If you say no to the first question, then you may be classified as a noncognitivist — javi2541997
The possibility of god is an equally untenable belief, in my mind. — NOS4A2
Do you agree with these definitions?
Are you an agnostic/Agnostic?
I agree. And I said so in the OP. I was primarily focused on the distinction of inner state versus position.I don't think that your terminology quite accurately depicts all the positions available with respect to the topic at hand. — Bob Ross
Agree again. The former is often referred to as "soft" and the later as "hard" Agnosticism. But both are only ever possible options for the Agnostic, not the agnostic."god is not known" is not equivocal to "god can't be known" — Bob Ross
I also did before changing to / relabelling myself as Agnostic.I would personally use a two-dimensional labeling system wherein one axis is knowledge (and lack thereof) and the other is belief (and lack thereof). In such a system, I would most accurately label myself an agnostic atheist. — Bob Ross
I don't think so. It is a method I've seen often.I do concede that it is highly controversial, — Bob Ross
I don't think about it as long as I don't get a definition.
But for the rest, yes, there is a possibility that god exists. I can even prove it to you. Regard this little syllogism:
P1: Clapton is god.
P2: Clapton exists. (And is real and there is evidence for that.)
C: God exists.
Pretty undeniable, don't you think? — ArmChairPhilosopher
No, because the conclusion does not follow since your use of "god" and "God" are different.
No, because the conclusion does not follow since your use of "god" and "God" are different. — Jackson
P1: Clapton is god.
P2: Clapton exists. (And is real and there is evidence for that.)
C: God exists.
Pretty undeniable, don't you think? — ArmChairPhilosopher
I agree. And I said so in the OP. I was primarily focused on the distinction of inner state versus position.
Agree again. The former is often referred to as "soft" and the later as "hard" Agnosticism. But both are only ever possible options for the Agnostic, not the agnostic.
I also did before changing to / relabelling myself as Agnostic.
(And I also remain an atheist - by definition, not by choice.)
Words have meanings. The word "god" in P1 is not defined - and thus we cannot draw any conclusions — EricH
Before I comment, let me ask for some clarification: is your Agnostic vs agnostic distinction about whom the claim is indexically referring to? As in, when you say "god is not known" is "soft Agnosticism", do you mean "[no person knows god exists"? Whereas "god is not known" in an "agnostic" position would really mean "[I do not know god exists, but I do not know if any other person does or does not know god exists"? — Bob Ross
very interesting, what made you decide to change? — Bob Ross
Agnosticism per se is sterile - it doesn't help you in making critical decisions in life. — Agent Smith
And theism or atheism does? — ArmChairPhilosopher
Only truth/falsity are relevant to decisions. — Agent Smith
Do you agree with these definitions?
Are you an agnostic/Agnostic? — ArmChairPhilosopher
:up:Atheism is not a doctrine, it is a position on a single claim. These days atheists are often likely to say I don't accept the claim that god/s exist. They do not say there is no god (unless they are dogmatists). — Tom Storm
I find a second-order approach – is theism (or its sine qua non claims) true or not true? – more reasonable.... is the proposition that God exists true or false? You are a theist if and only if you say that the proposition is true or probably true, you are an atheist if and only if you say that it is false or probably false, and you are an agnostic if and only if you understand what the proposition is, but resist giving either answer, and support your resistance by saying, “The evidence is insufficient” — javi2541997
Neither.Are you an agnostic/Agnostic? — ArmChairPhilosopher
I agree.
And neither Theism nor Atheism are well formed propositions, thus can't have truth values. — ArmChairPhilosopher
The agnostic says knowledge about God is not possible. — Jackson
Believing in God or not is one thing. God's existence or non-existence is another.Every definition of agnosticism I have seen is based on the idea that there can be no knowledge of God to prove existence or nonexistence. But God is a function of belief, so I think the agnostic is wrong. — Jackson
To make the claim knowledge of god is not possible is a rather extreme metaphysical position. — Tom Storm
That's the definition I would use for agnosticism. — Jackson
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