What you say does not seem to make even grammatical sense, sorry.i think again is a belief.
you're defending your belief, your position, with another belief
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What you say does not seem to make even grammatical sense, sorry.i think again is a belief.
you're defending your belief, your position, with another belief
noYou didn't answer any of my questions so again;
Is everything people react to a belief system?
people act from belief; when not acting from knowledge. a mind reacts to the unknown with belief from prior experience; whether that prior experience is relevant, or not. babies react to the unknown, adults also.Is what you’re thinking of people reacting to actually atheism, alone and in itself, or deeper and more constructed concepts which may grow from it?
i never stated that atheism is a religion. i stated it's a belief system. you're trying to make religion synonymous with belief. they aren't. we learn from the unknown all the time by using what we know and testing it against what we don't know.If atheism is a religion, why wouldn’t it’s opposite, theism, also be a religion?
What you say does not seem to make even grammatical sense, sorry.
atheists have beliefs. all humans do. we all act from those beliefs. how we identify our system is our choice.Other than refuting claims of a god that are pushed at them, what "acts" do atheists do that are predicated upon atheism alone?
atheists have beliefs.
If atheism isn't a belief system, why do atheists act from it and theist react to it? Can we have our cake and eat it too?
"The lady doth protest too much, methinks" - Queen Gertrude - Hamlet - Williamshakespeare
Freedom From Religion Foundation - Freedom From Religion Foundation
Then what does the opening question in your OP actually mean? If people can react to things that aren't belief systems, why must atheism be a belief system for people to react to it? You might think you're making deep and meaningful points here but that really isn't how it's coming across.
Fair point, but there is a bigger distinction between belief and belief system. If atheism is a singular belief system, why wouldn't theism be a singular belief system?i never stated that atheism is a religion. i stated it's a belief system. you're trying to make religion synonymous with belief. they aren't. we learn from the unknown all the time by using what we know and testing it against what we don't know.
A lack of belief is not a belief, and certainly not a system. Is your lack of belief in Leprechuans a belief system? This doesn't even make sense.i never stated that atheism is a religion. i stated it's a belief system. you're trying to make religion synonymous with belief. they aren't. we learn from the unknown all the time by using what we know and testing it against what we don't know.
How can you read so many posts in so many threads on this subject and still not get it? Atheists do not have an underlying belief of no Gods. Repeat: Atheism isn't a belief there are no Gods.atheists have beliefs. all humans do. we all act from those beliefs. how we identify our system is our choice.
atheism is not a cookie cutter form. there are all kinds of atheists with one underlying belief of no gods just as there are all types of theists with one underlying belief in god(s).
From Wiki:each person chooses their own label. otherwise we identify as a humanist, conservative, communist, philanthropist, vs something relevant to god(s), either anti-god or pro-god.
A false dilemma is a type of informal fallacy in which something is falsely claimed to be an "either/or" situation, when in fact there is at least one additional option.
What the heck does that mean?you can take god out of the belief but you can't take belief out of a person.
We don't.If atheism isn't a belief system, why do atheists act from it
WRONG! -- and you must know it. Atheism doesn't motivate any more than a-leprechaunism or a-unicornism does.Atheism has motivational effect, they are not passive many a time, they do it actively and many a time proactively in other words they assert it but they never give evidences for their stance/world-view.
Right, please?
Three forms of atheism in hinduism:
1.Buddhism
2. Jainism
3. Carvaka
Christian Atheism
Atheism isn't a cut and dry belief system.
Types of atheism
atheists have beliefs. all humans do. we all act from those beliefs. how we identify our system is our choice.
atheism is not a cookie cutter form. there are all kinds of atheists with one underlying belief of no gods just as there are all types of theists with one underlying belief in god(s).
each person chooses their own label. otherwise we identify as a humanist, conservative, communist, philanthropist, vs something relevant to god(s), either anti-god or pro-god.
you can take god out of the belief but you can't take belief out of a person.
Well said.atheists have beliefs. all humans do. we all act from those beliefs. how we identify our system is our choice.
atheism is not a cookie cutter form. there are all kinds of atheists with one underlying belief of no gods just as there are all types of theists with one underlying belief in god(s).
each person chooses their own label. otherwise we identify as a humanist, conservative, communist, philanthropist, vs something relevant to god(s), either anti-god or pro-god.
you can take god out of the belief but you can't take belief out of a person.
Let's turn it around ontologically, then, as we may: there are only beliefs. Beliefs compose the whole world as each of us know it. Terms like "theism" and "atheism" are composed around one of those beliefs: the belief that there is a god as actual, in relation to that world, or that there isn't.Sure, atheists believe things. If your argument is only that people believe things, then it's a silly argument.
No, it does not.If atheism isn't a belief system, why do atheists act from it
Atheism has motivational effect,
Atheists are people, and therefore not always passive.they are not passive many a time,
they do it actively and many a time proactively in other words they assert it but they never give evidences for their stance/world-view.
Right, please?
Regards
Actually, Buddhism is not nearly so much atheistic as it is non-theistic.Three forms of atheism in hinduism:
1.Buddhism
2. Jainism
3. Carvaka
Christian Atheism
Atheism isn't a cut and dry belief system.
Types of atheism
Certainly, atheists come in many flavors, but there is only one, definitive feature of all atheism -- lack of belief. When you say "atheist,' unmodified, this is all you're saying.
Here's the problem. The "one underlying belief" isn't "no Gods," it's just non-belief. No Gods is a peculiar subset of atheism. It's not what most atheists mean when we use the term. If that's what you're talking about you need to use one of the modifiers in your link.atheism is not a cookie cutter form. there are all kinds of atheists with one underlying belief of no gods just as there are all types of theists with one underlying belief in god(s).
I don't think beliefs necessarily comprise 'whole worlds.' Most beliefs are mundane; insignificant.Let's turn it around ontologically, then, as we may: there are only beliefs. Beliefs compose the whole world as each of us know it. Terms like "theism" and "atheism" are composed around one of those beliefs: the belief that there is a god as actual, in relation to that world, or that there isn't.
I wouldn't call atheism a 'system' of belief, but it is a topic of epistemology.
Atheism is REACTIVE rather than PROACTIVE.If atheism isn't a belief system, why do atheists act from it and theist react to it? Can we have our cake and eat it too?
"The lady doth protest too much, methinks" - Queen Gertrude - Hamlet - Williamshakespeare
Freedom From Religion Foundation - Freedom From Religion Foundation