Subduction Zone
Veteran Member
Not so. Gnosticism is a measure of one's confidence levels.Well, that's the easy position. There are no gnostic ones.
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Not so. Gnosticism is a measure of one's confidence levels.Well, that's the easy position. There are no gnostic ones.
Well, I know nothing about that. I'm an atheist.Sorry, that still makes no sense. The post appeared to be a strawman of atheism. For some reason some theists seem to project the sort of belief that they have upon others.
And not all atheists have the same beliefs.Well, I know nothing about that. I'm an atheist.
They do have a shared identity, voiced as atheism.And not all atheists have the same beliefs.
I kinda have already, but to summarise...
I'm a methodological naturalist, not a philosophical one, since I'm allowing room for what I don't know.
I'm an agnostic atheist, rather than a gnostic one to allow room for what I don't know.
I'm an atheist rather than purely agnostic due to what the existing evidence suggests to me.
Well, that's the easy position. There are no gnostic ones.
It is fine so far.
Regarding, the red highlight, would you say that this is still methological naturalism?
Regarding, the red highlight, would you say that this is still methological naturalism?
Wait...I might have misinterpreted your question. Perhaps you meant 'am I breaking principles of methodological naturalism in claiming atheism'.
No, I don't believe so. Those principles would suggest to me that a supernatural being is untestable, and so science neither proves nor disproves God. However, they do not suggest that I should limit my opinion on things only to what can be scientifically proven or disproven. I can use other evidence and rationalism to draw conclusions on things.
What I should not do is confuse my opinion, conjecture, etc, with scientific evidence. I don't believe I do.
To debate/argue with a fool is a fool's errand.It is not a fool's errand against those who consider the Biblical mythology literal,...
The number of people who can't tell the difference between a story and the ideals the story is meant to convey is debatable, and mostly irrelevant, if they don't want to know....which includes many or most Christians, and the line of the mythical origin of the doctrine and dogma of traditional Christianity, the anthropomorphic beliefs of a hands on God, and mythology of miracle workers does give support to the atheist whether you like it or not.
They don't care about what science observes as much as they care about the experiential value they gain from their faith. And no one can explain to them why they should.The fact that many if not most Christians in some way believe their belief is not consistent with science is the elephant in the room.
What does consistency have to do with it? It's about the value added, not the consistency. But even if; are you suggesting that the billions of humans that trust in the god-ideal aren't being "consistently" rewarded in terms of the value added to their life experience by doing so?Are you suggesting the concept of God is held in as consistent a manner as water?
We can reduce water to its component parts (ie. 2 parts hydrogen, 1 part oxygen) and that is 100% matched across all 4000+ words for water.
Are you sure this is a good comparison for the human construct 'God'??
That seems a stretch, to put it mildly.
Sure, it's the same reason that there are over 4000 different words for 'water', through almost as many different cultures and time periods. The phenomenon of water is a fairly universal experience, and yet the cultural, linguistic, geographical, and even spiritual experiences of it cause a whole range of different words, symbols, stories and expressions of it.
It's called 'relativism'. It's been a significant factor in science for quite a long time now.
I'm pretty sure you cannot explain the logic behind that conclusion.
Is there one water, or many waters? How do we know which water is the real one? Is it the liquid one, or the solid one, or the vaporous one? Is it the one called "water", or the one called "aqua"? And if we cannot answer these questions 'objectively', then water must not exist, ... right?
I'm pretty sure you cannot explain the logic behind that conclusion.
Is there one water, or many waters? How do we know which water is the real one? Is it the liquid one, or the solid one, or the vaporous one? Is it the one called "water", or the one called "aqua"? And if we cannot answer these questions 'objectively', then water must not exist, ... right?
It was not a ghost poster. I do not answer vindictive rant questions. I address specific rational question, and again . . . Maybe, maybe, maybe, maybe ah . . . and maybe . . .
You most be answering someone else, but not anything I posted.
Ask me specific relevant rational questions to what I post and I will answer.
I notice you hail as an atheist... so what is a "less wimpy" approach in your opinion? Denying evidence of God (if it were actually to be presented) and still asserting either that God doesn't exist, or that you still don't believe? If the evidence were entirely compelling, then yours would end up being the wimpy stance. Because you'd be wrong.That's a very wimpy approach and it completely ignores history.
Then why didn't you just say that in the first place, instead of making glib and insensitive remarks? Including all your cryptic "maybe's"? You might also like to point out which of my questions were irrational or vindictive? So to adhere to your request.
Why do you think Atheists do not believe in the existence of God(s)?
The belief in atheism, whether true or false, is in harmony with science.
This is such a strange statement. Just what, pray tell, is "the belief in atheism?"
You say "Hey there Mr. atheist, God exists!", and I say "I don't believe you."
You apparently didn't even read my reply to you.Not a strange statement at all. Simply; The belief in atheism, whether true or false, is in harmony with science.
I am not commenting here concerning why atheists believe as they do. I also do not address whether atheism is true nor false.
I believe it is fairly well documented that by far most atheists believe their belief is consistent and in agreement in science, ie the topic of the thread.
Not the topic and did not reflect anything I have posted in this thread.
Really? Did you not write...Some may, and I made no such generalization.
They are human like everyone else. Some do join UU and Zen and know them personally.
I made no generalization, and your vindictive sarcasm does not contribute to the dialogue.
Some if not many are loners in rebellion against tradition religious beliefs, and atheists are often rejected and shunned by their prior peers.