The etymology of 'agnostic' leads directly to the definition i gave "Not-knowledge". — AmadeusD
to not knowing. — AmadeusD
It's not a commitment anymore than thinking you could know is — AmadeusD
This is how Atheism is used in the 'broader sense'. — AmadeusD
Your conception of 'theism' is wrong, on my account — AmadeusD
Your conception of 'theism' is wrong, on my account, and doesn't capture what 'theism' represents. It would also capture deism — AmadeusD
The sources I found agree with the way I defined deism.
: a movement or system of thought advocating natural (see natural entry 1 sense 8b) religion, emphasizing morality, and in the 18th century denying the interference of the Creator with the laws of the universe — Merriam Webster
Belief in a god who created the universe but does not govern worldly events, does not answer prayers, and has no direct involvement in human affairs. — Oxford Reference
the belief in a single god who created the world but does not act to influence events: — Cambridge Dictionary
spawned “deism”, the idea that God set the initial conditions of the universe and then left it to play out on its own — Stanford Encyclopedia Philosophy
Wikipedia says a deist God is not necessarily impersonal.
Deism is the belief in the existence of God—often, but not necessarily, an impersonal and incomprehensible God who does not intervene in the universe after creating it, — Wikipedia — Hallucinogen
An omnipotent and eternal non-contingent entity is either inherently theistic or not, why would it be unlikely that an atheist would believe in such? — Hallucinogen
The bold doesn't bear on the non-bold here, at all, in any way. — AmadeusD
The reason an atheist is hardly taken to believe in a deistic God (of some kind - make it super-vague if that helps) is that an atheist is far more likely to be thinking rationally and wanting evidence instead of settling for an inference — AmadeusD
I am explaining that "if some A is the nth term then some B must have been the 1st term" does not entail "the 1st term necessarily exists (and is omnipotent)". — Michael
If not-A entails (B and (not-B)), then A is entailed. Is that what you're saying isn't the case?
Is B here the proposition that the universe has an nth term? And A is the proposition that there's a non-contingent entity in the universe's series of terms? — Hallucinogen
The example of the Presidents explains what I mean in simple terms.
You conflate "A is required for B" and "A is necessary". The former does not entail the latter. — Michael
If it's the 1st term then it isn't contingent on anything, because there's no term prior for it to depend on. — Hallucinogen
That something exists without having being caused to exist by something else does not entail that this thing necessarily exists — Michael
and it certainly doesn’t entail that this thing is eternal and omnipotent. — Michael
This initial singularity may have come into existence by accident/chance — Michael
and even if its existence was “necessary” it certainly isn’t anything like God. — Michael
Something can do anything if everything is dependent on it. Something exists forever if it isn't dependent on conditions. — Hallucinogen
These are non sequiturs. — Michael
And you are, again, equivocating. That a 2nd term depends on a 1st term to have existed does not entail that the 1st term must still exist. — Michael
A clock must have been made by a clockmaker, but the clock doesn't cease to exist after the clockmaker dies. — Michael
Your conclusion, that there is a God that necessarily exists, simply isn't proven by the claim that causation is not an infinite regress. — Michael
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