Soren wrote:Your language also describes Atheism, of course. It claims the "truth" that there is no Creator Being in the universe, a postulate which it cannot "verify," and in fact for which it presents none of its own evidence, but merely denies the validity of such evidence as is presented by the various religions, just as CL has previously suggested.
What CL previously suggested was:
Conde Lucanor wrote:Atheism is just denying the existence of gods.
That is different from asserting that there are no gods. I consider myself an atheist, because I do not believe in gods; you might prefer to call that agnosticism, although I take the view that agnosticism is the opinion that the evidence for gods is inconclusive.
He goes on, quite rightly, in my opinion:
The same is true of religion and a lot of fine work is done in the name of religion. So too is a lot of bad; there is no compelling reason to think that any particular view on gods makes you more or less inclined to inflict misery on others.Conde Lucanor wrote:That's the basic principle and there's nothing implicit or explicit in that principle that advocates for discrimination and violation of human rights.
Soren wrote:Yet negation of the opposition does not constitute proof of one's own position, unless one's own position is the only rationally possible alternative.
Tell you what: you show me the words I have used that lead you to think I am making such a claim, and I will qualify or retract them.
Where they overlap is metaphysical being(s)-no metaphysical being(s). They all require that you believe in something for which the 'evidence' has an explanation that doesn't require metaphysical beings.Soren wrote:But since religions differ, there is not merely one alternative under consideration (i.e. god-no god) but rather many alternatives.
The only thing an atheist is certain of is that there is no evidence for gods. It does not follow that they are certain there are no gods.Soren wrote:So Atheism would need to present its own evidence, or else we would have no reason to prefer it over any of these particular alternatives, on the one hand, or over agnostic uncertainty (rather than Atheist certainty) on the other.
I think that pretty much sums up evidence for any hypothesis. I think it is worth pointing out that atheism is the absence of an hypothesis and, therefore doesn't require any evidence.Soren wrote:I also would ask a question about your term, "completely unverifiable." Does partial, inferential or indicative evidence count,
No. I have no idea what could constitute 'total and complete evidence'. Blaggard gave some figures for the astonishing accuracy of quantum mechanics, Richard Feynman said that if you were to measure the distance from New York to Los Angeles to the same accuracy, you would literally be within a hairsbreadth. Still, I don't 'believe' in QM in the way that some people apparently believe in gods, I am quite certain it is the most compelling description of reality currently available.Soren wrote:or are you supposing that some view or another should be capable of total and complete evidence?
Soren wrote:If the latter, would that not commit you to being a Verificationist?
I have stated elsewhere that I am an empiricist. I try and construct a narrative that is consistent with what I see and hear, and I am very cautious about any ideas I have for which I cannot point to something objective as evidence.
I'm not, but on a technical point, verificationism is about whether sentences are meaningful rather than true.Soren wrote:And if you were, could you supply an example of a "completely verified" position on the issues in hand, either from the "religious" or the "atheist" perspective?