Well, obviously, you're free to attribute "atheist" to whoever you want. I'm pretty sure my budgie is an atheistNotvacka wrote:Sure. But I would not call a person who does not assert any proposition about God an atheist, not in this day and age. To me, the set of theists and atheists together consists of those who do. If you seriously have no opinion about God, you should not consider yourself an atheist, nor should you engage in any debate about the God concept. (After all, how could you?blackbox wrote:A person who does not assert any proposition about god, such as "god exists", well, they are not proffering a proposition. That's the difference between disbelief and e.g. belief "there is a god" or unbelief "no god exists". The last two are propositional, the bare lack of belief is not.)
Oh, I think I still get it. And in the exchange you refer to, I thought that Chaz got it too. But then he seemed to lose it again.blackbox wrote:You seemed to get the distinction previously...I like Chaz, but he can be rather trigger happy, writing too many posts while not giving himself enough time to actually read and understand the posts of others in between.
Having said that, Chaz is right in that the word "atheist" is a theist invention, from the days when theism was the norm and not believing in God was an aberration. Perhaps it's time to invent a new word from the opposite standpoint?
I'm perplexed that you think disbelief (which is non-propositional) in the existence of god is not a legitimate definition of atheism. Perplexed, because that is the exact (and primary!) definition given in authoritative dictionaries. Do you think they made a mistake?
Lacking belief in god's existence has nothing at all to do with holding beliefs about the concept of god, about people's "faith" in god, about what people insist their god wants them (or me) to do, or even about the possible existence of a god or gods. All disbelief is saying is that the person does not hold the belief "a god exists". That's it. It says nothing at all about other beliefs the person may or may not hold. It's very narrow, very specific, very simple.