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Isn’t Atheism a world view without reasons and arguments?

Apologes

Active Member
Atheism as an idea has a long and diverse history, has numerous implications for a world with a long history of theistic ideologies, philosophers have discussed and reasoned over it in great detail, people have fought and died to promote a godless view of the world (as part of a broader ideology), yet some people just want to recast it as a vacuum that is completely inert and has no potential implications of any kind and in fact has never had any implications based on a retroactive application of a definition based on a modern, normative, ideological logic regarding how they thing the world should work.

So you get arguments like how atheism is no more significant than a-unicornism, which is only possible if you ignore a real world context of a idea.

Atheism has social, philosophical, cultural and historical contexts, and I personally don't see the point in trying to act as if it didn't or doesn't and turning it into a definition in a dictionary that must only be considered in supreme isolation.

Just because the label 'atheist' doesn't necessarily say a great deal about an individual, doesn't mean discussions of atheism have to be abstracted from the broader context in which they exist.

So when, for example, Marx explicitly argues about the importance of atheism to his worldview, I think it's a bit strange to try to redefine atheism so that Marx's atheism was not in fact atheism after all and he was just confused and meant something completely different.

Absolutely. Funnily enough, another atheist here accused me of insulting atheism for trying to show that the word's meaning is not limited to a mere "lack of belief". At first I was puzzled over what exactly such an insult would entail but I later realized that if anything is an insult to atheism, then it is ignoring it's historical heritage and actively trying to erase it from public memory.

There are quite a few online from my experience because they keep on excommunicating me for crimes against atheist orthodoxy :pensive:

Oh, I wasn't talking about people online. I was talking about the state of the academia with a focus on philosophers of religion. Speaking of orthodoxy, you're on the orthodox side, not them.
 

Cacotopia

Let's go full Trottle
Absolutely. Funnily enough, another atheist here accused me of insulting atheism for trying to show that the word's meaning is not limited to a mere "lack of belief". At first I was puzzled over what exactly such an insult would entail but I later realized that if anything is an insult to atheism, then it is ignoring it's historical heritage and actively trying to erase it from public memory.

.

erase what from public memory? Again with the assumptions.
 

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
This is what you claimed and what I addressed:

"But you hardly represent atheism at large and certainly, as noted by others in multiple instances, your position of "I also don't assume that God does not exist' is not a prevalent definition of atheism."

Try again.

However, evidence does seem to say that it is prevalent - although evolving.
 

PureX

Veteran Member
That the concept 'real god' has any coherent definition hence meaning.
Sure looks like a "belief" to me. Even a statement of reality/truth. I'm just not seeing any "unbelief" in it.
And I've responded by asking you (a) do you mean a real 'god', a 'god' with objective existence? and (b) if not, who cares? and (c) if so, what's a meaningful definition of this 'real god' such that if we find a candidate we can tell whether it's 'a god' / 'God' or not. And you haven't offered such a definition.
I am not 'theism'. Are we discussing theism, or my understanding and practice of theism? I thought we were discussing theism as a philosophical proposition; that God/gods exist. Leaving it to each of us to determine for ourselves the nature and effect of such God/gods would be. Normally I'd be happy to discuss my own view of it but you seem to have rejected all definitions as "incoherent" prior to even knowing what they are. Not a very rational thing to do, is it? ... Allowing your bias to overwhelm your curiosity and reason like that.
What does 'transcend the mechanisms of physical existence' mean? The only way to be real is to have objective existence, and if something's not real in that sense, the only other way for it to exist is by being imaginary, no?
If imagination is not real, because it's not a physical object, then the idea of reality itself is not real; which negates the whole premise that reality requires physical objectivity. And if imagination is real because it's comprised of physical activity in a physical brain, then so is "God", as it is also comprised of the the same physical activity in the same physical brain.

The problem here, for you, is that you want to assert that the idea of a thing is not real, when every "thing" that we humans experience and understand, including "objective reality" itself, is experienced and understood as an idea. And anything that may or may not exist apart from and beyond human cognitive comprehension (idealization) is by default beyond the reach of this or any other discussion.

God, like love, truth, reality, objectivity, and everything else we can name is an idea about reality derived from our experience of reality. If any of them "exist" apart from or beyond our human ideological cognition, we have no way of knowing it. Literally. So your "objective reality" is just as much an ideological myth as "God" is. And there is no way around this. Which is why atheism is a logical failure from the start, and is also why atheists are so determined to pretend that they don't believe in it when they clearly do. Atheism would not be a logical failure if it would base it's justification not on knowledge, but on value, as most expressions of theism, are. But most atheists are so caught up in their own bias and denial that they can't even consider atheism as an act of faith.
That appears to be an amplified take on the qualia argument. Human mentation has been the subject of an ever-growing amount of research as better and better tools have become available since the 1990s. My sense of self, complete with memory, speech, interior dialog, perception, understanding, &c &c, is the product of the biochemistry of my brain. No modern research gives the slightest encouragement to dualism.
So is "God". And the brain functions via comparing and contrasting information sets, so dualism is inevitable. Most of what we think we "know" is known against the conceptual background of it's opposite: here/there, good/bad, now/then, me/not me, real/not real, true/false, and so on.
Love is also much studied. We experience it subjectively, but that experience is created particular biochemicals (especially hormones) interacting with the brain.
Same goes for everything else we experience, including "God". It's ALL cognitive experience. And as such, it's all "real".
'Truth', to me, means conformity with / correspondence to / accurate reflection of, reality. Reality means the world external to the self.
The problem is that there is no "world external to the self" that the self could possibly apprehend. So you are using your "self" to define something that, by your own definition, you cannot know, but only surmise (imagine). Which is exactly what you are accusing theists of doing, and then negating as invalid. What you're proclaiming, here, is nothing but a blind bias. And how is that different from any theist of any sort proclaiming the reality of their own personal concept of "God"? You proclaim the existence of an "objective reality" that you cannot possibly know or prove because you are the "subject" in the terms, "subjectivity" and "subjective reality". And you cannot possibly escape from that condition. And yet you are using what you imagine to be this "objective reality" to negate everyone else's subjective conceptualizations of reality and truth for being subjective and imaginary.

Can you see how wildly incoherent this reasoning and behavior is?
 
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Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
No, that is only your misinterpretation of the evidence.
If you say so.

Again, perhaps it needs to be said differently:

Screen Shot 2018-06-12 at 8.01.46 AM.png
 

`mud

Just old
Premium Member
AS to KenS' point:
"Hmmm... i don't think that addressed ma\y point."

He seemed to have a problem spelling the word 'my',
wasn't that your `point` ?
If not, what was your point ?
 

Windwalker

Veteran Member
Premium Member
That would be a positive belief that you never stated that, according to your logic.
That of course would be correct. Yes, I would say I positively believe I never said that. That is an affirmation of my belief.

"I don't believe" would not be an affirmation of belief. It doesn't get much simpler than that.
"I don't" is an affirmation of what you are believing. "I" do something. "I believe" is an affirmation of belief. I "don't believe" is an affirmation of belief. "I believe theists are wrong", is a statement of your belief." It's not any more difficult than that.

Let me ask you this, what do the words belief and faith mean to you, that you think it's a dirty word to use with atheism?

There is a big difference between the two. If you do not believe God is real you are keeping the possibility open that God does exist.
What does future possibility have to do with a current position? The current position is "don't believe", which is a statement of your current views, or beliefs.

If you believe that God is not real then you have determined that God does not exist. Big difference.
No it doesn't. It simply means at the moment, it's how you believe.
 

9-10ths_Penguin

1/10 Subway Stalinist
Premium Member
Most atheists claim they are atheists because they have not been given sufficient knowledge that proves to them that God/gods exist. Yet they also claim to be agnostic when asked how they can know that God/gods do not exist. But agnostics claim that such knowledge is not available to us, and is likely an impossibility. So these same atheists are demanding knowledge of God/gods that they don't believe exists, or can be obtained. And then using it's lack as their justification for believing that God/gods don't exist.

Are you beginning to smell the disingenuousness, here? Are you beginning to see the inherent contradictions? They can't logically be an atheist AND agnostic if their atheism is based on a demand for knowledge. And yet nearly every atheist I've ever met has claimed to be both, based this same demand for knowledge.
So positivism is disingenuous? The idea that we should only believe things once we have good reason to do so always just struck me as common sense. Why do you disagree?
 

blü 2

Veteran Member
Premium Member
Sure looks like a "belief" to me. Even a statement of reality/truth. I'm just not seeing any "unbelief" in it.
What 'looks like a belief' to you, exactly? That the concept of a real god is incoherent? If so, that's not just a belief, it's a datum, and one clearly shown by your inability to offer a useful definition.
I am not 'theism'. Are we discussing theism, or my understanding and practice of theism?
We're discussing what you mean when you say 'god'. And you still haven't told me. The 'philosophical position' that what exists, exactly? Imaginary gods exist in vast numbers, but only in the imagination of individuals. Real gods? I say the notion is incoherent, undefined, apparently undefinable. You can disagree with that by providing a useful definition of a real god and then we'll both know what we're talking about.
If imagination is not real, because it's not a physical object, then the idea of reality itself is not real;
Imagination as one aspect of brain function is real, just as brain function is real. As for the things imagined, take the concept of a unicorn. The 'concept' part is real, exists as a brain state, just as a sheet of drawing paper can be real. The 'unicorn' part, the thing imagined, is not real, just as the unicorn I draw on the drawing paper is not real.

The basic trouble here is that the unicorn, though imaginary, is well enough described to let us determine whether a real candidate unicorn is indeed a real unicorn. That is, the idea of a real unicorn is coherent, even though there aren't any. Whereas 'god', though imaginary, is not well enough described to let us determine whether a real candidate is indeed a real god. That is, the concept of a real god is incoherent.
 

Apologes

Active Member
So positivism is disingenuous? The idea that we should only believe things once we have good reason to do so always just struck me as common sense. Why do you disagree?

Positivism is a lot more than just that. It is a view which relied heavily on the verification principle of meaning according to which only that which can be scientifically verified is cognitively meaningful, hence disciplines not based on the scientific method like metaphysics or theology, while they look as if they're saying something, are actually not saying anything at all.

The view was riddled with problems and saw it's demise in the 20th century. One of the biggest promoters of logical positivism (back in it's heyday that is), A J Ayer, has commented on the fall of positivism rather bluntly as follows:

"[...] the most important" [defect] "was that nearly all of it was false." [1]

A fair amount of laymen may not be aware of this and still go by as if it's a sound view, but the academia has acknowledged the failure of positivism and has moved on to more plausible theories.
 

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
The problem is that you are projecting your flaws upon others. You can't get a nuanced belief onto a billboard and since you lack a nuanced belief you assume that others do as well, even though that error has been explained to you
OK.... I'm not sure it is my flaws, but rather, as I said, it is the projection of atheists whether by billboards, books, web-sites or even what is projected many times on this forum.

However, maybe I can also look at any projection I may contribute.

But what is also evident, is a lack to admit that there is a projection of "no God" given by atheists. maybe something you can look at for yourself too?
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
OK.... I'm not sure it is my flaws, but rather, as I said, it is the projection of atheists whether by billboards, books, web-sites or even what is projected many times on this forum.

However, maybe I can also look at any projection I may contribute.

But what is also evident, is a lack to admit that there is a projection of "no God" given by atheists. maybe something you can look at for yourself too?


It would appear to be your flaws since you refuse to understand fairly simply and obvious explanations and prefer your own narrative.

In fact you just repeated an error after it was explained to you. So one more time just for you: Billboards are not known for their nuanced approach to topics. You cannot use a billboard to support your claims in the way that you tried to.
 

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
It would appear to be your flaws since you refuse to understand fairly simply and obvious explanations and prefer your own narrative.

In fact you just repeated an error after it was explained to you. So one more time just for you: Billboards are not known for their nuanced approach to topics. You cannot use a billboard to support your claims in the way that you tried to.
WOW!

I mentioned multiple verifiable evidences and you pick on the billboard, never addressing the rest of the evidences.

I think that says it all.
 
OK.... I'm not sure it is my flaws, but rather, as I said, it is the projection of atheists whether by billboards, books, web-sites or even what is projected many times on this forum.

Me, and many other atheists, do indeed assume no gods exist. This is often because it is considered that the probabilities of gods existing are very small.

As such it is logical to assume no gods exist, even while maintaining that there is the possibility we are wrong due to the ultimate answer technically being unknowable.
 

Kenny

Face to face with my Father
Premium Member
Me, and many other atheists, do indeed assume no gods exist. This is often because it is considered that the probabilities of gods existing are very small.

As such it is logical to assume no gods exist, even while maintaining that there is the possibility we are wrong due to the ultimate answer technically being unknowable.

This is definitely a great answer. @Subduction Zone please note that I wasn't far off.

Thank you for your honesty, it speaks highly!

I may not agree, but we can live together in philia love (Gr) even if we disagree
 

Thermos aquaticus

Well-Known Member
So, according to you, the proposition "There is no God" has nothing to do with atheism?

I am saying that "There is no God" is not a necessary position for an atheist.

You're making the same mistake as the other atheists I've talked to previously in this thread and that is you uncharitably assume that this complicated issue of what atheism is to be understood as is somehow a product of the theists being confused (or purposfuly dishonest) about when in reality atheism has been understood as the view that there is no God by atheists themselves for most of history and is still being advocated as such today.

And yet there are atheists right here on this forum telling you otherwise, and you continue to tell atheists that they are wrong about their own position. You won't let atheists define what atheism is, and instead push your own view of what atheists should or shouldn't believe.

The very people who introduced the purely negative aspect of atheism have admitted that such an understanding is unusual. I find it pretentious that there is so much insistence in this thread (and elsewhere) to try to alienate the historically predominant view and limit atheism solely to the negative sense which is fairly recent.

The historically predominant view amongst who? Christians?
 

Thermos aquaticus

Well-Known Member

I cannot prove that either the Christian God or the Homeric gods do not exist, but I do not think that their existence is an alternative that is sufficiently probable to be worth serious consideration. --Bertrand Russell


Would you say that Russell was an atheist?
 
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