Yazata
Valued Senior Member
Tell what I'm unsure about.
It isn't a matter of what people think they are sure about. (That's closer to faith.) It's a matter of what they know.
Tell what I'm unsure about.
There were some intervening posts...Huh?
I'm still going with, "Huh?" You replied immediately after my post. You directly quoted my post. There has only been one other post in the thread, i.e. no "intervening" posts.There were some intervening posts...
That's a slander of most atheists - attributing to them claims of certainty and omniscience they do not make, or need to.Everybody's agnostic. Atheists and believers just don't know it.
It's a generalization that fits the post I was responding to: "I happen to be an atheist & consider agnostics to be cowardly atheists hedging their bet in our modern USA culture." That post implied that real, courageous atheists don't "hedge their bets" - i.e. they are fairly certain.That's a slander of most atheists - attributing to them claims of certainty and omniscience they do not make, or need to.
It's a slander of most atheists and an underestimation of many theistic believers, regardless of its rhetorical convenience.It's a generalization that fits the post I was responding to: "I happen to be an atheist & consider agnostics to be cowardly atheists hedging their bet in our modern USA culture." That post implied that real, courageous atheists don't "hedge their bets" - i.e. they are fairly certain.
Certainty is not involved. Judgment is. Faith is.
Maybe my sentence wasn't clear. I was responding to an atheist who seems "fairly certain" that there is no god.Is still bet hedging
If you want to take it as an insult, fine.It's a slander of most atheists and an underestimation of many theistic believers, regardless of its rhetorical convenience.
This atheist knows he is agnostic.Everybody's agnostic. Atheists and believers just don't know it.
That seems insulting. It is a claim that atheists & believers do not know what they think about the existence of gods.Everybody's agnostic. Atheists and believers just don't know it.
Hard luck.Let us make sure our semantics are very close to being the same. My definitions are as follows.
Theist or believer: One who believes in the existence of at least one supernatural being usually called a god.
Atheist: One who does not believe in the existence of any such supernatural beings.
Agnostic: One who claims to be neither a theist nor an atheist. I suppose this implies that he has no current opinion relating to the existence of gods.
I hope there will be very little or no nit picking relating to the above definitions.
There's either a belief or there isn't - you can't have a middle position.
Explain please.Fallacy.
Explain please.
^^^There is either what belief, or there isn't, without allowing for a middle position?
It's a nice tag line, and a nice graphic, sure, but none of it is attached to anything; it has no meaning.
There is either a belief or there isn't. Zero is zero. Belief or nonbelief thus formulated still results in essentially nothing, as it is akin to multiplying a variable by zero.
There is, of course, a plot twist, but it comes later in the variable adventure; that is, we will either need it or not.
A theist is 1 who believes there is a god or gods. An atheist is 1 who is not a theist. Everyone is either theist or atheist.
Word salad meaning nothing.
^^^Fallacy.
To reiterate:
There is either a belief or there isn't. Zero is zero. Belief or nonbelief thus formulated still results in essentially nothing, as it is akin to multiplying a variable by zero.
So pay attention, please:
Look, we all have pride and our moments of egotism and self-righteousness, but I really don't get this bit where people just can't be bothered to have a point while putting on pretentious airs. And, you know, if they can't be bothered to have a point, is it still too much to ask that they have a clue?
No, seriously what are we to think of the phrase, "Word salad meaning nothing", when it is the cowardice of going out of one's way to be offensive while ducking the point in order to simply repeat the fallacy?
It would be one thing if you had an actual answer, but, I don't know, what, is that somehow an unfair expectation?
There is either what belief, or there isn't, without allowing for a middle position?
There's either a belief or there isn't - you can't have a middle position.