I make the claim that there is a soccer-ball in my closet.
You don't have access to my closet or any way to prove or disprove my claim.
Maybe it's a basketball instead of a soccer-ball, or maybe there is no ball at all in my closet (maybe I don't even have a closet :gasp: ).
Do you believe there is a soccer-ball in my closet? If not, do you then believe there is no soccer-ball in my closet?
Why must you have a "belief" either way? If you're not forced to decide, why bother?
And the question that raises for me is, what does it matter if such a purported entity exists or not? — Wayfarer
"atheism" has never really been about proving the non-existence of god(s), if we're fair: it has been about rejection — VagabondSpectre
The 'three' positions appear to be
There is a God
There is not a God
I don't know, there may be something?
A particular type of 'having cake and eating it too' appears to apply to the 3rd agnostic option. It would appear that the 3rd option has the high moral ground. But that is only because the agnostic (rather selfishly IMOP) chooses not to engage constructively in the debate.
The 'debate' as such is confined to those who wish to align themselves with either of the combatants.
It might be argued that agnosticism is a form of intellectual cowardice or duplicity in that it occupies a duality of choice and permits the agnostic to create a personal and self serving God-reality AND a non-God reality. I think one MUST choose a side and validate ones decision in spite of the difficulties or the ferocity on the battlefield. The ferocity of the argument seems relative to the lack of definition as to what this 'God' thing actually might be, and I suspect that Spinoza has the most evolved and unappreciated concept of same.
M — Marcus de Brun
I think if you want a seat at the table, you should have a position that there is or is not a God. — Rank Amateur
not what I am saying.
What I am saying is, it is not a position to say proposition A may or may not be true, or this or that point in support or defense of proposition A may or may not be valid. It is way beyond reasonable. It is objectively true that there is or is not a God. It needs no discussion or defense. It also is not very helpful. — Rank Amateur
[T]here is no doubt that I am inexperienced- hence the name. However how does your point of what a position has going for it, pros cons, merits etc, apply when the position is, I have no position on the question? — Rank Amateur
That does not mean that on any particular item in the argument an agnostic can not have a valid or helpful view. But at its core equivocation is not a position. — Rank Amateur
If you will accept that an important part of what we believe to be true is how it effects what we do. How can agnosticism have any impact on what we do. Pray on tuesdays and thursdays? Accept absurdity on Monday Wednesday and friday? — Rank Amateur
there is no doubt that I am inexperienced- hence the name. However how does your point of what a position has going for it, pros cons, merits etc, apply when the position is, I have no position on the question?
That does not mean that on any particular item in the argument an agnostic can not have a valid or helpful view. But at its core equivocation is not a position. — Rank Amateur
Not a big fan of your soccer ball problem, it is just a conclusion with out a premise- — Rank Amateur
there either is, or is not an uncreated creator. There are no other options. That was called being black or white earlier, call it what you like, but it is a true statement. One can, chose by reason to believe either argument. — Rank Amateur
My answer is, I don't care if there is or is not a soccer ball in your closet. The question has no importance to me. — Rank Amateur
If however you said if you guess correctly, I will give you 5,000 dollars I would work to try and answer correctly. If you said, if you guess there is a ball, and you are right, you get 100 million dollars, if you guess there is not a ball, and you are right you get 35 cents. I guess there is a ball. — Rank Amateur
Simply, I do not believe that no gods exist and I do not believe that some god exists. — Jerry
there are a few reasonable arguments for there being at one time an un-created - creator. I understand there are challenges. And I have acknowledged that the counter position is not un-reasonable. But the assertion that a theistic belief is un-reasonable is more rooted in a particular prejudice than in argument. — Rank Amateur
and the addition of Pascal is not really for the mechanics of the wager, but for the need to bet.
The game is on, whether one acknowledges it or not. There either is or is not a God. — Rank Amateur
But my real objection to agnostic or soft atheism - is, it is really a semantic hedge - disguised as reason. If our actions are the manifestations of our beliefs - most/all agnostics - are practicing atheists - just holding on to a hedge. Or as above - conversely - umpires in the argument - calling different positions in or out while sitting comfortably in the chair above the court, indifferent as to the outcome of the match. — Rank Amateur
Like the soccer-ball question, you would probably say that you simply don't care and that nothing seems to actually be at stake. For me, having emancipated myself from religion and theistic belief so long ago, there re almost no remaining god-shaped holes that I haven't already filled with something else. Whether or not god exists changes nothing for me as it very clearly does not reveal itself in this life, and presuming that god-belief is important for the next life is a presumption that comes out of nowhere and has no rational advantage over its rejection or negation — VagabondSpectre
Thanks for all - appreciate the comments. All due respect - this statement certainly sounds like you have taken a position - in your actions and in your thoughts. All that really remains is to acknowledge it as such. I would also assume you arrived at this position from reason, which is in conflict with your statement: — Rank Amateur
I read into your comment that your definition of truth seems to lie only in what is fact. And reasoned beliefs of truth have less weight.
That to me is a very different position than indifference - which I would have no argument against. Although I am skeptical that any thoughtful person is truly indifferent to the question - Which returns me to my view that the agnostic is not a reasoned position - or even an absence of reasoned position - it is a hedge against the position of your beliefs and actions. — Rank Amateur
I have no issue that my world view impacts my position - as I think yours and others does as well. — Rank Amateur
I have no issue that my world view impacts my position - as I think yours and others does as well. — Rank Amateur
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