The word "atheist" for instance, has so many different meanings that it becomes virtually useless in these discussions. Agnostic seems to be heading that same way. — Frank Apisa
I thought atheist had an intentionally specific vague meaning...Isn't the main definition "one who does not believe in god or gods"? That captures a wide range of beliefs, (everything from agnostic to "I believe there is no god") but its meaning seems perfectly clear. Wouldn't "Christian" have the exact same problem? What about "Asian"? It just means "a person of Asian descent" or "relating to Asia". Notice there is then a wide range of possible items that fit that definition...but it doesn't make the definition meaningless.
I would actually say that most problems with the word "atheist" come from people assuming a more specific definition than the word actually entails. When I hear "Christian" I think of the whole range of Christianity, not just Catholics or Baptists. — ZhouBoTong
Well...if "atheist" means "one without a belief in any god"...that WOULD mean agnostics are atheists. But most agnostics I've known DO NOT want to be considered atheists. — Frank Apisa
Using that definition...agnostics would NOT be atheists. — Frank Apisa
"a person who believes or asserts that no gods exist." — Frank Apisa
People who use "atheist" as part of a personal descriptor either assert a 'belief' that no gods exist...OR that it is much more likely that no gods exist than that at least one god exists. — Frank Apisa
(both of which are nothing but blind guesses about the true nature of the REALITY of existence) — Frank Apisa
Agnostics do not do that.
Some people do identify as agnostic-atheists or atheist-agnostics...and do make those blind guesses. But they use the "atheist" qualifier BECAUSE of those guesses.
I attempt not to use a descriptor unless needed for commentary like this, but here is how I describe my agnosticism:
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST...that the existence of gods is impossible;
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST...that gods are needed to explain existence;
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction...
...so I don't. — Frank Apisa
If the word is not ambiguous...why are there so many arguments about strong-atheism or weak-atheism...and why does that distinction come up so often in Internet discussions... — Frank Apisa
The only time the distinction between strong and weak seems to be made...is during these kinds of discussions. Meet someone in the real world who is an atheist...and that person will use "atheist." — Frank Apisa
Wonder what they mean. — Frank Apisa
Whichever...they are asserting a blind guess...which their counterparts "theists" call 'beliefs.' — Frank Apisa
Thank you for your lengthy response, ZhouBoTong. (Is there a shorter name I can use and still show respect?) — Frank Apisa
Have you ever encountered any person who identify themselves using the word "atheist" who is totally uncertain of the existence of gods,,,and does not see the likelihood of "no gods" as being greater than the likelihood of "at least one?" — Frank Apisa
I would actually say that most problems with the word "atheist" come from people assuming a more specific definition than the word actually entails. — ZhouBoTong
You can clearly see that with Frank Apisa in his example, the problem here isn't that agnosticism or atheism are vague, there's a fundamental disagreement here about the meaning of the terms. — Judaka
The use of generality in mathematics is that it allows abstractions (e.g., thoerem proved about an abstract triangle) to be applied to a multitude of situations: piece of land, movement of celestial bodies, trajectory of a ball, whatever.
Generality becomes specific when it is applied to the concrete. Generality gives movement to concepts/abstractions. In detaching from the material to the ideal, concepts are born. Generality is this detachment, or perhaps it is the realm where concepts flow (yeah there's some poetic licence here).
We could not even think metaphysical without the ability to generalise. — emancipate
General and specific; each can be worthwhile, yes? — Pattern-chaser
The thing I am attempting to communicate is that every individual I have ever met or know of...who uses the word "atheist" as part of a descriptor... — Frank Apisa
I think when I have a problem with words being used generally it is more because society has started using the word(s) flippantly to the point that they can have nearly opposite potential meanings ("conservative" and "liberal" are 2 words where I need more information to even begin to guess what they mean in any given context, and of course "literally" now generally means "figuratively"). If everyone gave dictionaries a bit more authority, it would solve a lot of problems - but even dictionaries change over time so it wouldn't solve everything. — ZhouBoTong
Here I think acceptance is of more use than challenge. Language really is a democratic institution, and its usage is dictated solely by its users. So, a few years ago, "bad" came to mean good, in everyday parlance. It doesn't really matter whether you or I like it; it just is.
Giving dictionaries more authority is, I think, an unachievable aim. The users of our language currently hold that authority, as they always have, and probably always will. I can't see language users losing their authority over their own language, can you? And, even if it was possible, would you really want it to happen? Consider, if dictionaries have authority, where does this authority rest? With one or a few senior dictionary executives, or something similar. What has been gained? :wink: — Pattern-chaser
Here I think acceptance is of more use than challenge. — Pattern-chaser
Giving dictionaries more authority is, I think, an unachievable aim. — Pattern-chaser
Consider, if dictionaries have authority, where does this authority rest? — Pattern-chaser
What has been gained? :wink: — Pattern-chaser
That helps...but is not authoritative. — Frank Apisa
Well notice that something like wikipedia would allow the language users themselves to be the ones to create and constantly update and modify the "dictionary". Consensus and evidence then determine what stays and what changes. — ZhouBoTong
Here is a site I have used for years. Put a word into it...and you will get the word as defined in 10 - 30 different dictionaries.
https://www.onelook.com/ — Frank Apisa
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