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#31
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Re: what do y'all think?
[QUOTE=bryantm3;149151 . . . i think that most people who describe themselves as agnostics would probably fall under your definition of atheism. . . .[/QUOTE]
Maybe if everyone was always reading from the same book. What I mean to say relates to my first reading of the term agnostic and my first exposure to it's "definition". From that point I always told others I spoke with regarding my views on fatih that I considered myself to be agnostic. I can only imagine the impression I had made on many in the past . . . . not that I care of others impression of me or anything. Anyways, my first reading of agnosticism went along the lines of: a lack of faith towards organized religious institutions.
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#32
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Re: what do y'all think?
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All this is obviously anecdotal and subject to my own biases. Last edited by Deckard; 02-11-2011 at 03:47 AM. |
#33
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Re: what do y'all think?
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#34
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Re: what do y'all think?
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![]() Seriously though, they'd have got the gist of what you meant. |
#35
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Re: what do y'all think?
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(How I wish I could claim authorship of that.) |
#36
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Re: what do y'all think?
Despite peoples inability to agree on their understanding of certain words, that does not change the concrete meaning of words.
Theist=one who believes there is a God Atheist=one who believes there is no God Gnostic=one who believes it is possible to know God Agnostic=one who believes it is impossible to know God I am in agreement with Huxley, gnostics are delusional. On another note. . . why do talks about God always digress into arguments (for lack of a better word) about the human failings of religion? Can't spirituality be seperated from religion? In the realm of physics, experts are coming to the determination that their are dimensions of reality beyond our human experience. To be atheist, is to deny the possibility that these dimensions are devoid of intelligence. To quote D. Adams, "I see no evidence. . . therfore I am a radical athiest." Has he had access to all the evidence to make a solid decision? He is like the fool stuck in a box professing there is no light because he lacks the facilities to open the box. And when some one suggest he try to open the box, he ridicules the idea "Why attempt to open the box? There is no evidence of light!" ""There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which can not fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance- that principle is contempt prior to investigation." |
#37
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Re: what do y'all think?
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You REALLY don't get "God Fearing(sooo rolling my fing eyes here) America" even more so, THE SOUTH.
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#38
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Re: what do y'all think?
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Alternatively, we can just accept that the definitions of some words, particularly those describing philosophical positions, are mere starting points, and that multiple definitions of contentious words like atheist may well differ, sometimes in ways that are imperceptible to the average person but fundamental to someone who has thought deeply about it. For instance, you claim that an atheist is "one who believes there is no God", but you make no mention of the alternative definitions involving no such positive claim. If that's because you don't understand or accept the difference between, say, a lack of belief in god, and belief in a lack of god, then I'm afraid it may be you who needs the primer in analytic philosophy, not anyone else. There is no universally agreed 'concrete' meaning for words. The fact that words are not as fluid as water does not mean they are as solid as concrete. Some definitions are less solid than others. Words in general are closer to slurry than concrete. Quote:
Whichever way round you meant it - to be an atheist is no such thing. Either your deductive reasoning is in need of fine-tuning, or you're demonstrating that your concrete definitions are not so concrete after all. Atheism refers merely to the element of belief in a god. God is not, to most people, synonymous with "any intelligence residing in dimensions of reality beyond our human experience". If that was the case, it would be leaving the door open for God to be a theme park dolphin or a 78 year old prostitute or a cockroach, albeit in some higher-dimensional form. And none of us thinks that (apart from that evil Richard Dawkins, the bitter old swine!) Most of us imagine the concept of God as traversing dimensions, as being beyond them, and of possessing certain qualities. The reality is that there's a pretty big difference between what most atheists are rejecting (the omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient gods of religion) and the possibility of intelligent life residing in areas of reality beyond what is current known to us - regardless of whether that area of reality is beyond the boundary of the observable universe, or in another universe of higher dimensions within a greater multiverse, or in a completely different reality about which we are destined to remain forever ignorant. Being an atheist involves ruling out no such thing. All it involves is not positively believing in god, a being about which, by most definitions, we can have no actual knowledge. (Look up ignosticism.) There may be a lot more intelligence out there, not only in our own Universe, but in other universes, multiverses, and beyond even that, in a way that we can't begin to imagine. But there's a huge gulf between the idea of that and the idea of an all-encompassing loving judging God who takes an interest in human affairs, listens to prayers, and so on and who presumably straddles what we might call "everything". And that's why it's important to elaborate on word definitions, otherwise it can lead to quite different discussions and incorrect assumptions. Last edited by Deckard; 02-11-2011 at 10:26 AM. |
#39
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Re: what do y'all think?
You're quite right, I forgot about that.
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#40
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Re: what do y'all think?
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For the sake of discussion, I'll assume you've accidentally used a double negative in your comment that "To be atheist, is to deny the possibility that these dimensions are devoid of intelligence". As an atheist, I fully acknowledge that dimensions beyond our perception, as well as theorized alternate universes and such (if they even exist) could all contain forms of life and intelligence that we've never even dreamed of. In fact, it's quite likely that they do based on what we know - even though there's no direct evidence of it yet. Because what we know is that here on Earth, life is tenacious. It persists through mass extinctions, it thrives in the most extreme of environments, it recovers from seemingly insurmountable setbacks. If anything, the evidence all points to the likelihood that life could be quite common in the universe and beyond, relatively speaking. But that's a separate issue from not believing in a god. While we know that life in general is tenacious and pervasive based on a variety of evidence, we have no such comparable evidence of any god - only faith. So from a scientific perspective (which a large portion of atheists share), life in unknown places has a fair likelihood of existing, while gods do not.
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Download all my remixes Last edited by Sean; 02-11-2011 at 02:58 PM. |
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