The Voice of Reason
Doctor of Thinkology
Mea culpa - I was actually referring to a kouple of the new members, if you get my drift...Deut. 32.8 said:I'll try not to take that personally.
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Mea culpa - I was actually referring to a kouple of the new members, if you get my drift...Deut. 32.8 said:I'll try not to take that personally.
I make the claim for my personal belief, only my belief, that there is no God. Not just from the logical inconsistencies associated with the God of the Bible but with evidence (subject to criteria of truth) that shows God is a product of man created with support from more than one scholastic discipline. I can not argue with conviction against other manifestations of diety specific to that diety, but the foundational explainations for it's creation would seem to apply as well.Halcyon said:How can you claim there is no God? How can you claim there is?
You either believe it or you don't, to claim to know for certain is foolishness, no matter which camp you sit in.
I went through a stage when I would accept that God existed and created stuff but that He had not been active in peoples' lives since. Is this what you mean?Ceridwen018 said:...How is it possible to believe that god exists, but have no belief in him/she/them/it?...
You've no belief in my sister. Would you assert that my sister does not exist?Ceridwen018 said:To me, there is absolutely no difference in "having no god belief" and "declaring that god does not exist".
I'm going to make multiple posts here to answer individuals so bear with me.The Voice of Reason said:You know that a generalization about Christianity based on Fundamentalists' (or Evangelicals') views is unfair. I would not wish my belief system to be judged by some of the posts put forth by others on this site.
It's more semantics than anything. Sort of the picky dotting the i's and crossing the 't's. Basically one is saying "I don't believe in the claim you've made." The other is actually claiming something in "God does not exist."Ceridwen018 said:This whole idea seems extremely redundant to me. How is it possible to believe that god exists, but have no belief in him/she/them/it? To me, there is absolutely no difference in "having no god belief" and "declaring that god does not exist". Obviously, if you have no belief in god, you don't believe it exists!
no you wouldn't have been an atheist becauseCaptainXeroid said:I went through a stage when I would accept that God existed and created stuff but that He had not been active in peoples' lives since. Is this what you mean?
Original Freak, am I understanding you right that some people would have classified me during that time as a Atheist because I had no 'God belief' but not a 'Strong Atheist'?
. In my previous posts I tried to state things a bit clearer. It boils down to one not believing in a claim and the other making an actual claim.I would accept that God existed
No, it is not. I do not believe in God(s) because I see no evidence which I feel warrants such a belief. But I also recognize that this stance depends wholly on my philosophical bias concerning what constitutes compelling evidence. Atheism works rather well as the consequence of a presumption, but not as dogmatic assertion. That you insist on viewing agnosticism, 'weak' atheism, and 'strong' atheism, as successive points on a curve is, in my opinion, symptomatic of a very fundamental error. It might help to set aside the Diety issue, and spend some time considering (a) what constitutes 'knowing', (b) what methods are valid for acquiring 'knowledge', and what is the sufficient criteria for validating knowledge.Original Freak said:It's more semantics than anything. Sort of the picky dotting the i's and crossing the 't's.
Have you ever heard of the "No true Scottsman" fallacy?Original Freak said:It's really only when ...
That is simply inaccurate: you confuse an inability to detect {X} with an inability on the part of {X} .Kirkaiya said:If God is truly defined as being indetectable by humans, and therefore not a part of this physical universe (assuming we can ultimately detect anything that *is* a part of it), then god becomes irrelevant anyway - he has no means to apply leverage.
I, for one, haven't a clue.Alexander said:Clarification please. I note the capital "God". Is the atheism discussed here anti-personificational or creative force?
I think it is not inaccurate - if some entity has the ability to cause changes in our physical universe, then those changes would be detectable in theory, since they would have no clear observable cause.Deut. 32.8 said:That is simply inaccurate: you confuse an inability to detect {X} with an inability on the part of {X} .
I remember trying to convince kbc_1963 of this. With no luck.Faust said:Not having an explanation for something is not justification for making an assertion that can't be proved or disproved as the explanation.
Makes sense to me.Faust said:So based on this lack of justification (other than simply to fill in the blank) I personally have no belief in God/s. I don't believe in filling in the blank.
Does that make any sense to anybody.