makes sense at all. Shame. — StreetlightX
0 P
An "atheist" is a person who either "believes" there are no gods...or who "believes it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one."
— Frank Apisa
What would you call someone who believes it extremely unlikely that a God of religion exists? — Relativist
A "God of religion" is a being who intervenes in the world, reveals himself to some, and provides for a life after death. (I'm referring to myself, btw).
My point is that "God" is a fuzzy term.
Its etymology CLEARLY indicates it was meant to denote “being without a god”
— Frank Apisa
The α is certainly privative. But the word you need to attend to is the ό θεός. Of course even if atheist were only just an English word, you'd still have to account for the meaning of its parts - if you're serious. But like everyone, you take the understanding of the meaning of the word "God" for granted, and that means that you can make all the noise you like, but based on your beginning, you're not saying anything. — tim wood
Where B is the operator for belief, you can be without or with beliefs for proposition p:
1. someone does not believe p: ¬Bp
2. someone believes not p: B[¬p]
3. someone does not believe not p: ¬B[¬p]
4. someone believes p: Bp
Those are the possibilities in doxastic logic.
2 and 4 contradict (with). 1 and 3 do not contradict (without). 1 and 4, 2 and 3, contradict (with and without). 2 entails 1, and 4 entails 3 (with belief entails without belief in the contrary, and the converse does not hold). Each can be exemplified, they're jointly exhaustive of belief and the proposition, and no two are identical.
Differentiating a couple categories:
the elaborate religions with scriptures and stories of supernaturals, rituals, commands, fate designations, fulltime professional advertisers, often apologists earning a living from writing thereof, mutual inconsistencies, etc
unassuming deism, non-descript panpsychism, some varieties of Buddhism, entertaining some sort of (unknown) superbeing(s), etc
The latter is typically of less concern, and epistemically more on par with The Matrix, Bostrom's hypothesis, Zhuangzi's butterfly, Māyā of Indian fame, deus deceptor, dream thought experiments, Kafkaesque silent hidden superbeings, perhaps even solipsism, you name it. (Maybe Spinozism?)
"Whereof one cannot speak ..." and all that? — jorndoe
Seems the term atheism is commonly used about someone technically agnostic towards the latter, and with doubt/disbelief in the former.
Are you saying that there are no gods?
— Frank Apisa
I was suggesting that absence of theism and doubt/disbelief therein does not comprise a belief system (any more than disbelief that Santa is real does).
Frank Apisa
Ya, thats just theistic semantics, calling a lack of belief a belief to draw a false equivalence so they can shift the burden of proof. You aren’t doing that, but you are making the same error.
What I think you have a problem with is people who are atheists for bad reasons, and/or who are anti-theists and atheists but fail to make the correct distinction between the two. Those people are just one kind of atheist, and there are all kinds of different atheists...what they have in common is a lack of belief in god/gods, thats it. Thats what defines atheism. You want to change the definition because you do not want to be in the same category as people I imagine you find obnoxious about thier atheism.
Anyway, if I lack a belief in god then the answer to the question “do you believe in god?” Is “no”, correct? — DingoJones
Having a belief that no Gods exist translates into a belief system much like Religion
— 3017amen
Atheism is NOT a religion...but for the most part it IS a "belief system."
— Frank Apisa
Like disbelief that Santa is real is a belief system?
Like a clean bill of health is a disease?
• absence of theism: newborns, the Pirahã people, some pygmies, ...
• doubt/disbelief in theisms: some pagans, some panpsychists, Hitchens, Russell, ... — jorndoe
↪Frank Apisa
Here's my thoughts.
Over the years, I've seen many pointless debates about the meaning of the term "atheist". For example, I've encountered Christians who insist that to be an "atheist", one must hold the belief:no god(s) exist, and argue that "lack of belief in god" doesn't mean much (they counter: "I'm a theist because I lack belief in God's non-existence"). Their motivation seems to be a desire to argue against a strawman.
I therefore think the the term should be only be used to convey a general, vague sense of a person's position. One should make no specific assumptions about what any self-labelled atheist means. It's fair to assume he probably doesn't think there is a God, in the traditional sense of the term. If you want to know more specifically what he believes, set the label aside and ask.
BTW, as a point of trivia, the Roman empire labelled Christians as "atheist", because they didn't believe in the Roman gods. — Relativist
↪Frank Apisa
I asked what YOU think atheism means, not anything about atheists you know and how they may or may not describe themselves...or about how you choose to describe them using theistic semantics
I would like a clear, concise definition for atheism from you. Im asking you that because I want to know if I agree with your definition and to keep this from going into the weeds. Please, just give me a short, concise definition without reiterating your problem with some peoples use of the term.
My second question may have been a bit clumsy, so lets just start with my first one. It will be easier to communicate if we keep things short and to the point, dealing with one thing at a time. — DingoJones
Hi Frank!
I'm not exactly sure what you are asking, but thought that the quoted definition was intriguing. Having a belief that no Gods exist translates into a belief system much like Religion. — 3017amen
So, if someone says: Atheism is just another Religion, would they be incorrect?
Such an emotionally charged issue I know. However, the irony for the Atheist is that if emotive phenomena is metaphysical in nature, they need to reconcile the paradoxical nature of their own said emotional belief system from the lack thereof.
You havent demonstrated a very deep understanding of the word, certainly your use of “CLEARLY” Is erroneous here. — DingoJones
If it was clear from the epistemology alone you wouldnt need to bring it up.
You also fail to justify claims you make, such as that defining atheism as lacking belief in god is an insult to reason and logic. How?
Even if you think thats the wrong definition, that doesnt mean its an insult to logic and reason. Anyway, I have some questions if your actually interested in a discussion.
First, you didnt provide a definition of what you think atheism is, so lets hear that.
Also, What is the difference, in your mind, between “being without a god” and “being without a belief in god?”. Im curious to know what being without god would even mean if not being about belief.
↪Frank Apisa That whole anthropological legend is apocryphal. — Banno
I'm always annoyed at people who say infinity is not a number but a "concept." For one thing, that is way too broad and says absolutely nothing; I cannot think of anything in mathematics or logic that is not a concept. I say it is a number for if it is not then one divided by infinity would not equal zero anymore than one divided by a cat is a number. Here's my definition of infinity, and for simplicity I'm only referring to positive infinity: infinity is a number, but it has a characteristic that all real numbers do not possess. Namely, it is a number that is greater than any particular real number. All the rules of arithmetic applicable to real numbers do not carry over to use of infinity. Examples: infinity plus a real number is infinity: infinity divided by infinity is not equal to one: infinity subtracted from infinity is not equal to zero. — Michael Lee
Also, did you know that our ancestors could count only upto to 2? Look below:
Cardinal - Ordinal
1 - first
2 - second
3 - third
4 -fourth
.
.
.
n - nth
Notice that the names for ordinal numbers of the first two cardinals (1 & 2) are distinct viz. "first" and "second". All other ordinal numbers can be constructed from their respective numbers simply by adding "th". This is claimed to be be evidence of counting ability being limited to 2 and after that, 3, 4, 5,...,it was simply "many". So ancient counting looked like this: one (first), two (second), many. The many corresponds to the modern concept of infinity. As you can see, many and infinity represent a limit to quantification i.e. it spills over into the domain of quality - a concept and not a number. — TheMadFool
Two...if you were, you would be terrified of Biden...JUST AS TRUMP IS.
— Frank Apisa
There's no evidence of this at all. Again, gut feelings isn't political analysis.
Biden would be a terrible candidate. Just more establishment Democrat bullshit -- exactly like Hillary.
Maybe Trump fears him, maybe not. We have no idea. Trump's an imbecile anyway, so who cares? — Xtrix
Well...you may not be bored...but for certain you are not telling it as a fact.
— Frank Apisa
I am telling it as certain as being a solipsist. — Wallows
If I were Trump I would love nothing better than to have Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee thanks to his 40 year career as a non-progressive establishment Democrat, his deteriorating brain which disallows him to speak for more than several minutes without digressing in an incoherent blob.
Further, Joe Biden's support among the youth is abysmal and his nomination would lay bare the disdain the Democratic party's establishment has for the concerns of its Millennial/Gen Z constituents who are inheriting the mistakes made by their parents and older generations.
And according to a Lev Parnas leaked audio, Trump claimed, "If Bernie would have been VP it would have been tougher...I got 20% of Bernie vote [note, this is not true, it was ~12%] because of trade. He's a big trade guy...Had she picked Bernie Sanders it would have been tougher. He is the only one I didn't want her to pick." — Maw
Why are you saying that solipsism denies the existence of other minds?
— Frank Apisa
It says so in the wikipedia entry on solipsism:
Denial of material existence, in itself, does not constitute solipsism.
A feature of the metaphysical solipsistic worldview is the denial of the existence of other minds
— Wikipedia — TheMadFool
↪Frank Apisa I think we are indebted to the Chinese. If they initiated a run on the dollar, we'd be in bad shape. — frank
↪Frank Apisa One barrier to a socialist agenda in the US is that it would require drastic fiscal restructuring: a progressive property tax probably. No president can do that. Think about how far to the left all three branches of govt would have to be.
Electing a socialist wouldnt be much more than an aesthetic victory. — frank
Solipsism (/ˈsɒlɪpsɪzəm/ (listen); from Latin solus, meaning 'alone', and ipse, meaning 'self')[1] is the philosophical idea that only one's mind is sure to exist. As an epistemological position, solipsism holds that knowledge of anything outside one's own mind is unsure; the external world and other minds cannot be known and might not exist outside the mind.
— Wikipedia
How is solipsism, specifically the part where you deny the existence of other minds, tenable when cogito ergo sum can be used to confirm the existence of all thinking beings?
If I can say the mind of an other is uncertain then that other may say the same thing of my mind, and so on, making every mind of uncertain existence and yet anyone, everyone can say, truthfully, "cogito ergo — TheMadFool
↪Frank Apisa Tally ho. Get that fox! — frank
↪Frank Apisa The Democratic field is obviously weak. The economy is ok. The impeachment trial will be forgotten. Trump has fairly decent chance of winning a second term.
It's a good time to get philosophical about things. Deflate your passions and look at the situation as if from outer space. — frank
What I hate hearing is 'how likely it is for Trump to win a second term'. This doesn't mean I don't believe it's possible, because I do. It's just that after all that has happened, after the many obvious disasters and malfeasance and constant barrage of lies, the fact that this can still be a prospect, even considered by otherwise intelligent people, makes by blood run cold. It's like, how can the world be this f***ed, that someone like that is even considered? — Wayfarer
I can sympathize with this entirely. I am a non believer but my wife is, so I can sort of say that I celebrate for her. That way I can get my Christmas dinner.
Our tree sits in the corner of a bay window that goes around the corner of the house, and there is a part that sits behind the supporting post. My wife insists that the lights and decorations do not get interrupted and that that part looks just like the rest.
That is what we men love about women, the way they think. So entertaining. :wink: — Sir2u
A non-cognitive explanation for holding a belief describes a cause for it but is not a justification.
— fdrake
Who said it has to be justified? A belief is essentially a hypothesis. Justification goes beyond the hypothesis to its proof. Again, per Popper, the origin of a hypothesis doesn't matter. — Pantagruel