If atheism is defined as a disbelief in the existence of gods, — Pinprick
If atheism is defined as a disbelief in the existence of gods — Pinprick
You would still be applying logic to arrive at your position of non-belief right? — DingoJones
It is logical to withhold belief in the absence of evidence. — DingoJones
I don’t think so. I’m starting at a position of non-belief prior to even hearing any of the arguments. It’s the position of ignorance, which seems to necessarily be the default position, since one can’t start at a position of knowledge. Right? — Pinprick
Logic is strictly applied only to arguments. What argument is being presented when you simply find theism’s argument unconvincing? — Pinprick
You would still be applying logic to arrive at your position of non-belief right? It is logical to withhold belief in the absence of evidence.
I don’t see why logic wouldn't be applicable. — DingoJones
The logic of un-belief may be based on the old adage : "seeing is believing". Anything that I can't see, or otherwise verify for myself, is subjective hearsay. But most "isms" are also also grounded by a pragmatic attitude, which defines what can be accepted without evidence, and what should be treated with skepticism. Of course, it's always easy for us to be skeptical of other people's paradigms, that we don't share. And the emotional feelings of "isms", including Atheism, are often impervious to rational logic.If logic is just a tool used to justify/support arguments, then how could it apply to a non-belief that is based on a lack of convincing arguments? — Pinprick
Convincing arguments supporting theism are lacking, therefore atheism. — Pinprick
Not so much argument or lack, but of evidence. You might be reluctant to believe a hippopotamus is in you living room, and it is hard to see what argument could sway your belief. After all, your friends could have put one there. But the entire question is settled by evidence in accordance with criteria for judging evidence.Non-beliefs aren’t really based on arguments, they’re based on a lack of them. — Pinprick
A new born baby is a non-believer, and ostensibly does not get there through logic. I'm sure it's the same for many adults: they don't get to non-belief by thinking about the evidence or lack thereof - it's just default. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Convincing arguments supporting theism are lacking, therefore nothing.
Convincing arguments supporting atheism are lacking, therefore nothing. — Foghorn
The problem in this world is indoctrination from a young age. Many grow up and have to actively question everything they've been taught in order to dismiss those irrational beliefs. Since most people are biased and don't fundamentally think with reason and logic, very few wake up from that indoctrination. It is their fundamental worldview, their Plato cave. — Christoffer
The point I was trying to make is that even if you haven’t gone through a logical process to arrive at atheism logic is still present in the sense that your lack of belief adheres to the basic principals of logic such as non-contradiction and excluded middle. — DingoJones
Good on ya, Bertie. :up:"Men are born ignorant, not stupid. They are made stupid by education." - Bertrand Russell — Down The Rabbit Hole
If you use statements like “I believe no unicorns exist,” then you’re defining belief in a way that makes non-belief impossible. I can say I don’t believe unicorns exist, but you’ll argue that I actually believe unicorns don’t exist. Every possible stance on unicorns is a belief. You see the issue? — Pinprick
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