I think you are acknowledging the problem that this sentence presents, but I am not sure. To me context is important. Being skeptical as an activity, since positions are actually activities, can be good or problematic. It depends. I could spend 40% of my day wondering if my wife is as nice as I generally assume. I think that's way too much. That I once in a while consider that there is a problem I am not willing to look at in the relationship, that she is responsible for, could be useful. Running around telling people our love is perfect might also be problematic. To me without presenting a context, an assertion like the one I quoted above isn't clear and probably is misleading, since it avoids the whole issue of application. But perhaps this is what you meant by 'the problem of the criterion'. And I do appreciate the probing, exploratory feel of your post.As of the present moment then I consider skepticism an irrefutable position. — TheMadFool
Not at the same time. If you doubt and play baseball at the same time you will play it worse. That's pretty much scientifically demonstrated. If you are engaged in the activity of doubting while doing a vast range of things, you will perform them at a lower level.This isn't true: we may doubt, even radically so, but we can, without the slightest difficulty, walk, talk, play baseball, etc — TheMadFool
I suppose it is possible confidence is problematic is one is specifically waxing philosophical. But in general there are many situations where confidence improves your chances of success. Even something as simple as the act of walking requires confidence that the ground is there, that you can manage to walk, and so on. And the more challenging the walk, the more important fundamental certainties are. Which would include confidence in one's own ability to notice anomalies in the terrain that might be dangerous. There are all sorts of skills/activities where one does not want to have thinky doubts while performing them, this can be dangerous. Of course if you do not have enough skills to be safe, then doubting the wisdom of certain acts is healthy, but once engaged lack of confidence can be problematic. There's a difference between pondering potential metaphysical exceptions and what might be illusions on certain occasions. The action of investigating ontology or whatever when one has the luxury of a safe environment and no physical goals and one is interested in doing that is not at all appropriate in many types of situations. A baseball players making sure to include some Zeno inspired doubt about the possibiity of motion while standing and the plate waiting for a pitch is reducing his or her chances of getting a hit. Factory workers would be increasing their risk of injury. And so on.Ergo, being confident is always a flaw for, as the skeptic reminds us, certainty is impossible. — TheMadFool
IOW simpler to assume consciousness is a facet of matter in general rather than an emergent property of some matter. We lack, currently a direct measure of consciousness, though we do have measures for behaviors and functions. We have assumed, for example, within the scientific community in Western culture that only humans, then grudgingly only perhaps primates, then slowly other mammals were conscious. Only in recent years has it been accepted that perhaps many animals more distantly related to us have consciousness in some way and the boundary is now hovering around plants in that community where there is some acceptance that they may be conscious. Before this of course other parts of Western culture just (and I would argue correctly) assumed that animals were conscious: animal trainers, pet owners, indigenous members of Western societies, children and more. There the presumption of consciousness at least with animals worked extremely well and was a better axiom than the one held by the scientific community. IOW there are a few default positions, all matter, all life, only very complicated organisms with nervous systems like us. I think the last is based on bias. Right now however we do not have a way to reconcile the issue. It is very hard to falsify any of these positions, though I would not say any of them are unfalsifiable, since technology may change that over time. We can test for memory in some things - which is a cognitive function that may or may not be hinged to conscoiusness. We can test for behavior. But we cannot directly test for consciousness in anything we cannot communicate with, problem of other minds and all that. Right now in the epistemologically scientific community with its default (and not demonstrated default) position that complex neural networks are must for consciousness, the set of organisms that are considered conscious has been expanding for decades. And as I said now even the possibility that plants are conscious is being taken seriously despite their not fitting that default. So, even in a group that has a very rigid a priori, the set has been expanding. Even up to the early 70s asserting in professional contexts as a scientist that animals were conscious was a position potentially damaging to one's career. I sometimes wonder if the influx of women scientists was part of what shifted the extremely rigid default agnosticism present before that, when science was actually behind and clearly almost solipsistically behind the positions of a number of other groups in Western society and then also beyond.than to suppose that some magical wholly new metaphysical thing starts happening when otherwise inert matter gets arranged in just the right way (or else than even we humans somehow don’t even have the first person experience we think we do — Pfhorrest
It seemed that way. But I think simply labeling something woo is rude and contentless.And I was urging against that kind of response to the OP. — bongo fury
I think that could have been shortened to 'I think consciousness emerges in human infants and not in any simpler organisms.' In my posts here I have been arguing that the people I responded to were reacting to various cognitive functions, memory for example, that may or may not correlate with experiencing. It is not woo to point this out. I was not asserting that viruses must be conscious or a pantheism. So, thank you for finally actually describing your views, even if you have failed so far to actually respond to my posts in any substantive way. And using 'metaphysics' as a pejorative, to me, doesn't seem to fit with the kind of intelligence you just showed in this last post. I know a lot of people use metaphysics as a pejorative - not realizing that everyone has metaphysical positions - but that last post tells me you must know better. Most of what is happening in this thread is speculative. I was raising an issue about what might be being (problematically) assumed, especially given our history of bias in relation even to mammals. You disagree with me. Fine. This 'I was urging against that kind of response' is a fancy way of saying you don't want people to disagree with you or who approach the issue another way to post their opinions. Using 'woo' is lazy ass posting and rude. Tossing metaphysics in after that was poor use of the term, since it is a blanket pejorative use for a whole area in philosophy that even you have assumptions within. On your third post, you can't even bother to respond to my arguements, but presume I should have noticed your earlier desire in a post of yours in the thread I was not responding to. You'll have to forgive me if I ignore any further posts of yours in the thread.As it happens, though, doing ontology, in the straightforward sense of inferring domains of objects to serve as the potential targets of our word-pointing, i.e. doing semantics, would be my suggestion for roughly where to look for the emergence of consciousness in (e.g.) human infants. — bongo fury
Matter is interconnected in life forms, and perhaps other batches of matter. A body functions as a unity. Of course perhaps on another level it is connected to other or all matter, but Cognitive functions arise from the complexity of the interconnection inside the organism and also the sense organs. But this does not mean that consciousness is limited to such organizations. Functions are not the same thing as consciousness.What’s the purpose of the brain and sensory organs then? Leaf, branch, tree, forest… what is conscious there, and what makes the boundary between my consciousness and that of the chair I’m sitting at, or the house I’m in, for example? — Zelebg
The cognitive functions need not persist. This likes memory, or that this particular batch of atoms, all together, is conscious as a unit, end, but this need not mean that consciousness ends.If that were the case and consciousness were a property of matter rather than a large, functioning nervous system, then consciousness would persist post-mortem. — Txastopher
And they do have traits and abilities that differentiate them. But consciousness may not be a trait in this sense, it may merely be a facet of what gets called matter. Since we can't detect consciousness, but we can detect behavior, and because we have a bias in granting consciousness to things like us, we tend to grant it to organisms and those like us, and always with great reluctance. Not long ago in science animals, even, were considered machines without consciousness or scientsts at least had to remain agnostic about it.I disagree. All organisms are similar in the sense that all of them are subject to the same physical laws of nature. However, when subjected to those physical processes, they may come to posses certain traits and abilities that differentiates them from each other. — StarsFromMemory
Actually nothing in what you wrote implies that consciousness is the result of evolution. Because certain things can be the result of evolution does not mean all things are.That would imply that consciousness is a result of evolution and can be explained by neuroscience. That is what I have come to believe. — StarsFromMemory
Yes, this is what you think. And I can see the appeal of it and it might be true. Or it might not.I don't think consciousness is a some fundamental property of all creation. I think even the most rudimentary forms of consciousness are only in organisms that posses a nervous system and as the complexity of the system increases, it becomes more and more aware. — StarsFromMemory
The complexity of the nervous system may allow for more cognitive functions, but this may not be coupled at all to being conscious. For all we know a mussel has just as intense experiences as we do, but it does not have anything like our range of cognitive functions. And scientists, after long bias, are beginning to consider that plants are conscious, despite the lack of nervous systems. They have memory, react to pain, communicate, even across plant species, make choices (albeit much slower than we do in general, but not always), and have across whole plant reactions that look very much like nervous system reactions despite not having one. There is absolutely no reason to assume they are not conscious. Note my wording.(What it becomes more and more aware of depends on the part of the nervous system that has become more sophiscated) — StarsFromMemory
I guess one possible source of anger - which some on both (all the) sides engage in, is poorly supported generalizations. In a thread with the intention, it seems, from later posts, to be about reducing animosity, we have an OP summing up the emotional state of a large group of people, with no evidence at all. This would likely anger people in any group that gets summed up. Bill O'Reilly is not a sociologist. It's his impression. The way news works and what becomes popular, angry commentators are going to rise to the top faster than people looking to build bridges. The people who decide to press their ideas in the public realm are more likely to be aggressive in general. That's often a good quality to elbow yourself to the front. There could be all kinds of biases that would lead those who think atheism correlates with anger to think they know this. But, really, we have no evidence, scientific evidence for example, or survey evidence, that atheists are angrier than theists or the norm of shopkeepers. So, maybe a first step would be not to accept the generalization nor spread it. I can't see how it could possibly do anything but piss off whatever group this kind of generalization gets aimed at. And then they are in a Catch 22.
I haven't read his posts, but if the idea is to defuse tensions a post like this is a bad approach. You are telling someone that they are not a true X. Then telling them what they should feel. Then telling him his belief system is weak. And then that he should have his feelings. That seems like baiting to me. Trigger anger while judging anger.If you were a true atheist, you would care less about this kind of stuff. But, apparently, your belief system is weak. Why can't you just say the EOG is false, rather than project your apparent frustration and/or vengefulness and/or resentment. Get over it. — 3017amen
What if over the long run this heuristic is detracting from life, but it's hard for you to notice because your focused on the trees and not the forest.I wholeheartedly agree with the aphorism: "question everything" — Wheatley
There certainly can be. There are dangers in not being confident. There is a lot of 'it depends' in this. But I think it is a good goal to be confident. Not some armoured version of it, where feedback and mistakes and threats cannot be noticed.There are dangers to being confident. — Wheatley
Did I? What did I say it was not relevant to? or that it was not relevant to whom? I did make a very specific suggestion to a person when he or she (not sure) finds him or herself in a very specific situation. A very specific possible version of a discussion of the meaning of these terms with certain demands. At least, that's what I was doing in what you quoted in your first post to me.You said the debate on the meaning of "atheism" was not relevant. — David Mo
Somewhat.I hope that my answer is now clear. — David Mo
In this discussion of morality, the definition of subjectivity that I'm concerned about is the one that asserts that morality is opinion, feelings, taste and hence doesn't lead to objective moral truths. As I said before even if morality is about personal feelings, so subjective, the causal patterns in re these feelings are sufficiently generalizable, i.e. the causes of happiness and sorrow seem to be similar for all people irrespective of cultural, social, economic, variations, that it allows us to be rational about what must follow thereof; in other words, we can be objective about what sort of moral theory is consistent with, morality's essence, our feelings. For example, there's a universal dislike for murder - we feel offended by it - and this can be the basis of the objective moral truth thou shalt not kill. — TheMadFool
If someone is publically identifying as an atheist and then talking about religious people or religion, then they are likely to be angry because religion has had so much power over minds and society. There are likely many instances where atheists come into public view in other contexts and either you just do not know they are atheists or even if one does for some reason, they are not coming off as angry. They are then speaking aobut other issues. Vocal side-takers in society are often angry, period, regardless of what the issue is or what side. And I say this as a theist. Religious people have to understand how much power religions have had in society and the vast amount of power abuse those religious have perpetrated. Religions are also responsible for intra-psychic violence which a lot of atheists (and theists) assume is part and parcel of believing in God. Theists who thinks these facets of religions are not intra-psychic violence - because guilt and shame are seen as good or not even noticed by them - will obviously not call these facets that. If religoius people, and especially liberals ones, cannot understand the incredible anger generated by the religions, my suggestion would be to find an atheist and ask them and really try to listen. Say that you are going to listen first, so perhaps they will be calm about it.He is suggesting that the majority of Atheists are angry. — 3017amen
Not in war time, at least for some. Others see no reason to create an exception when a government decides X is the enemy and must be fought. All sides even in what one side thinks is a just war will kill innocent defenseless people. Though I am not sure why innocent people with kevlar vests and MMA training are morally more OK targets. Like they are walking down the street and I don't shoot the guy with the suit, but the guy who looks pretty tough (and is training in MMA ((I can see by his black belt) and I see his kevlar vest sticking out of this collar so my shot has to be a head shot) so killing the second guy is less morally reprehensible.However, as far as I know, killing an innocent defenseless person is murder in all cultures. — TheMadFool
I think it is better to say universal morals. Your sense of what you mean may be fine, but moral truths sound like objective things, to me at least. Or one could work from your verb converge, to converged morals, since we are not likely to have universal morals any time soon.Do the definitions above conflict with my belief that there are moral truths, here being interpreted as those moral tenets arising from the simple fact that we all share a great deal when it comes to emotions, especially happiness and sorrow, which form the foundation of morality? — TheMadFool
Sure, but there are so many definitions of murder, what is a wrongful killing and I think, at this point in history at least, we are making a huge assumption that really, deep down, we all want the same thing. Different cultures AND different individuals inside single cultures have a different sense of what makes a killing OK. We also have deontologist and consequentialist divides. IOW when killing someone who is not directly guilty is allowed, for example. Like in bombing even military targets when some civilians will or may get killed. And then honor killings, or total quaker pacifists, or home as castle justifiable killing for thief break-ins versus cultures that require even escalated responses, and much more. And these are not going to be resolved by logic, because I think at base they are based on fundamental differences in worldview AND temperment. Maybe deep down we really all want the same thing, but it's a maybe. And right now we are dealing with intractable splits in many areas. It looks like we all don't like murder, but actually that is based on the equivocation that the word 'murder' represents. It means radically different things to different people and that's not even bringing in vegans.For example, there's a universal dislike for murder - we feel offended by it - and this can be the basis of the objective moral truth thou shalt not kill. — TheMadFool
Sure, you are. But people use the term in a couple of ways, so there is no reason for him to accept that label when he has a perfectly good label. If you want to think of him as an atheist because that is your definition, I think that makes sense. But in a discussion with him, it seems to me a rather civilized and polite thing to accept his even more clear self-label. Otherwise I begin to suspect something else is going on.Language definitely isn't a machine. But if I use the definition of atheism that says "no belief in God," than having no believe in God is sufficient to be an atheist (aside: I don't think it's very useful to extend the term to include babies; "no believe in God" is incomplete - it's "capable of beliefe, but no belief in God"). So when I'm saying I'm an atheist under that definition, then I'm implying he's one, too, under that definition. — Dawnstorm
Why not let it go. He believes in using history to determine the actual meaning of a word. He feels that there were political intentions between a shift from what we could call now the positive atheist, who believes there is no God, and the negative atheist who merely lacks a belief. He's rather not potentially contribute to what he considers and obfuscation. And, in fact, regardless of how one determines the meaning of a word, if he were to call himself an atheist many people would misunderstand. And here he is using agnostic, which works quite well.I'm not insisting he use this definition. But if he's insisting that he's not an atheist period, I just don't know how to respond to that. — Dawnstorm
Ah, but there's a third option. Resist his defining of you, allow him to define himself. I have argued with him around his campaign to get everyone to use the word the way he thinks it should be used by telling them they are wrong. I think it's fine if he tries to get us to move to what he considers a more rational schema, but I have issues with saying those who use atheist differently are wrong. I am in the current use camp. IOW I resist on this issue both sides for telling the other they should lable themselves X. There would be situations where I would argue against self-labeling. 'I am a medical doctor' would be an example where I would have certain specific criteria that might not be met. In this case, I am happy to have him call himself an agnostic.Basically, I would have to grant him the right to use his definition, while he doesn't pay me the same courtsey. — Dawnstorm
I think you can. And I had a discussion with him in this or another thread where I argued this case, and in fact, he listened quite respectfully. I don't think I changed his mind, but it seemed like he heard me and considered it. The word does have a mixed history as far as its meanings, so this is all not too surprising given the charge around the issues. But I think people need to let others choose their self-labeling on it, especially if the labels are, in the end accurate.I can't call myself an atheist. — Dawnstorm
You're welcome. If you look at his next response to me, he keeps mis-contexting my responses and misinterpreting them.Thank you. — Frank Apisa
I don't think so. Language is not a machine.Someone has to give. — Dawnstorm
Yeah, that's where I've been disagreeing with Mr. Apisa, and in part because of that, I think he can define himself in a way he feels is most clear. And he wants to use the term agnostic, which sure seems correct. If he doesn't want to be called an atheist, well, jeez there must be something more important to fight against. A man who uses an accurate term to describe himself, rather than a term that might be misleading, because there are certainly people out there who use the term, and no incorrectly (also) to mean people who believe there is no God. Many use it to mean that one simply lacks a belief in God. Dictionaries often include both. I think he should label himself as he likesBut if it's a win-lose debate about which term is more "rational", I'm not interested. Language isn't a formal system like maths, anyway. — Dawnstorm
Oit really seems to me you are not reading me carefully or paying attention to the context. He said, originally to me thatThat doesnt mean the word “theist” doesnt describe the person, its not the wrong category/label. — DingoJones
Get it? he is talking about a subjective feeling of importance he attaches to a word. I argued, in relation to his subjective not liking a term being used for him, that many theists would probably have strong reactions to the word theist. Maybe I am right, maybe I am wrong. But either way itIf I use a single word to describe myself...it is agnostic. I suspect the distinction I am making about this issue is of greater importance to someone using that descriptor...than to someone using "theist." — Frank Apisa
I know that Christians are theists, so please drop this line with me.That doesnt mean the word “theist” doesnt describe the person, its not the wrong category/label. — DingoJones
The label is ambigious. To some it means lacks a belief, to some it means believes there is no God. To some it means either. Given this, I think it is perfectly find for him to resist being labeled as something that has several meanings out there in the culture, even if one of them is correct regarding him. And the one that is correct is not as exact as agnostic. I'm done. This is not interesting.You were telling him to “resist”, I took that to mean you agreed the label didnt include him. So I was directing those questions at you, not him. — DingoJones
I didn't say it was too broad, just that Christians would find it too broad. I doubt vast majority would ever identify first as a theist and see if the other wanted clarification. Even Christian is too broad for many: they'll want to get in which large category, like Protestant, and then down into their specific church. Being merely a theist could still be really quite seriously the wrong thing to be given which kind.A Christian is a type of theist, its not “too broad” a description its a broad description. — DingoJones
He's an agnostic who doesn't want to be called an atheist. I don't think anyone should or really can make him take that label. If you think he should, feel free to try to convince him. I was supporting him in what he preferred.Resist what? Why? — DingoJones
OK, good. I did a trace back through our posts and I think it was your use of the phrase 'moral truths' coupled with the mentioning of objective processes in determining morals, that led me to believe you were saying something opposed to that last sentence.That god has been successfully ejected from morality, to say nothing of the fact that god never really figured in it as explained above, doesn't imply that there are no moral truths. — ChatteringMonkey
I did specifically mention that one can work with objectivity once one has subjective axioms. So I acknowledged that facets of working out a morality can be objective. But this does not mean that the conclusions (or moral rules) are objective. The sum of the process is still a set of rules that are subjective. Say, we all decide that violence is bad. WE don't like it. Then we can turn to science and parenting studies, etc. to see if there are ways to reduce violence. And then we come up with some moral guidelines. Like say corporal punishment has been shown to lead to violence, so we now want to stop corporal punishment.Well, I didn't mean to say you think/claim that subjectivity is bad in any way for morality but you replied to my claim that moral convergence among various moral traditions was an indication that morality is objective by saying that morality is subjective as if to say that that precluded any objectivity on the issue. — TheMadFool
I think most Christians, for example, would find theist way too broad. They'd want to get specific fast.If I use a single word to describe myself...it is agnostic. I suspect the distinction I am making about this issue is of greater importance to someone using that descriptor...than to someone using "theist." — Frank Apisa
I would resist their labeling you that way. I don't think they get to label you, nor do I think they have any ground to insist you label yourself that way. The term covers meanings that do not fit the same person. Resist.There is no goddam way I want any person using the descriptor "atheist" to insist that because I lack a "belief" in any gods...that I am perforce an "atheist." — Frank Apisa
Not on my part. But I did want to point out what would be subjective and what is subjective. Subjectiviity is the best part of my life. Not relevent in you case since you were speaking in general, but often I notice how this or that is sold as objectivity as a power move. Some of the most subjective and unempathic forces out there claim objectivity as a way to try to get others to back down. I gots no problem with subjectivity. Amongst other things, accepting my own, helps me suss out these power mad fools who are happily destroying the planet and our souls.I think there's a general tendency to look down on subjectivity; — TheMadFool
I don't know, you wanna get rid of people using the word belief, but you write a lot of absolutely certain seeming textIn the context of a discussion about the unknown...the word "belief" is used to disguise a blind guess.
The more honest version of "I 'believe' (in) God"...is, "It is my blind guess that at least one god exists...and that god is the GOD I worship."
The more honest version of "I believe there are no gods"...is, "It is my blind guess that no gods exist.
Really think about it...and you will see I am correct. — Frank Apisa
Yeah...the people of the 19th and 20th century still bought into the teachings of people who, for the most part, thought the Earth was a pancake flat object at the very center of the universe. — Frank Apisa
and here we have, it seems, a kind of dismissal of people's thinking in two decades. Like, well, that means we can dismiss their thinking, case closed. Her implied.Yeah...the people of the 19th and 20th century still bought into the teachings of people who, for the most part, thought the Earth was a pancake flat object at the very center of the universe. — Frank Apisa
No, in reality even if we could agree on core values, how we see these playing out and prioritized are going to have individual and cultural differences. And the means itself will also have values in it. We want to all make kids safe. Peachy. Seems like a shared core value worldwide, except for certain people generally considered pariahs in most cultures. But then bang, the means of achieving that (let alone what that actually means) requires even more agreement on stuff that gut feelings and culture have their way with. And then how that core value is prioritized in relation to other core values, such as developing adults from children who are experts, or not undermining their strength and independence.And I don't even think it really works like that, simply deducing morality from desires or preferences in some kind straigtforward logical way. There's a lot more that goes into it. — ChatteringMonkey
from the article.The quantum Zeno effect is used in commercial atomic magnetometers and naturally by birds' magnetic compass sensory mechanism (magnetoreception).[37]
The objectivity could be said to be in the deduction from subjective desires and preferences. The axioms in the system you describe would be subjective, which means the foundations of eveyr conclusion, thus moral idea, would be subjective also. The process of deriving a universal morality might have much that is objective in it. IOW if we generally agree we don't want children harmed, we can from that vague axiom derive logically certain conclusions (not that humans will ever agree on these but hypothetically). Still the axiom, hence the entire morality, has a subjective foundation and is subjective, if universal in this hypothesis.There is objectivity in the convergence of ethics. — TheMadFool
Not if you think that every belief needs to be criticized. That is, the quote I have quoted. That is an utterly unrealistic demand.The difference is that critical rationalism has built into it that that is the right way to proceed. — Pfhorrest
I just don't see that, not in practice. Scientists are justificationists in general, and they must know that not all assumptions have been demonstrated and they are revisionist at least in theory.] The justificationist at least nominally says "don't believe anything at all until it's justified from the ground up".
Right but if we have that sentence I quoted as part of the system you might as well be a justificationist. You have an endless job the moment you have a single belief. If I meet a person who works with justification who says that every belief must be justified, I will 'harrass' them just as I am you. And it has happened. If I mean a critical rationalist who makes a statement like that, well, you see what happens. And this is not just me being a pedant. I have a mixed epistemology. I use intuition, justification, and critical rationalism. I decide sometimes to let things slide that may or may not be working.Critical rationalism on the other hands says you don't have to justify everything from the ground up before you're warranted to believe it. You're warranted to believe anything you want, unless you've found something that demands you reject it. — Pfhorrest
Actually you could not do this. It's the cognitive equivalent of hitting yourself with a hammer you can't even believe exists. You cannot believe the criteria of justification. You can't decide anything even to not decide. It's gibberish.That by itself is compatible with justificationism: you could question everything, and demand conclusive answers before you let yourself believe anything, rejecting all beliefs that can't be conclusively justified yet. — Pfhorrest
A sentence that does not go with the sentence I won't quote again but have four times. IT DOES NOT FIT WITH THAT SENTENCE.But my second principle, "liberalism", says not to do that: you are free (hence "liberalism") to think whatever you like, until you find reason not to. — Pfhorrest
That by itself would be compatible with fideism, e.g. a religious person would say "so I'm free to believe in God then, thanks!" — Pfhorrest
I don't think that holds. But it's another issue and we can't seem to get around that sentence.But that, obviously, would be to abandon rationalism: just "believe what you want lol no rules". — Pfhorrest
Fair enough. Resist. There are some who would say that atheist agnostic is possible. But I think that agnostic has a particular meaning, generally around the potential for positive knowledge of God. So, to me it is a fairly precise term (not completely, since some people use it to mean they are not sure, but still, in general in philosophy forums it means what I am guessing you mean by it). I see no reason for you to be placed in a category you think does not fit, especially given what you take atheist to mean.There is no goddam way I want any person using the descriptor "atheist" to insist that because I lack a "belief" in any gods...that I am perforce an "atheist." — Frank Apisa