Admitted what? That it sounds weird? That may be - weirdness is a matter of personal taste. I just don't see how it's relevant to accuracy. Lots of accurate things can seem weird.
When someone admits that it's weird to use the word "atheist" to describe a baby or ape, that is a linguistic judgment that serves as data. Definitions are supposed to describe usage, so a proper definition needs to exclude babies and apes. (Frank Merton made this point very nicely.)
So? Atheists tend to be the ones most concerned with proper use of the term.
Nonsense. Anyone who uses the word is concerned with its proper use. Atheists like yourself have a particular axe to grind, however. Your insistence on the "lacks belief" definition has more to do with the debate between atheists and theists.
Anyhow, as I pointed out in my other post, there's a substantial number of people who use the term in ways that both you and I would consider incorrect: that atheism is "anger at God", for instance. If correctness of language is determined by popularity, does this mean that these people's definition is right?
There is a big difference between word meaning and the definition of a word sense. Meanings are very complex networks of associations. Definitions are succinct statements that help people distinguish between different senses of the word and serve as discovery procedures for setting up the correct meaning. Dictionaries do not determine what words mean. They provide readers with clues as to how words are commonly used by speakers of a language.
Did you notice where it gave "disbelief in God or gods" as a definition for atheism and "lack of belief" as a definition for "disbelief"? What do you get when you put those two definitions together?
Now what on Earth makes you think that the word "disbelief" would support your definition? Its primary meaning is the opposite of what you want. For example, dictionary.com gives two definitions:
1. the inability or refusal to believe or to accept something as true.
2. amazement; astonishment: We stared at the Taj Mahal in disbelief.
They go on to note that "disbelief" and be confused with "unbelief", which is
the state or quality of not believing; incredulity or skepticism, especially in matters of doctrine or religious faith.
Merriam Webster's Unabridged dictionary defines "disbelief" as:
the act of disbelieving: mental refusal to accept (as a statement or proposition) as true <listened to him with shocked disbelief>
If you want to define "atheism" as "disbelief in gods", I'll agree. If you want to define it as "unbelief in gods", you have lost my vote.
So... when the National Cancer Institute refers to children in a discussion of legal protections against secondhand smoke for non-smokers (see question 7), they're incorrect?
No, because the meaning of "non-smoker" can be extended to children, who, like adults, have lungs that can be filled with second-hand smoke. The word "atheist" cannot be so easily applied to infants or apes, because those individuals have no understanding of what a god is. That is, they are not potential theists, unlike children who are "potential smokers".
I think if any position is looking absurd, it's yours.
Absurdity is in the mind of the beholder. I'm not the one straining to call babies atheists.
Except "non-theist" and "atheist" are synonyms.
Only if you maintain that "atheist" can refer to people who are neutral about the existence of gods. In fact, the reason that a word like "non-believer" or "non-theist" exists is to distinguish the class of individuals who lack belief in gods from those who reject it. We use them in contexts where we wish to avoid the lack of neutrality that is associated with with atheism.
That would make sense, because it's exceptionally hard to find someone who's never been exposed to the concept of "god"... nobody who's capable of carrying on a conversation with you.
Don't you know any children? Have you never had a pet? We can communicate some thoughts to dogs--for example, that we don't like them pooping in the house--but they probably do not have a concept of gods.
By the same token, the term "person" almost always refers to someone who has a nose. Should we exclude those without noses (who lost them by disease or accident, for instance) from the definition of "person"?
Interesting question. I could answer it, but not easily or quickly here. I could refer you to George Lakoff's tour de force
Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things, which explains the amorphous nature and structure of word meanings, but that takes us well beyond this little discussion. Briefly, though, noses are part of the prototypical "core" human. Four legs is part of the core concept of a dog's body, even though three-legged dogs occur. How do we recognize what makes up the essence of a "person" or a "dog"? You need to study lexical semantics to understand that.
Though under Huxley's definition, agnosticism doesn't work as a "default" position either, because it depends on adherence to principles and positive assertions:
What you need to understand about people who coin words is that the meanings people assign to them by convention of usage may not be the same as intended by the coiner. Usage has drifted away from Huxley's original concept. Nowadays, its primary sense is associated with indecisiveness.
Bringing this back to the subject at hand, this would be like me not specifying that the term "atheist" doesn't refer to people who believe in God. It's unnecessary because it's built into the definition... unlike your claim about active rejection of god-belief and atheism.
It's not about being open-minded. The most pig-headed, closed-minded person in the world would be an atheist if he simply lacked belief in God. All this is about is trying to come to an accurate, workable definition.
I was referring to the purpose of the "lack of belief" definition. From the perspective of an atheist debater, claiming lack of prejudice is a way of claiming the high ground in the debate. My fellow atheists do not want to lose that high ground, so they fight for a more neutral and inclusive definition of atheism than is normally understood by the public at large.
I disagree. My many posts in this thread notwithstanding, I think that the definition of the term "atheist" is a bit of a sideshow. The best thing that atheists can do to improve their image is to not focus on what we don't believe and instead focus on what we do believe... which is going to be different for every atheist.
I think that you are already losing focus.
What we do believe is that gods are implausible beings. We reject belief in their existence, even if the rejection is fairly weak. If that excludes a lot of people who are on the fence about the existence of gods, so what?
This will make it difficult for theists (or anyone else) to tar all atheists with the same brush, but that's just fine by me.
Please remember that you said this. It underscores my point that the "lack of belief" claim is tied to a position in the theist-atheist debate, not an objective recognition of how people use the word "atheism". You fear being tarred, and you want to make it more difficult for your debating opponents to "tar" you.
If atheism depends on active rejection of God or gods, then you're only an atheist about the specific gods you've considered. I'm sure you'll agree that there are plenty of god-concepts out there that you (or I) have never heard of; by your definition, you can't be an atheist about those, since you've never actively rejected them - how can you reject a concept you've never even thought about?
If you take this argument to its logical conclusion, there is nothing you can ever talk about, because any word you use may be used differently by someone you have not met yet. The fact is that we both have a very good idea of what a god is and what the range of ideas are that people entertain when they use the word "god". I frequently take care to define a core concept--a prototypical--god as a usually immaterial intelligent agent that has absolute power over some aspect of reality. The monotheistic "God" is a god with a lot more semantic baggage--power over all of physical reality. What makes me an atheist is that I reject belief in such beings. I do not think it likely that brainless minds can exist, let alone have ultimate power to shape reality. If someone wants to start redefining "God" and use the term in some other way, they are free to do that with other speakers of English who will agree to it. I think that doing that leads people into lots of equivocation traps.
In that light, how can you call yourself an atheist generally? How can anyone? At some point, even in your worldview, atheism has to come down to simple lack of belief: you may not be capable of rejecting all those god-concepts you've never encountered, but you're certainly capable of not believing in them.
I am just as capable of rejecting belief in gods as I am in rejecting belief in flying saucers, pixies, and unicorns. If you feel that you cannot go quite that far, then I have mistaken you for someone with a sharper sense of reality.