The problem's in your eyes again. You don't see God; you also don't see me. You don't see much of anything, I would say.
But you might be just one of those people who's already decided what he's willing to see and not see. That seems likely.
The problem's in your eyes again. You don't see God; you also don't see me. You don't see much of anything, I would say.
I don't think "lacking belief in gods" accurately defines Agnosticism either, but I agree that atheism has some work to do in properly defining its position.
Even so, all Positions appear to have the same range/spectrum of so-called strong - middling - to weak personalities, and these in themselves do not define the positions being discussed.Right. There's more to agnosticism, even. Agnostics can exist on a range: everything from what Dawkins calls himself, a "firm agnostic" to a "soft agnostic," which might well be somebody who is very nearly convinced of the truth of Theism.
But what's really the point is that such a definition isn't really going to cover Atheism well, or in a very flattering way.
-- unless it's coupled with a stronger claim, like, "because such don't exist."
Generally there is such coupling, and so the lack of belief is touted as the core identity of atheism, which as you have pointed out, would include any person which can lack belief in gods, further confusing agnostics as atheists.
I think there is merit in this observation.I've found that agnostics generally know what they are, but Atheists don't always want to be known as Atheists.
And with good reason: Atheism is irrational, and agnosticism can at least be reasonable. The problem, though, for the Atheist, is that saying, "I'm agnostic" doesn't do much to convince anybody else, or even to assure oneself that one is right. So it makes the Atheist's position much weaker than many Atheists would like it to be.
The way I am wording it comes from my experience with those calling themselves atheists as it is they who generally word it as such.As you're wording it, it leaves wide open the possibility that God or gods still exist, but the speaker just "lacks belief in them."![]()
I agree that 'lacking belief in gods" allows for the possibility that gods exist, which is not how atheists I have engaged with present their philosophy - and since they do have philosophy, it cannot be simply a case of lacking belief in gods.
Yes. I was using it in that context. I understand there are different sub-categories within each of the three Positions, seeing no current necessity to being any more specific than that.I'm not sure I see the logic of that last statement. How what does "have philosophy" mean? I know people who DO philosophy...and I have met those who have specific philosophies in mind. I've never met anybody who just "had philosophy," without further specification. It's a bit like saying somebody "has religion," without saying which one.
But I agree that the discourse of Atheism is very confusing. They sometimes talk as if they're only agnostics, and then other times, they want to self-present as Atheists. I think that's a function of the problem I've been pointing out: namely, that agnosticism is more intellectually honest but is weak as a statement, and Atheism is manifestly irrational and dishonest, but much more strong as a statement.
The problem for the Atheist, then, is how to get the strength of statement without exposing the irrationalism. And this is the way they tend to do it: they call themselves Atheists when they want to attack, but only defend as if they were only agnostics.
Or the truth is, lacking belief in gods is the default position of every human personality and it is from that point we each make the personal choice of the three positions available to us.The truth is, they really need to sort themselves out. "Lacking belief" is only strong enough as a claim to warrant agnosticism.
Materialists are the ones making such claims. To say otherwise is to support the misinformed opinion of what Agnosticism really is."I know there's no God" is the kind of attacking-claim the Atheists are keen to be able to make, though.
As an Agnostic I am able to avoid using such judgement statements as I am aware that many calling themselves atheists who debate theists are themselves former theists who have become disillusioned with theism and its claims of gods.And to "lack belief" in something that he either could know or should know is not any badge of honour, but rather just a confession of ignorance or inexperience.
Not at all. There is nothing bad about that position. The position is strong in that is is able to (easily) integrate theistic beliefs without having to actually adopt those beliefs as "true" or treat those beliefs as "false".Okay. But then you're badly positioned to accuse somebody else of being, say, irrational, for believing in God.
That is the rock and hard place Materialism has created for itself.That's what the "angry Atheist" types like Dawkins don't like about your position: they can't call faith a "delusion" if they aren't pretending to know that it is a delusion.
Of course, such lack of being able to decide where exactly one best position oneself is problematic. From an agnostic position, both the materialist and theist positions offer a wall - one which it is claimed nothing exists on the other side of said wall, and the other offering all sorts of unsupported imaginings in the form of varying claims as to what does "actually" exist on the other side of that wall.But even Dawkins retreats into agnosticism, when pushed. He doesn't want to have to defend Atheism as a knowledge claim. It's as aggressive as he wants, but too indefensible when questioned.
So it leaves the speaker open to the suggestion that he just hasn't got enough experience or thoughtfulness to know anything about the subject -- but it leaves the question of the possible existence of a God or gods inadequately addressed.
I would call that "turning a blind eye" but also note that this tactic is used by theists with strong unsupported beliefs, so wouldn't agree with any statement implying it is solely problematic for atheism.
I agree, actually: Theistic beliefs can be held blindly. People sometimes do that. But Atheism always is.
Yes. Agnosticism is as blind (to knowing what is on the other side of the wall) as are both Materiaism and Theism.Can agnosticism be blind?
No.Can we insist we don't know things, when we really do know them, or should know them, or have available all the good reasons to know them but refuse to know them?
As soon as any supported information is supplied by Materialism and Theism, Agnosticism is able and willing to integrate said data into the overall picture such data presents. Thus it does not turn a blind eye as the position does not allow for the personality to use it in that way.I suppose it can, too.
Atheism (as Agnosticism defines it) is not something which requires "saving" as it is simply the natural default position from which the personality steps into the situation from. The situation creates the positions mentioned - Materialism Theism and Agnosticism and the personalities choose accordingly.So maybe that's only a comment about the people, not the belief. I think agnosticism can be rational, just as Theism can be. I don't see how we can save Atheism, though.
Atheists would be smart to reject so weak a definition. It leaves them no means to say that God does not exist, and puts the fault back on the speaker for "lacking" knowledge.
I don't think the words themselves are weak re describing an actuality (such as you pointed out - it applies to Agnosticism) but it is inadequate as a stand alone definition of either Atheism and Agnosticism.
This would require explaining the knowledge the gods don't exist be they "he" she" or "it" gods.Yes, it needs more. And I think we can tell what it would be.
Atheism would have to say, "I lack belief in God, because I know He doesn't exist."
Not quite so. None of the positions are "personal" (which explain why there exists sub-categorizes)And agnosticism would have to say something more like, "I lack believe in God because I personally have not seen evidence for God."
No quite so. For all, the starting position is "lacks belief" and from that point, Beliefs are general present in both Materialist and Theist positions, but not in the Agnostic position. Agnostics do not argue from belief(s).In both cases, it's the second clause that makes the ideological position clear; the first clause is identical, so doesn't tell us which we're dealing with.
I think the evidence supports the premise that IF everyone starts off lacking belief in gods they are "atheists" THEN as each personality develops through its experience, everyone moves from being atheist to being one of three types of positions. Agnostic, Materialist or Theist.
As an Agnostic I can integrate this concept into the overall if it is argued as a subconscious knowledge but my saying we start out as Natural Atheists has to do with our conscious knowledge, which is set to "zero" as to begin with we do not even know about subconscious knowledge.We'd have to say it's the other way around, I would think. What seems clear from history and sociology is that human beings seem to have an inbuilt intuition about God; how else do we explain that 100% of societies, especially those that have never had contact with each other, have some sort of belief in God or gods?
It's really the Atheism that is learned, not instinctive.
Even so, Theism is derived from a conscious awareness of the subconscious reality and this has been/is still a gradual awareness for that.We don't even find Atheism as a major ideology capable of influencing a whole society until pretty much the 18th Century, and even then, only in Europe.
Now, it might be different in your personal case, and I don't call doubt upon your claim that it was. Perhaps you were born into an ethos in which disregard for any questions about God was the general practice, or the people around you were Atheistic, or that you never personally found reasons to think about it: how would I know, really? So I don't guess.
Suppress rather than expunge. If indeed these intuitions are subconscious realities which require examination, then they can only be consciously suppressed. If they could be expunged, then no interest in them should be forthcoming from the Materialist position and indifference would be the defult setting of Materialism.But I think the general human pattern has been the opposite: intuitions, at least, of the existence of God occur very naturally and very early in many people; and it takes a later exercise of will for many of them to expunge such intuitions from their consciousness.
Even Dawkins claims that, interestingly.
In that, (as an Agnostic) I would interpret this as coming from a frustration due to Theism being unable to explain itself in a manner that integrates the physical evidence with the intuitive claims made through Theism.He thinks that we all have a normal inclination toward belief in a Being above us, and an impulse to worship. He says he even feels it, whenever he looks at the complexity and sophistication of biology. Nevertheless, he demands that we must fight and override that instinct, because, he says, it's not to be believed.
For me this has meant I started out as a natural born atheist (re the question and associated questions Theism brings to the table) and developed from that in the Agnostic Position, largely because of the unsupported assumptions coming from Materialism and Theism. imo a most honest personality naturally evolves into the Agnostic Position.
Not just "at least" but "accordingly". If we do not know, we don't not claim to know.The agnostic position is, as I say, at least an honest one. What could be more honest than confessing, "I don't know"?
Such cannot happen unless the Agnostic defects to one of either the other two positions (Materialism or Theism). If such occurs, then one would no longer be an Agnostic.But we've got to be cautious not to let it become irrational and dishonest, if it should turn out to be the case that evidence exists, and we simply refuse to entertain any, because we've already made up our minds that we're going to remain agnostic-to-the-death, no matter what. That can happen.
When I refer to *The World* in which we find ourselves, and when I refer to the *real world* and not an imposed or overlaid view of Our World, I believe that I get close to the problem that many if not most here face. Spurgeon expresses it like thisThus, to Shakespeare's pictorial imagination, the problem in Hamlet is not predominantly that of will and reason, of a mind too philosophic or a nature temperamentally unfitted to act quickly; he sees it pictorially, not as the problem of an individual at all, but as something greater and even more mysterious, as a condition for which the individual himself is apparently not responsible, any more than the sick man is to blame for the cancer which strikes and devours him, but which, nevertheless, in its course and development impartially and relentlessly annihilates him and others, innocent and guilty alike. That is the tragedy of Hamlet, as it is, perhaps, the chief tragic mystery of life.
In your strange perceptual system, dominated by a specific religious view, man is responsible not only for his own condition in a world where suffering and disappointment are inevitable (to put it lightly), but he is responsible for the fallen condition of the world. That is, you believe that the original sin affected the Cosmos and ruined or contaminated *the world*. Literally, the sin of Adam & Eve poisoned life."a condition for which the individual himself is apparently not responsible, any more than the sick man is to blame for the cancer which strikes and devours him, but which, nevertheless, in its course and development impartially and relentlessly annihilates him and others, innocent and guilty alike."
I insist therefore that that’s the case. In one way or another. All the time. Always.iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 10:39 pm Or, sure, insist it is only "ideas" about these things that count in a philosophy forum.
Right: agnosticism comes in a big, big range, including everything from "I really, really think there are no gods," to "I'm very tempted to think God exists, but am just not quite sure yet." That's a big spectrum.VVilliam wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 9:12 pmI don't think "lacking belief in gods" accurately defines Agnosticism either, but I agree that atheism has some work to do in properly defining its position.Even so, all Positions appear to have the same range/spectrum of so-called strong - middling - to weak personalities, and these in themselves do not define the positions being discussed.Right. There's more to agnosticism, even. Agnostics can exist on a range: everything from what Dawkins calls himself, a "firm agnostic" to a "soft agnostic," which might well be somebody who is very nearly convinced of the truth of Theism.
But what's really the point is that such a definition isn't really going to cover Atheism well, or in a very flattering way.
But I agree that the discourse of Atheism is very confusing. They sometimes talk as if they're only agnostics, and then other times, they want to self-present as Atheists. I think that's a function of the problem I've been pointing out: namely, that agnosticism is more intellectually honest but is weak as a statement, and Atheism is manifestly irrational and dishonest, but much more strong as a statement.
The overall position of Agnosticism is the strongest,
Materialists are the ones making such claims.[/quote] Often true. But it's kind of hard to provide any rationale for Atheism if one doesn't also believe in Materalism, or Physicalism, CS Realism, or some such idea. So the ideas tend to kind of cling together. I suppose it might be possible to describe an Atheism that doesn't also require some such supposition, but it would be hard to do, I think. They're pretty much a matched pair."I know there's no God" is the kind of attacking-claim the Atheists are keen to be able to make, though.
Hmmm. I can't see any reason for adopting ANY belief that one has already permanently decided can be neither true nor false; so it seems to me that any agnostic has to be open to the possibility he's wrong to hold agnosticism.As an Agnostic I am able to avoid using such judgement statements as I am aware that many calling themselves atheists who debate theists are themselves former theists who have become disillusioned with theism and its claims of gods.And to "lack belief" in something that he either could know or should know is not any badge of honour, but rather just a confession of ignorance or inexperience.
Not at all. There is nothing bad about that position. The position is strong in that is is able to (easily) integrate theistic beliefs without having to actually adopt those beliefs as "true" or treat those beliefs as "false".Okay. But then you're badly positioned to accuse somebody else of being, say, irrational, for believing in God.
That's pretty fair. But whereas the agnostic can wonder whether the Theist has "seen over the wall," he already has to realize that the Atheist cannot possibly have done so. And he can wonder whether or not he could, himself, see over that wall.Of course, such lack of being able to decide where exactly one best position oneself is problematic. From an agnostic position, both the materialist and theist positions offer a wall - one which it is claimed nothing exists on the other side of said wall, and the other offering all sorts of unsupported imaginings in the form of varying claims as to what does "actually" exist on the other side of that wall.But even Dawkins retreats into agnosticism, when pushed. He doesn't want to have to defend Atheism as a knowledge claim. It's as aggressive as he wants, but too indefensible when questioned.
No. I meant, "Can it be a product of nothing but blind faith or blind unfaith, the way Theism can sometimes be, and Atheism always is?Yes. Agnosticism is as blind (to knowing what is on the other side of the wall) as are both Materiaism and Theism.Can agnosticism be blind?
Oh, I agree that's what agnosticism CAN do. I'm asking whether some agnostics can also go the other way, and refuse to be persuaded, even when the evidence is available. And I think they can.As soon as any supported information is supplied by Materialism and Theism, Agnosticism is able and willing to integrate said data into the overall picture such data presents. Thus it does not turn a blind eye as the position does not allow for the personality to use it in that way.
I mean "saving from being recognized as inherently irrational," or "rescued from being exposed as a claim the Atheist can't back with the required evidence." It's that that Atheism cannot manage, I think. Both agnosticism and Theism can produce sufficient evidence, I think, to warrant their own positions, at least...whether or not they can produce sufficient evidence to close the whole case in their favour for everybody.Atheism (as Agnosticism defines it) is not something which requires "saving"So maybe that's only a comment about the people, not the belief. I think agnosticism can be rational, just as Theism can be. I don't see how we can save Atheism, though.
I don't think so. If, for example, the whole idea of any God or gods were shown to be inherently irrational and self-contradictory, or were over powered by requisite evidence, I think we wouldn't even get to the question of what kind of God was being discussed.This would require explaining the knowledge the gods don't exist be they "he" she" or "it" gods.Yes, it needs more. And I think we can tell what it would be.
Atheism would have to say, "I lack belief in God, because I know He doesn't exist."
Not quite so. None of the positions are "personal" (which explain why there exists sub-categorizes)And agnosticism would have to say something more like, "I lack believe in God because I personally have not seen evidence for God."
Right. They argue they lack them. Except in the case of the obdurate agnostic I was talking about, the one who may decide not to believe anything, no matter how many arguments or how much evidence he/she becomes aware of. They have a belief in the universality and necessity of ignorance; and that would be another kind of belief.Agnostics do not argue from belief(s).
I think the evidence supports the premise that IF everyone starts off lacking belief in gods they are "atheists" THEN as each personality develops through its experience, everyone moves from being atheist to being one of three types of positions. Agnostic, Materialist or Theist.
As an Agnostic I can integrate this concept into the overall if it is argued as a subconscious knowledge but my saying we start out as Natural Atheists has to do with our conscious knowledge, which is set to "zero" as to begin with we do not even know about subconscious knowledge.We'd have to say it's the other way around, I would think. What seems clear from history and sociology is that human beings seem to have an inbuilt intuition about God; how else do we explain that 100% of societies, especially those that have never had contact with each other, have some sort of belief in God or gods?
It might matter to you. I can't guess at it. But if it were the case that you were raised with strong anti-God beliefs, or even raised in a place where such issues were just routinely ignored, it's possible you would find, later in life, that you had trouble imagining what role God would play in cognition or in life. Having been raised to ignore God, one might imagine He couldn't possibly be an important issue, and might bury one's awareness of God in the subconscious instead of acting on it. That could happen, too.Now, it might be different in your personal case, and I don't call doubt upon your claim that it was. Perhaps you were born into an ethos in which disregard for any questions about God was the general practice, or the people around you were Atheistic, or that you never personally found reasons to think about it: how would I know, really? So I don't guess.
Yes - at this point of the discussion, my background as an Agnostic is besides the points being made.
Yes, that's fair: suppress rather than expunge. I take your point.Suppress rather than expunge. If indeed these intuitions are subconscious realities which require examination, then they can only be consciously suppressed. If they could be expunged, then no interest in them should be forthcoming from the Materialist position and indifference would be the defult setting of Materialism.But I think the general human pattern has been the opposite: intuitions, at least, of the existence of God occur very naturally and very early in many people; and it takes a later exercise of will for many of them to expunge such intuitions from their consciousness.
No, I just find him the most convenient exemplar of the "angry Atheist" type. Few men actually get famous for their hatred of God; Dawkins is certainly one of them. He's made a mint on tours, selling books, doing interviews, and such, all to bolster the flagging un-faith of the ardent Atheist set. They pay him a lot of money, and he makes his statements very publicly.Even Dawkins claims that, interestingly.
Your mention of Dawkins tells me that you (perhaps) regard his word on such matters as being worthy of consideration and honest for that.
Well, if you read Dawkins's own biography, he'll tell you that he became a Atheist at 17. At that age, he wasn't a biologist. He wasn't even a scholar. He was in high school. So I don't think it was a problem with physical evidence that compelled him to make his decision; more likely, youthful rebellion.In that, (as an Agnostic) I would interpret this as coming from a frustration due to Theism being unable to explain itself in a manner that integrates the physical evidence with the intuitive claims made through Theism.He thinks that we all have a normal inclination toward belief in a Being above us, and an impulse to worship. He says he even feels it, whenever he looks at the complexity and sophistication of biology. Nevertheless, he demands that we must fight and override that instinct, because, he says, it's not to be believed.
And that's right: one should not claim what one does not know. But one also should not insist on not knowing something one could know.For me this has meant I started out as a natural born atheist (re the question and associated questions Theism brings to the table) and developed from that in the Agnostic Position, largely because of the unsupported assumptions coming from Materialism and Theism. imo a most honest personality naturally evolves into the Agnostic Position.
Not just "at least" but "accordingly". If we do not know, we don't not claim to know.The agnostic position is, as I say, at least an honest one. What could be more honest than confessing, "I don't know"?
Well, there's a kind of truth in that statement, but not quite, I think. He would be very much like an Atheist, but would differ from that in that his insistent postion would be not, as in Atheism, that God doesn't exist, but rather that nobody is allowed to know that God exists.Such cannot happen unless the Agnostic defects to one of either the other two positions (Materialism or Theism). If such occurs, then one would no longer be an Agnostic.But we've got to be cautious not to let it become irrational and dishonest, if it should turn out to be the case that evidence exists, and we simply refuse to entertain any, because we've already made up our minds that we're going to remain agnostic-to-the-death, no matter what. That can happen.
Oh, I didn't know that you insisted on it. That changes everything of course.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 10:55 pmI insist therefore that that’s the case. In one way or another. All the time. Always.iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Jan 15, 2024 10:39 pm Or, sure, insist it is only "ideas" about these things that count in a philosophy forum.