So, in other words, you do believe that there is only one valid definition for atheism, and that would be "Someone who lacks a belief that gods exist."Not exactly. The orange circle is also part of atheism, but I wouldn't say your sentence. Atheism is both circles, but if you're going to define it, you have to use a definition that includes both circles, since atheism isn't one of the other.
I understand your analogy now, and you are right if indeed there is only one true definition for atheism, just like there is only one definition for cars.mball1297 said:It would be incorrect to state "Cars are vehicles with gas engines". It is similarly incorrect to state "Atheism is a belief".
However, I disagree that there is only one definition. The "negative belief" definition is useful, descriptive, and in common use. It has a different enough connotation from the generalized "lack of the belief" definition that it's separateness is justified.
I think we define weak vs strong atheism differently. I consider weak atheism to be the "I believe god doesn't exist" position, and strong atheism to be the "I know god doesn't exist" position-- no hedging around. But this Wiki article shares your definition: Negative and Positive Atheism. So I'm not married to my interpretation, though I do feel the distinction is important.mball1297 said:And that's incorrect. If you want to say that strong atheism is a belief, I'll agree to it. But atheism is not a belief, just as cars aren't vehicles with a gas engine.
In other news, I appreciated your previously posted Wiki article's distinction between implicit and explicit atheism. I think that's the distinction-- and wording-- we should be using and making, rather than trying to cram all "atheism" into a one-size-fits-all definition.
Also, my car-- which is a vehicle with a gas engine-- wants to know what it should be called now, since "cars aren't vehicles with gas engines".