How do you deal with the fact that very smart people disagree with you? — darthbarracuda
The strong agnostic knows that there is no God. — Thorongil
So, if the analogy is between pain and belief in God, then saying there is no such things as pain is analogous to saying that there is no such thing as belief in God, no? — John
So, someone can only know there is no god if there is no god and he has a justified belief there is no god. — Hanover
At any rate, if we change the word "knows" to "believes" in my quote of you above, I don't agree with the statement. You have defined "strong agnostic" how I would define "atheist." An agnostic does not know whether there is God or not because he's unable to arrive at an adequate justification for his belief one way or the other. An atheist does not know (he only believes such) there is a God unless you're either (1) stipulating there actually is no God and he believes it, or (2) you're equivocating with the term "know" and just using it to emphasize the strength of his belief (as in, e.g., "I just knew Clemson would beat Alabama, but it didn't work out that way"). — Hanover
All of this is impenetrable to me, I'm afraid. — Thorongil
At the risk of repeating myself too many times, I will only emphasize once more that these terms OVERLAP. They are not totally mutually exclusive. They answer different questions but they are perfectly compatible with each other. — Thorongil
The weak agnostic simply lacks knowledge of God. The strong agnostic knows that there is no God. — Thorongil
The Greek word gnosis means knowledge, while the prefix a is a negation. So the agnostic is "without knowledge," — Thorongil
I might also point out here that the weak forms of atheism and agnosticism reflect the psychological state of the individual. The strong versions are making claims about the nature of reality. This is important to note. You can't refute someone who says they lack belief in God, for they are just expressing a fact about themselves to you, not presenting an arguable point. It would be akin to someone telling you they don't feel any pain. That's different from saying "there is no such thing as pain." — Thorongil
Perhaps we should make a different thread? — darthbarracuda
God is unknowable. You tell me how we very finite, narrow-minded, pig-headed, flesh-embodied beings can "know" anything about a being who is infinite, immortal, invincible, all knowing, and always present everywhere. — Bitter Crank
The God that believers claim to know is unknowable. I say, believe, then shut up about the object of belief. There is nothing to say. — Bitter Crank
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