I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST (that the existence of gods is impossible); — Frank Apisa
tim wood
4.1k
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST (that the existence of gods is impossible);
— Frank Apisa
How about zero evidence and zero possibility? — tim wood
On your criteria, you must accept the proposition that you owe me USD 1,000. And that the universe is run by the magic hippopotamus - after all, you have no evidence. Btw, what do you mean by "God"?
Theism (as I understand it's sine qua non attributions) defines g/G with claims (1) there is at least one Mystery (2) that Created Existence & (3) Intervenes - causes changes - In the Universe (as per e.g. scriptures, prophesies, testimonials, theodicies, metaphysics, etc) — 180 Proof
but when is God ever defined as something different than claims 1,2, and 3? — Pinprick
See wiki re: (e.g.) deism, pandeism, animism, acosmism, etc. :fire: — 180 Proof
Speaking for myself as an anti-theist, I'm agnostic (and even ignostic) with respect to 'non-theistic concepts of divinity' because they're either insufficiently evident (ágnôsis) or intrinsically undecidable (epoché).If Antitheism only concerns theistic claims about God’s existence, does that mean that non-theistic claims about God’s existence are at least plausible in the Antitheist’s eyes? — Pinprick
I don't think so. Many Japanese Buddhists, for instance, also revere? (worship?) traditional Shinto 'deities'.If so, then that would mean followers of non-theistic religions would also be Antitheists as well, correct?
I don't think so. Many Japanese Buddhists, for instance, also revere? (worship?) traditional Shinto 'deities'. — 180 Proof
Born Shinto, marry Christian, die Buddhist’.
Pragmatic. — Wayfarer
I’m trying to understand the term Antitheism better. — Pinprick
If a religion is not theistic, then atheism isnt a position one is able to have about that religion because atheism is a position on theism (namely, the absence of theism). If one is an anti-theist, then one is only anti-theistic religions — DingoJones
Those “isms” you listed are types of theisms, and I do not see how a specific definition of god (the 1,2 and 3 traits) implies any of those “isms” are not theism. — DingoJones
Speaking for myself as an anti-theist, I'm agnostic (and even ignostic) with respect to 'non-theistic concepts of divinity' because they're either insufficiently evident (ágnôsis) or intrinsically undecidable (epoché). — 180 Proof
I don't think so. Many Japanese Buddhists, for instance, also revere? (worship?) traditional Shinto 'deities'. — 180 Proof
You're mistaken. E.g. (JCI) monotheists are atheists with respect to "other gods" (e.g. Olympian Pantheon, Nordic Sagas, Hindu Vedas, Indigenous tribal totems, etc).I take Atheism to apply across the board, since it is the denial of any God’s existence. — Pinprick
No. Holding 'simultaneously' that both theism and anti-theism are 'true' is contradictory. As Wolfman & Wayfarer point out (above), the 'apparent inconsistency' (of (e.g.) Daoist pandeism (or pantheism?) combined with worship of local deities + ancester veneration) is only apparent and quite pragmatic, or non-binary - different 'objects of hope' for addressing different 'modes of fear' - in terms of cultural (traditional) context.Ok, but which conception of God would they believe to be true? Theistic, or non-theistic? Holding both beliefs would be contradictory ...
Does this mean that Antitheist’s can believe anything they like regarding the existence of any Gods, as long as they are against the spread of Theism?
2h — Pinprick
Holding 'simultaneously' that both theism and anti-theism are 'true' is contradictory. — 180 Proof
Lost me completely. — 180 Proof
:roll: :monkey:Match the following:
God beliefs:
1. god exists
2. god doesn't exist
3. god may/may not exist
Formal positions (all being different from each other)
a. Theism
b. Atheism
c. Agnosticism
d. Antitheism — TheMadFool
As I've previously pointed out here to you, Fool, mixing ontological apples with epistemological oranges loses the coherent plot: (my) anti-theism claims that theism's negation is true (i.e. that the specific claim about divinity called "theism" is not true) AND THEREFORE any theistic g/G's negation is not true as well :chin: ; thus, atheism (i.e. theistic g/Gs [TOKENS] are fictional) is entailed by anti-theism (i.e. theism [TYPE] is not true). — 180 Proof
Doesn't see how if you've read on past the last semi-colon. :eyes: — 180 Proof
It's the difference between Type and Token, or set and member ... concept and referent ... epistemic "ANTI" and ontic "A". The latter belongs to the former; if the former is true, then the latter necessarily is true.What's the difference between ANTItheism and Atheism? — TheMadFool
Anti-theism is a second order (meta) claim about theism and not a claim about g/G (which would be a first order (object) claim). Likewise, atheism is, as I conceive it, an ontic - existence - entailment of postive truth-value anti-theism, just as 'composite numbers are not members' is entailed by the set-membership rule 'only natural numbers greater than one that are not products of two smaller natural numbers' (re: prime numbers).If there's a difference then antitheism can't be about the claim that god doesn't exist because that's atheism.
It [antitheism] includes, therefore, atheism, :ok: but short of atheism, there are anti-theistic theories. Polytheism is not atheism, for it does not deny that there is a deity; but it is anti-theistic :chin: since it denies that there is only one. Pantheism is not atheism, for it asserts that there is a god; but it is anti-theism, :chin: for it denies that God is a being distinct from creation and possessed of such attributes as wisdom, and holiness, and love. — Robert Flint (1877)
Let me ask you a question. What's the difference between antitheism and atheism? If there's no difference then why different words for the same idea? If there's a difference then antitheism can't be about the claim that god doesn't exist because that's atheism. :chin: — TheMadFool
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