crunk-juice
Senior Member
i have not even heard one decent argument from a theist.. ever. so in answer to your question, no.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
I dislike it when theists, agnostics or other atheists presume to pronounce what "atheists" believe or assume. I'm an atheist. That tells you little if anything about what I believe or assume; all it tells you is what I don't believe or assume. Beyond that, I'm capable of speaking for myself, if I feel like it.I call myself agnostic now because atheism has become about assumptions and not the search for knowledge.
I have to interject here and challenge the claim of close-mindedness. To give an example, if a theist claims that their god is unknowable while making all sorts of factual claims about that god then I do not believe it is not close-minded to dismiss their god as being contradictory.Personally I think atheism is falling into the relion trap. Closed mindedness on the part of atheists has led to the same dogmatic approach to untested (and possibly untestable) hypothesies as theists.
Please see this thread where this misconception is tackled - http://www.religiousforums.com/foru...ostic-doesnt-fall-between-theist-atheist.htmlthe basic premise of 'I don't BELIEVE' in god' goes against the very evidence based argument we use.
The FSM is a perfect analogy for how non-believers perceive the god concept and so is very relevant to the debate. You are raising the point that we cannot reasonably make the claim that we know any transcendental concept does not exist. This is true, but the relevance of the FSM as analogy is to show that those transcendental concepts cannot reasonably form the logical basis for real world claims/actions. See my signature which also touches on this concept. Basically, you have the scenario that transcendental concepts are beyond the realm of empirical analysis, and yet people use that transcendental concept as the basis for making factual claims about the nature of the world trying to have it both ways.I'm sick of flying spaghetti monster, it is not in anyway relevant to the debate. We are talking about trying to prove something transcendant in an empirical way and saying that if no empirical data exists, then it doesn't exist outside.
It is possible something supernatural/transcendental exists and it is a completely reasonable to recognise that we cannot be absolutely sure such things do not exist. If this is your argument then I agree. But the instant you then attempt to ascribe characteristics to such a concept and to use this concept as a basis for making claims about the world then it becomes an entirely different argument.I'm not talking about organsied religion here but the possibility simply of existence of SOMETHING.
When did the multiverse become theory??This is a completely reasonable possibility, particularly if you subscribe to the multiverse theory.
I see problems with this.Furthermore we are yet to resolve the idea of infinite regress. Yes some new theories help, but what caused those effects? something without a cause did. what has NO cause? I don't know, neither do you. We have no way of even contemplating that question properly, so why do we beleive that there probably isnt a god?
I hold no religious beliefs whatsoever. Does this question even make sense in my case?If you cannot find anything that SHAKES your beliefs, then you ARNT looking in the right places.
Please see this thread where this misconception is tackled - http://www.religiousforums.com/foru...ostic-doesnt-fall-between-theist-atheist.htmlI call myself agnostic now because atheism has become about assumptions and not the search for knowledge.
This viewpoint has a name scientism. While I dont ascribe to scientism in the way Dawkins does I must ask you a question:I would like to redirect my criticism to a different definition in the popular followings of dawkins et al who pronounce science as the answer and empirical observance as the only path to understanding our world.
i have not even heard one decent argument from a theist.. ever. so in answer to your question, no.
I think the claim holds true if you remove any arguments for deism from the mix.As an atheist I have to say, most theists don't present decent arguments, but the blanket statement is a bit unjustified (unless of course you haven't talked to many theists).
I think the claim holds true if you remove any arguments for deism from the mix.
Really? I know the decent ones are few and far between, but at least you have to give the argument from personal experience some credibility (at least it's credible for them, though not for me or you).
All sorts of crazy things are credible for other people - regardless of how credible somebody else finds something, has nothing to do with how credible I find it - personal experience included.
I don't see any reason to disbelieve other people's experiences, though. I myself had some extraordinary experiences that lead me to believe that a god existed for a very long time. I now have the knowledge to explain those experiences scientifically, but I can still see how such experiences could compel one to believe that a god exists given a slightly different set of knowledge than my own. I.e., the argument is a logical one, it's just the facts are incomplete.
I'm not saying I disbelieve that they've had these experiences - I'm saying that their experiences don't make god any more credible of a cocept to me, because I think they are misinterpreting their experiences.
The longer i go, the more i believe that any kind of god existing or having made us is unlikely. Oh, this is directed towards you jrbogie, if you don't believe in a god/gods you are athiest. Look at my tag, it defines me as agnostic athiest. It means i do not believe in god, but am by no means asserting an actual knowledge of facts. I do not, for a fact, know there is no god. I just don't believe. That is the difference.
So, if you don't believe in god, you are athiest. Now, admitting that you don't know(cause no one actually knows, they are fooling themselves if they think they do) is what makes you agnostic. Also, keep in mind, being agnostic doesn't necessarily mean that you think the human mind can't know, it can mean that you just don't know. I think it is ALMOST impossible to prove god, short of said god actually presenting himself before you.
Just so you know, i had the same argument about athiesm and agnosticism, i swore up and down that i was agnostic, not athiest. But if you look over the meanings, you will discover that you can be both. Agnostic deals with knowledge, athiesm deals with belief. And no, to be athiest does not necessarily mean you are asserting a disbelief in god, it simply means that you don't believe. Doubt is most certainly allowed, and if you ask me, encouraged.
You know the saying, only a fool is certain?
Ditto. Belief (in the truth of the thing) concretizes knowledge.I am perhaps somewhat unique in that I don't draw any distinction between knowledge and belief. I don't see how someone can believe something they don't know.
I think that portrays "faith" in a mistaken light. Like belief, we can only have faith in those things we know. The distinction I make is that faith applies in the case of things that are not actualized.I agree completely. Of course, i start out with knowledge, from knowledge comes belief. I don't believe anything unless it can be proven to me, which means knowledge comes first.
To me, faith is something made up by people who want to control others. It's like, you don't need to actually have facts, just believe, and you will be rewarded. That is a load of bull, if you ask me.
I am perhaps somewhat unique in that I don't draw any distinction between knowledge and belief. I don't see how someone can believe something they don't know.