Harbal wrote: ↑Thu Jan 12, 2023 7:30 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jan 12, 2023 5:17 pm
What does "disbelieve" mean, in that sentence, is the question.
To become aware of some claim, give it some consideration, and conclude that it lacks enough plausibility to be taken seriously, therefore not including it among proposed accounts of states of affairs one regards as being true, or likely to be true.
Alright. Let's take that definition and work with it.
On what does one base the "conclusion" that it "lacks enough plausibility to be taken seriously," when it comes to the matter of God? That's an obvious question, because according to neutral statistical gathering (the CIA factbook, for example) 92% of the world's population believes it's plausible, and another 4% thinks it
might be plausible...leaving only 4% that are convinced it's not. And that's without taking the historical count into tabulation, which would surely be far higher, since for long periods of time there was practically nobody who thought otherwise.
So the numbers of people who think a thing "plausible" doesn't prove anything. But it surely implies that somebody who confidently asserts that it's "not plausible enough" even to "be taken seriously" would need to supply some sort of rationale or proof himself, if he were to expect anyone to take
him seriously.
Does "disbelieve" mean, "not have any information to go on, either way"?
All I intend the word "disbelieve" to mean is having an absence of belief that something is the case.
You can, of course. However, I have to point out that, on an applied level, that won't quite work.
It makes
to know nothing at all about X, or
to have no opinion at all about a matter as being equivalent to "disbelieving." That seems not to do enough.
I certainly don't think that somebody who claims to be an Atheist wants to say, "Y'know, I've never actually thought about God at all," or "I have no opinion." If he's an Atheist, he has both. He's thought about it, and he has an opinion. I think that's fair, don't you?
But is it a
rational opinion, or just a
wish? That will have to be established on the quality of the evidence he produces.
...any questions you ask me about my non-belief in God, are equally applicable to to your (and my) non-belief in unicorns...
Hardly.
Almost nobody believes in unicorns, though there are some. But the vast majority of human beings have found the existence of some sort of transcendent deity to be totally plausible. At least, there are very few people with such absolute confidence on the matter that they proclaim, "It's not even reasonable to think that."
And if they do, then surely they owe us reasons why they think it's so unreasonable, don't they?
Atheists never want to say. Because either answer is a serious problem for them. (I'm not calling you out on this, please understand; I'm just talking about the logic of what Atheism itself holds.)
I doubt that the average atheist perceives any problems inherent in his atheism,
Well, that's true.
But I also find that the average Atheist is only interested in thinking about the matter long enough to fix on some singular idea that satisfies him personally that he can dismiss the whole matter, and then stops thinking right there. That's why they never want to give evidence, but prefer to complain, "I don't owe any." It's because their disbelief is, even in their own awareness, not well-founded, and they're very keen not to have their reasoning examined, or their basis of disbelief questioned. It won't stand up well.
What you have to realise, IC, is that while the issue of God might be a matter of great importance to a theist, it tends to have very little significance to an atheist.
If find the opposite is manifestly true.
Atheists are quite obsessed with dismissing God. They work very hard at it, because it's actually hard work. So, for example, when Dawkins or Harris writes a book claiming that God is a "delusion" or a "mass psychosis" or whatever, it's not at all because the matter has "very little significance" to them. It's because the one point on which they agree with the Theist is that it is perhaps the most important matter of all.
I imagine that your belief and faith in God are a major part of your identity, but my atheism -my simple none inclusion of religious belief in my worldview- is only a minor part of mine.
That might be. I don't doubt you.
But that's a very different question than whether or not it's a serious matter. Plausibly, it's a matter that has simply escaped your serious interest. That would produce exactly the same result, would it not? And as I say, it seems a great many Atheists are totally convinced it's a matter of primary importance, one way or another.
I feel the possibility to be so unlikely as to not warrant questioning.
"Feel"?
Is your conclusion that there needs to be no careful consideration of the possibility of God that you simply "feel" that? Or have you another, stronger reason for that conclusion?
That might technically make me an agnostic, but certainly not in the same way as someone with a 50/50 perspective.
Well, Dawkins thinks agnosticism is a spectrum...he claims it goes from "strong" to "weak," or from "hard" to "soft." He pegs himself as a "hard agnostic."
Well, okay. I can buy that. But surely even an agnostic must have reasons why he's convinced of the "strong" or "hard" version of doubt, rather than, say, the neutral or "weak" version. And he should, if he's a rational person, be able to explain his choice.
...you are projecting the importance that you attach to the issue of God onto the atheist.
Not at all. Dawkins, Harris, Hitchens, and all their ilk have chosen their own hobbies...I had nothing to do with it.
Yet they all are obsessed with this issue. Either they're a bit lunatic (which I accept as possible), or they have actually realized it has an importance that perhaps some others have failed to grasp. (in which case, perhaps a personal rethinking is in order, no?)
I suppose you can pick your explanation of their behaviour. I don't mind which you take.
I was making the point that there is irrefutable evidence that atheists do exist, but I don't remember what I was making it in response to.
I don't recall having expressed any doubt that Atheists exist. In fact, their existence seems to me to reinforce the plausibility of thinking that the God question is, for many people, quite pressing.