You learn that from Wikipedia?is everyone clear now that many atheist dont have beliefs about a god myth?
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You learn that from Wikipedia?is everyone clear now that many atheist dont have beliefs about a god myth?
What should we infer from the (probably sizeable) number of people who define atheism as "being angry at God"?
No, others have admitted that, including Alceste, although she sides with you on the definition. I have also pointed out that the vast majority of people who will agree to call babies and animals "athiests" are atheists, not the general population of English speakers. However, I really have no doubt that a general survey would confirm my claim, since the primary definition in most dictionaries is not the one that atheists tend to favor, and dictionary are always vetted by usage panels. Dictionaries quite often make mistakes, but the word "atheist" has been in the language since Middle English. The usage is well-established. (I have researched the word in the Oxford English Dictionary.)So... your argument comes down to a gut feeling that calling a baby an atheist seems weird to you?
Exactly, and that is the point. Inherent in the meaning of a word like "non-smoker" or "bachelor" is eligibility to belong to the class. A smoker is a person (not inanimate object or animal) that could reasonably be expected to smoke. A non-smoker is always a potential smoker who does not smoke. Someone who is just out of cigarettes does not qualify as a "non-smoker". A "bachelor" is someone who could get married. An atheist is someone who could believe in a god. When you do surveys, you sometimes have to draw somewhat arbitrary lines for what counts as "eligible". Regarding atheists, a minimal eligibility requirement is that the person be capable of believing in a god, i.e. understands what a "god" is and rejects belief. Mere lack of belief is not a sufficient criterion to merit eligibility for the label.That entirely depends on what sort of survey we were doing.
No, they were establishing eligibility criteria for potential membership in the smoker/non-smoker category. This underscores the point I have been trying to makeBTW - I did a quick Google for "non-smoker survey". The web site for the first actual survey that came up says that they surveyed smokers and non-smokers over the age of 18. Were they being redundant when they said this?
Like you say, it depends on the point of the survey. In some cases, it could be that simple. In the case of religion, it would be more honest to distinguish between "theists" and "non-theists", "religionists" and "non-religionists", or "believers" and "non-believers". The word "atheist" almost always refers to someone who has rejected belief in gods, not someone who is a non-believer on account of never having been exposed to the concept of "god". Huxley made plain why he felt uncomfortable with the label "atheist", because he understood at an intuitive level that atheists are people who reject belief, not just people who think it impossible to know whether gods exist. He rejected the label "atheist", even though atheists can also be agnostics under his original definition.Why? You're reading it into more than the term suggests. Why wouldn't you take the obvious option and think of a non-smoker simply as someone who doesn't smoke?
No, the age and gender criteria are never specified in order to exclude inanimate objects and animals. People know that "smoker" refers to a person who might reasonably be thought to smoke. They need age and gender criteria because one needs to understand the conditions and assumptions that governed the survey.Well no, since every legitimate survey I've ever seen is careful to define the population being studied, which normally implicitly excludes rocks. If a survey report says that their study group is made up of something like "American men and women from 18 to 44 with no history of cancer or lung disorders" (for example), then the fact that they're not studying rocks is implied.
But you do understand that it is absurd to include non-moving objects as "traffic", don't you? You do not bother to tell people that houses and bridges are excluded.As an example from my own professional life, I've done traffic demand surveys for shopping centres that only cover 6 hours of the day and only consider cars and trucks. Does this mean that I think that cars outside those times or bikes aren't "traffic"? Of course not. They're just not relevant to what I'm trying to figure out.
I understand that, but I think that you are very strongly motivated not to give up a very popular definition of the term "atheist", because it puts atheists in their strongest position--that of being open-minded people who have yet to be convinced of the existence of gods. In reality, though, most of us have thought long and hard about the possibility of the existence of gods, and we have rejected that belief on grounds of plausibility. What makes us look absurd is when we end up calling babies and rocks "atheists" just to defend a bad definition. Far from making us look open-minded, it makes us look doctrinaire, dogmatic, and disingenuous (pardon my alliteration).Again - I don't see how using the term this way makes anyone look silly. All I've got so far is that you have a personal dislike for this use of the term.
Fine with me. All I can ask is that you look at your own usage and that of others objectively. Word meanings can be shifty, and so can our intuitions about what words mean.Well, when you come up with that explanation, please let us know. Until then, I'm not really inclined to take your "odd feelings" as Gospel.
It's really pretty simple. Atheism is the rejection of a belief. It's not like atheist have a book or some rules to what they believe in or not. Atheism is only the lack of belief in a god. There's atheists who does not believe in evolution, there's atheist who do.
Quite so! Atheism is not a belief system but a broad church, if you'll excuse the pun. Under the banner of atheism there are all kinds of people lacking a belief in the existence of gods: the uninterested, the disinterested, the strong sceptic the weak sceptic and the cynical antitheist.
I must make the point once again that this subject only seems to arise (and it does so with monotonous regularity) due to theists wanting to say that atheism is a religion, or that it too is a 'mere belief.' The former is absurd while the latter lacks any proper argument or ignores the distinction to be made between ordinary belief and a commited belief as faith.
This is my last word on the subject - on any subject here in fact. These forums are way to addictive and the onset of Spring, and my life in general, calls me to other things. Perhaps we'll all speak again next winter?
Now that would be an anomaly.There's atheists who does not believe in evolution.
There are also many atheists who have strong beliefs about a god myth.is everyone clear now that many atheist dont have beliefs about a god myth?
Now that would be an anomaly.
There are also many atheists who have strong beliefs about a god myth.
Someone "apolitical" has no opinion about or association with politics. Right? While babies have no apparent opinions, their "lack of interest" can't be claimed to be specifically disinterest specifically about politics. Their "lack of association" is circumstantial.In your opinion, is it incorrect to describe a baby as "apolitical"?
I did assign as I saw fit. Why would anyone else be beholden to accept what I say as true if it's not what they also see as true? Answer me that.BTW - what happened to your thing where everyone gets to assign meanings to words as they see fit? Are atheists exempt from that?
That there are even more people (than previously suspected) who define "God" as more than just "lack of belief."What should we infer from the (probably sizeable) number of people who define atheism as "being angry at God"?
Evolution is scientific; most scientists are atheists. The associations are hard to miss.For sure. It would be very unusual. Mainly because atheism is based on logic and reasoning, and so is evolution.
Evolution is scientific; most scientists are atheists. The associations are hard to miss.
Admitted what? That it sounds weird?No, others have admitted that, including Alceste, although she sides with you on the definition.
So? Atheists tend to be the ones most concerned with proper use of the term.I have also pointed out that the vast majority of people who will agree to call babies and animals "athiests" are atheists, not the general population of English speakers.
So have I; I quoted the OED (the online version, anyhow) earlier in the thread.However, I really have no doubt that a general survey would confirm my claim, since the primary definition in most dictionaries is not the one that atheists tend to favor, and dictionary are always vetted by usage panels. Dictionaries quite often make mistakes, but the word "atheist" has been in the language since Middle English. The usage is well-established. (I have researched the word in the Oxford English Dictionary.)
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?Exactly, and that is the point. Inherent in the meaning of a word like "non-smoker" or "bachelor" is eligibility to belong to the class. A smoker is a person (not inanimate object or animal) that could reasonably be expected to smoke. A non-smoker is always a potential smoker who does not smoke. Someone who is just out of cigarettes does not qualify as a "non-smoker". A "bachelor" is someone who could get married.
Why not?An atheist is someone who could believe in a god. When you do surveys, you sometimes have to draw somewhat arbitrary lines for what counts as "eligible". Regarding atheists, a minimal eligibility requirement is that the person be capable of believing in a god, i.e. understands what a "god" is and rejects belief. Mere lack of belief is not a sufficient criterion to merit eligibility for the label.
Really. So in studies of smokers vs. non-smokers, minors don't matter?No, they were establishing eligibility criteria for potential membership in the smoker/non-smoker category. This underscores the point I have been trying to make
Except "non-theist" and "atheist" are synonyms.Like you say, it depends on the point of the survey. In some cases, it could be that simple. In the case of religion, it would be more honest to distinguish between "theists" and "non-theists", "religionists" and "non-religionists", or "believers" and "non-believers".
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.The word "atheist" almost always refers to someone who has rejected belief in gods, not someone who is a non-believer on account of never having been exposed to the concept of "god".
Though under Huxley's definition, agnosticism doesn't work as a "default" position either, because it depends on adherence to principles and positive assertions:Huxley made plain why he felt uncomfortable with the label "atheist", because he understood at an intuitive level that atheists are people who reject belief, not just people who think it impossible to know whether gods exist. He rejected the label "atheist", even though atheists can also be agnostics under his original definition.
Huxley said:I further say that Agnosticism is not properly described as a “negative” creed, nor indeed as a creed of any kind, except in so far as it expresses absolute faith in the validity of a principle, which is as much ethical as intellectual. This principle may be stated in various ways, but they all amount to this: that it is wrong for a man to say he is certain of the objective truth of a proposition unless he can produce evidence which logically justifies that certainty. That is what agnosticism asserts and, in my opinion, is all that is essential to agnosticism.</I>
They're given in order to specify what the study will consider. Specifying that the study will consider "X" and only "X" has the effect of specifying that the study will not consider anything that is not "X".No, the age and gender criteria are never specified in order to exclude inanimate objects and animals.
OTOH, if a house or bridge did manage to turn into the shopping centre driveway somehow during the survey, we sure as heck wouldn't ignore it. That'd go in the report for sure.But you do understand that it is absurd to include non-moving objects as "traffic", don't you? You do not bother to tell people that houses and bridges are excluded.
Edit (because I completely mis-read this the first time):I understand that, but I think that you are very strongly motivated not to give up a very popular definition of the term "atheist", because it puts atheists in their strongest position--that of being open-minded people who have yet to be convinced of the existence of gods. In reality, though, most of us have thought long and hard about the possibility of the existence of gods, and we have rejected that belief on grounds of plausibility.
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.What makes us look absurd is when we end up calling babies and rocks "atheists" just to defend a bad definition. Far from making us look open-minded, it makes us look doctrinaire, dogmatic, and disingenuous (pardon my alliteration).
I have looked at it objectively.Fine with me. All I can ask is that you look at your own usage and that of others objectively. Word meanings can be shifty, and so can our intuitions about what words mean.
That's putting it mildly:Now that would be an anomaly.
Raëlism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaThe Raelian Movement teaches that life on Earth was scientifically created by a species of extraterrestrials, which they call the Elohim. Members of this species appeared human and when having personal contacts with the descendants of the humans they made, they were mistaken for angels, cherubim or gods.
Does the term "apolitical" imply that the disinterest in politics has to be specific to politics?Someone "apolitical" has no opinion about or association with politics. Right? While babies have no apparent opinions, their "lack of interest" can't be claimed to be specifically disinterest specifically about politics. Their "lack of association" is circumstantial.
I have no idea. I just find it odd that you seem to be taking so much exception to it when I'm the one doing the "assigning".I did assign as I saw fit. Why would anyone else be beholden to accept what I say as true if it's not what they also see as true? Answer me that.
But are they right?That there are even more people (than previously suspected) who define "God" as more than just "lack of belief."
No, I would be happy if he would stop repeating his definition and calling it fact.
Instead, I would prefer him to be as reasonable as Alceste and admit that it sounds like a silly thing to do to call a baby an atheist. She basically took the position it was an irrelevant point.
My argument was that it felt odd to call babies atheists because the definition she (and most other atheists) have been defending was flawed. It reduces one to an absurdity.
When some atheists insist that babies have to be classified as "atheists", they just make themselves look silly. Why do they do that? They've taken a stand on the definition of atheism that drives them into that corner.
The absurdity lies in that we generally don't grant a conscious reasoning ability to babies and rocks, but we do to atheists.
(Though some give cause for doubt.)
Is it possible to hold an interest in politics that isn't specific to politics?Does the term "apolitical" imply that the disinterest in politics has to be specific to politics?
I don't take exception to your defining it. If the point that each assigns meaning has been taken, then good. Relativity is good.I have no idea. I just find it odd that you seem to be taking so much exception to it when I'm the one doing the "assigning".
You keep asking for my opinion; my mistake is that I keep giving it.But are they right?
Do you agree with them?