Who cares what Wikipedia says? Why should Wikipedia volunteers be expected to have any deeper understanding of atheism than the average man on the street?
Most people, including almost everybody on philosophy forums, blindly chant the memorized definition "atheism equals lack of belief in God" without bothering to ask where that lack of belief comes from, what is it built upon, what is it's source?
Atheism is no more merely a "lack of belief" in gods than theism is merely a "lack of belief" in Christopher Hitchens. — Jake
Wikipedia/atheism then goes on to say that in a very narrow sense, atheism means a positive claim that no Gods exist. — VoidDetector
Atheism is a positive claim that human reason is qualified to analyze questions the scale of god proposals, just as theism is typically a positive claim that some holy book is so qualified. Each party is referencing their preferred chosen authority, neither of which can be proven qualified for the task at hand. — Jake
Actually, one is a statement of belief, the other a categorical assertion. The two are irreconcilable. Either can coexist with the other. The need for good definitions them comes to the front. Without them the discussion is a variety of nonsense.“There is no god” and “I lack belief in god” are not the same thing. — DingoJones
“There is no god” and “i lack belief in god” are not the same thing. — DingoJones
One doesn't require authority to lack belief in something, although one would perhaps require evidence to otherwise make positive claims. — VoidDetector
this definition from "American Atheist"
"Atheism is one thing: A lack of belief in gods. Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods" — Rank Amateur
Well, it is a sort of semantic game but I think it is the believer who makes it that way, by calling “disbelief” a belief. The goal is to create a false equivalence so the believer doesnt have to support their position. — DingoJones
Hilariously flawed, you are talking right out your ass.
First, you tell me im trusting an authority called reasoning and therefore my view is no more or less justified than the view of the one not based on reason but ancient books written by primitives and what is your basis for doing that? Reason!
Spectacular failure. Not to mention I just got through explaining exactly why your assertion here is wrong.
Cherry on the cake? You dont even know what intellectual dishonesty means!
Congratulations sir, you have the proud distinction of the single, most profoundly ignorant post I have ever bothered to respond to. What can I say, i had a good long laugh.
We are done here, you go ahead and have the last word. — DingoJones
without bothering to ask where that lack of belief comes from — Jake
One doesn't require authority to lack belief in something... — VoidDetector
Google “Russels Teapot”. That will put you on the right track. — DingoJones
You said “not believing in the existence of god is an active act”. Is it only the lack of belief in god that is an active act or does it work that way for all lack of belief? — DingoJones
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