You feel that theists are ignorant because they haven't proven anything, and I agree. — Jake
I call myself a "Fundamentalist Agnostic", a silly ironic label which points to a position outside of the theist vs. atheist paradigm. — Jake
Well, I won't explain what you mean by the words you are using. So no circle here. Only a full stop. — Mariner
A being whose existence is not contingent on anything, and whose existence is necessary for everything. — Rank Amateur
I probably should have learnt my lesson by now, since I've had problems with you in past discussions. — S
Why is the default position that religious ought to be taken seriously? — StreetlightX
To be fair, as a disclosure, I’m a disbeliever in both Theist and Atheism thus understood. Yup, I uphold both these types of theists and atheists are plain wrong. And this conviction, fully independent of anything else, makes me a very liked guy everywhere I go (My sarcasm, if it’s not clear. No, both hardcore theists and atheist detest any such belief as an abomination to be spit upon—this for gutturally emotive reasons rather than reasoning itself). At any rate, these are my beliefs/non-beliefs laid bare.
To address some concrete examples, here are some philosophers’ notions of divinity: Aristotle’s principle teleological cause as “unmoved mover”, Neo-Platonic notions of the “the One”, Spinoza’s understanding of Nature as being Divinity and vice versa, many an Eastern philosophical notion of, roughly expressed, a perfect (and non-hypocritical) state of non-duality wherein all suffering and impermanence eternally cease, this being what is professed as our ultimate reality … I’ll stop short, but there are other examples to be found. — javra
From the atheist point of view, all that is at stake is a fallacious belief — Wayfarer
Why is the default position that religious ought to be taken seriously?
— StreetlightX
There's an asymmetry underlying this question though. From the atheist point of view, all that is at stake is a fallacious belief; because it has no real content, losing it is losing nothing - other than an impediment. Indeed that is all that can be at stake. But from the believer's point of view, what is at stake is literally everything. Not understanding it correctly, or performing it correctly, or whatever is required by the particular faith tradition the believer belongs to, is literally a matter of life and death - even more than that. It's crucial, it's the most important thing about life. So the assertion that it's not important could only be from atheism, from those who have no sense that there's anything at stake. — Wayfarer
There's an asymmetry underlying this question though — Wayfarer
But from the believer's point of view, what is at stake is literally everything. Not understanding it correctly, or performing it correctly, or whatever is required by the particular faith tradition the believer belongs to, is literally a matter of life and death - even more than that. It's crucial, it's the most important thing about life. — Wayfarer
I don't believe that God exists, and it means that I don't believe that any god or gods going by any other name or even no name at all exist. — S
I don't know if I agree or not with you, since I don't know what you mean by the word "god". — Mariner
I was not asking for a definition, by the way, but for the meaning of a word. These are not synonyms, and the two kinds of questions are often addressed in different ways. — Mariner
By your initial (in quotation marks) sentence in this last post, coupled with your commentary, your position seems to be , "If my interlocutor takes 'god' to mean something that I don't believe in, then I don't believe in it and I can say I'm an atheist. If my interlocutor takes 'god' to means something that I believe in (because it does not contradict atheism), then I can say that his usage of 'god' is irregular, accuse him of sophistry, and say that I'm still an atheist." — Mariner
A funny position, to be sure. (And the idea that the way other people use words in their discourse is somehow amenable to refereeing of this sort is quite weird). — Mariner
But let's see if we find a breach in the wall. — Mariner
What is the kind of evidence that would convince you that you should no longer be an atheist? — Mariner
(Perhaps by this indirect route we can, at long last, ascertain what you, rather than your imaginary interlocutor, mean by 'god'). — Mariner
It would be a start. — Mariner
Let's go with a being who created the world, is the source of what's right and wrong, and intervenes in the world. — S
Is this "a being" another object in the world? Or perhaps an object in a meta-world (inside which he/she/it created "the world")? — Mariner
If you say "yes" to any of these questions, then I agree with you that I don't believe in him/her/it, and we can live happily ever after. — Mariner
I don't think that God can be called "a being" among other beings. God is Being. But that does not equate to saying that God is everything. If I look at a pencil, I don't think that the pencil is Being. But, to the extent that the pencil is (i.e. shares in Being), he has something from God. — Mariner
What about mind-body dualism, for instance? — praxis
Is our separation from God only an illusion? — praxis
Morally, we are absolutely separated from Him. Cognitively, we are absolutely separated from Him. Etc. — Mariner
A distinct morality, cognition, etc., appears to constitute a being, and a being which exists among other beings. — praxis
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