hatred for being an atheist

Beefbisquit

Well-Known Member
Excerpt from Encyclopedia Britannica;

Instead of saying that an atheist is someone who believes that it is false or probably false that there is a God, a more adequate characterization of atheism consists in the more complex claim that to be an atheist is to be someone who rejects belief in God for the following reasons: for an anthropomorphic God, the atheist rejects belief in God because it is false or probably false that there is a God; for a nonanthropomorphic God because the concept of such a God is either meaningless, unintelligible, contradictory, incomprehensible, or incoherent; for the God portrayed by some modern or contemporary theologians or philosophers
 

Prawn Connery

Well-Known Member
I think he means people with no concept of epistemology and who feel entitled to limit the world based on their own personal mussing.
I'm sure you would need to provide the correct definition of the misconcept of epistemology in the first place to apply it rightfully, wouldn't you? If indeed you could prove your defintion is any more valid than anyone else's.

How is my theory on the innate concept of God or relative omniscience any less provable than your cut-and-paste views below? What original thinking have you brought to the debate?

Heisenberg said:
There are only two positions available on the existence of god. Belief or non belief, theism or atheism. Anyone who does not subscribe to theistic ideas is an atheist. Atheism only requires a lack of belief, and that belief can be lacking for any reason: ignorance, rebellion, logic, apathy, ect. Only a very small subset of atheists go on to also claim god doesn't/can't exist. You are choosing to define a whole group of people by that small minority, and leaving no room for people like me who have not been convinced of any god, yet still consider the possibility that evidence is out there and we just haven't found it yet. I don't believe, yet I don't claim a God doesn't/can't exist. Since I have no evidence or knowledge that God can't exist, saying he doesn't would require a leap of faith. I do not posses that faith, yet you are trying to box (people like) me into a position that requires it.
There are more than two positions. Your definition of "atheism", for example, sounds a lot like agnosticism. Perhaps you don't know the difference?

Perhaps, due to your conditioned state and sense of false superiority, there are no provisions for views outside your own based on the established norm. But why limit your argument to what others have simply said before you? Why not branch out?

Let's dispense with childish notions about Lock Ness monsters and "simplistic views of the world". I think such arguments are below people who clearly left immature analogies about supersticion and belief behind long ago. Let's focus on your adherence to the "musings" (good word, that) of your quotable friends below:

Heisenberg said:
Atheism has meant lack of belief as far back as 1772 when Paul Henri Holbach wrote: "All children are atheists, they have no idea of God." This statement only makes sense if the term "atheism" includes a passive sense which does not mean the explicit denial of the existence of any gods. A hundred years later, we see atheism is still meant to mean lack of belief when Charles Bradlaugh wrote in 1876: "Atheism is without God. It does not assert no God. The atheist does not say that there is no God, but he says 'I know not what you mean by God. I am without the idea of God. The word God to me is a sound conveying no clear or distinct affirmation. I do not deny God, because I cannot deny that of which I have no conception, and the conception of which by its affirmer is so imperfect that he is unable to define it for me."
There are basically two premises here - two different concepts.

Firstly, that children "have no idea of God". That statement is very easy to contextualise in reference to the religious views of the late 18th century and the explicit notion that "God" is the god of Christianity or some other mainstream religion.

Is that what Holbach was referring to? And if so, does that not limit his theory to mainstream views and concepts while ignoring the very idea of an innate belief in "the almighty" or an omnipotent being that has absolutely nothing to do with religious doctrine at all?

Have you even thought about that?

Secondly, Bradlaugh's (this time 19th Century) assertion that: "I do not deny God, because I cannot deny that of which I have no conception, and the conception of which by its affirmer is so imperfect that he is unable to define it for me."

This is very close to what I have been saying. And it's interesting, because it was coined only a few years after the term "agnosticism" was first introduced by Huxley to the wider world to define his own philosophy - which is quite different to that of the theist or even athiest (though obviously some people - such as yourself - can't tell the difference).

Seen in that context, is Bradlaugh still talking about "athiesm"? Is he refering to a "lack of belief" or, in fact, doubts over the afirmation of such beliefs? And again, is his statement not in the context of some form of mainstream religion? That "Standard God", if you will?

If making allowances - as you have above - for only two sides of a debate is not "limited" - as you seem to be referring to my own position - then I'm not quite sure what is!

Heisenberg said:
So we see atheism has always meant "without belief" while not requiring the positive claim that there is no God. You seem to be redefining it to fit your own simplistic view of the world, and resisting with specious reasoning when corrected. If you insist on redefining words and then having the world subscribe to the redefinition, and refuse any appeal, then some people feel talking to you is a waste of time, which is what I believe Pad meant. What's next? Will you redefine "up" to mean "sideways", "poison" to mean "zero"? Redefining words and expecting others to argue against the redefinition is no different than rewriting history and expecting people to argue against that.
Can words not be redefined? I'm a "gay" chap - how about you?

Honestly, please try to give us a flash of something a little more exclusive . . .
 

Prawn Connery

Well-Known Member
I understand (and disagree with) what prawn is saying. I was just adding my 2 cents to the mix. If I had to classify myself as either having a lack of belief in god, or an active belief that he does not exist it would be the latter.
Both are active beliefs. A lack of belief is a cognitive action in the same way that apathy is a cognitive action. Both are consious (possibly even sub-concious) decisions. But both require actions.
 

Prawn Connery

Well-Known Member
Likewise, people who do not have a belief in god do not necessarily believe god doesn't exist, only that they haven't seen the required evidence to form a belief.
Is that athiesm? Are you sure?

Beefbisqui said:
What the hell are you talking about? We would completely derail the entire concept of language if we were to do that. It's silly to even waste time pondering it. Language only works if there are rules to it, how would calling everything an apple, facilitate the passing of knowledge from one person to another? It's ridiculous.

If we called everything an apple, an apple would no longer mean the same thing, but the actually physical object that we know as an apple would still exist (as an apple no less, as everything would be an apple) Non-apples wouldn't exist. Pointless.
I'm not talking about language at all. You simply don't get it. That's OK. You're right. Pointless.

Same as your take on "I think therefore I am". Sorry, but do you even know what that is supposed to represent?

And yes, "Encyclopaedia Britannica". Very good . . .

or a nonanthropomorphic God because the concept of such a God is either meaningless, unintelligible, contradictory, incomprehensible, or incoherent; for the God portrayed by some modern or contemporary theologians or philosophers
. . . except there is no such thing as a "nonanthropomorphic God". If humans define it, by its very definition it is anthropomorphic.
 

Zaehet Strife

Well-Known Member
I think he means people with no concept of epistemology and who feel entitled to limit the world based on their own personal mussing.

There are only two positions available on the existence of god. Belief or non belief, theism or atheism. Anyone who does not subscribe to theistic ideas is an atheist. Atheism only requires a lack of belief, and that belief can be lacking for any reason: ignorance, rebellion, logic, apathy, ect. Only a very small subset of atheists go on to also claim god doesn't/can't exist. You are choosing to define a whole group of people by that small minority, and leaving no room for people like me who have not been convinced of any god, yet still consider the possibility that evidence is out there and we just haven't found it yet. I don't believe, yet I don't claim a God doesn't/can't exist. Since I have no evidence or knowledge that God can't exist, saying he doesn't would require a leap of faith. I do not posses that faith, yet you are trying to box (people like) me into a position that requires it.

I have seen no evidence of the Lock Ness monster, yet I do not know that he isn't real. He could be down there. So while I do not believe, I also do not claim its nonexistence. It would not be fair for someone else to pigeonhole me into taking the position that Nessie can't be real just so they can feel they understand the world. That would not reflect my feelings and it would not reflect the state of the world.

Atheism has meant lack of belief as far back as 1772 when Paul Henri Holbach wrote: "All children are atheists, they have no idea of God." This statement only makes sense if the term "atheism" includes a passive sense which does not mean the explicit denial of the existence of any gods. A hundred years later, we see atheism is still meant to mean lack of belief when Charles Bradlaugh wrote in 1876: "Atheism is without God. It does not assert no God. The atheist does not say that there is no God, but he says 'I know not what you mean by God. I am without the idea of God. The word God to me is a sound conveying no clear or distinct affirmation. I do not deny God, because I cannot deny that of which I have no conception, and the conception of which by its affirmer is so imperfect that he is unable to define it for me."

So we see atheism has always meant "without belief" while not requiring the positive claim that there is no God. You seem to be redefining it to fit your own simplistic view of the world, and resisting with specious reasoning when corrected. If you insist on redefining words and then having the world subscribe to the redefinition, and refuse any appeal, then some people feel talking to you is a waste of time, which is what I believe Pad meant. What's next? Will you redefine "up" to mean "sideways", "poison" to mean "zero"? Redefining words and expecting others to argue against the redefinition is no different than rewriting history and expecting people to argue against that.
I agree. We are in a philosophy forum. When trying to define a word, we must use the correct definition of that word in order to communicate with others exactly what we are trying to say.

The word atheist, is by definition, a person who disbelieves or lacks belief in the existence of god or gods.

Again, this does not mean the atheist holds onto the belief that god or gods certainly do not exist, it is merely a statement of "Nah, not enough evidence for me as an individual to prove to myself that god or gods do not exist, not enough evidence to prove that they do either, so ill stick with my previous notion, that i do not believe in something that has not been proven to me."

The correct word you are searching for Prawn would be a "strong atheist". If you want to use the word, to describe an atheist who believes with certainty that there is no god.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
How is my theory on the innate concept of God or relative omniscience any less provable than your cut-and-paste views below? What original thinking have you brought to the debate?
I did not claim to bring original thought, but remedial corrections. Your statement was:

Until I realised athiests and theists are one in the same: one is certain that god (or gods) exist; the other is certain they do not.
Demonstrating your misunderstanding was all I intended to do.


There are more than two positions. Your definition of "atheism", for example, sounds a lot like agnosticism. Perhaps you don't know the difference?
Agnosticism is about knowledge, I was speaking of belief. There are only two positions possible, belief or non-belief. If you are not with belief, then you are without, just as if you are not with money you are without.

Perhaps, due to your conditioned state and sense of false superiority, there are no provisions for views outside your own based on the established norm. But why limit your argument to what others have simply said before you? Why not branch out?
Aside from the subtle ad hominem, I have no need to branch out. If we can't use the accepted definition of words, or agree on new usage, further musings are pointless.

Let's dispense with childish notions about Lock Ness monsters and "simplistic views of the world". I think such arguments are below people who clearly left immature analogies about supersticion and belief behind long ago. Let's focus on your adherence to the "musings" (good word, that) of your quotable friends below:
There was no argument. It was an example meant to demonstrate my point. You've apparently contorted it into a "childish argument" in your mind in order to justify pushing it away.


There are basically two premises here - two different concepts.

Firstly, that children "have no idea of God". That statement is very easy to contextualise in reference to the religious views of the late 18th century and the explicit notion that "God" is the god of Christianity or some other mainstream religion.

Is that what Holbach was referring to? And if so, does that not limit his theory to mainstream views and concepts while ignoring the very idea of an innate belief in "the almighty" or an omnipotent being that has absolutely nothing to do with religious doctrine at all?

Have you even thought about that?

Secondly, Bradlaugh's (this time 19th Century) assertion that: "I do not deny God, because I cannot deny that of which I have no conception, and the conception of which by its affirmer is so imperfect that he is unable to define it for me."

This is very close to what I have been saying. And it's interesting, because it was coined only a few years after the term "agnosticism" was first introduced by Huxley to the wider world to define his own philosophy - which is quite different to that of the theist or even athiest (though obviously some people - such as yourself - can't tell the difference).

Seen in that context, is Bradlaugh still talking about "athiesm"? Is he refering to a "lack of belief" or, in fact, doubts over the afirmation of such beliefs? And again, is his statement not in the context of some form of mainstream religion? That "Standard God", if you will?
It's clear what was being said. Atheism is about belief, agnosticism is about knowledge. That is why a person can be atheist and agnostic, theist and gnostic, or anywhere along the spectrum. Simply knowing someone is agnostic tells you nothing about what they belief. A person can say they have no knowledge of God what-so-ever, yet they believe on faith or feeling. Likewise, knowing someone is gnostic tells you nothing about what they believe. I am with knowledge, but does that knowledge prove to me God's existence or his non-existence? In order to tell, you need to also know if I am theist or atheist.

If making allowances - as you have above - for only two sides of a debate is not "limited" - as you seem to be referring to my own position - then I'm not quite sure what is!
I do not demand anyone choose or accept any label, I am simply providing the correct description of terms. We are not talking about a debate, we are talking about your statement:

Until I realised athiests and theists are one in the same: one is certain that god (or gods) exist; the other is certain they do not.
There seems to be no debate here, your quote is pretty definite, and demonstrably wrong.



Honestly, please try to give us a flash of something a little more exclusive . . .
Belittlement and mental masturbation to the point of Gish galloping seem to be your only tools.
 

Prawn Connery

Well-Known Member
:roll:

Honestly. I was wondering when the epithets would begin. And you don't see the hypocrisy at all, do you? "Mental masturbation to the point of Gish galloping" - very alliterative! But hardly an observation.

I'll dispense with the lazy cut-and-paste dissection argument that you all seem to employ by simply suggesting that you are not "with knowledge" until you understand that knowledge itself is in a state of flux - and inherently hinges on the theory (and general acceptance) of the time. Which, as human history attests, is ephemeral.

All theories stand to be disproved. All knowledge is a product of our current state. There is no such thing as "true" knowledge, because there is no such thing as "true" anything: everything is a perception.

The same applies to language. Which is why it evolves and will continue to evolve no matter how you may cling to it.

If athiesm is about belief, and agnosticism about knowledge, then where does the "belief" in your "knowledge" fit in? You write as if belief and knowledge are seperable.

Are they?

Accepting you don't have the knowledge to base a particular belief on anything requires a belief in and of itself.

I certainly expect you to recant this with a bit of . . Kant. But that's all I can expect, as you have stated that your "belief" in your "knowledge" is not only irrefutable, but should form the basis of all underdstanding. You have made no provision for the aspects of existance that fall outside that "spectra" of human knowledge, and do not seem to be prepared to acknowledge we are fallible by our very make-up!

By dismissing the existance of god through whatever means - active non-belief, the (spurrious) denial of belief, or simple contortions of what you claim to be accepted defintions of the word itself - you are dismissing everything you don't know, and failing to open yourself to ideas that may fly in the face of your learned (outdated - much of what we do learn soon becomes outdated) behaviour.

I will stand by my statement:

athiests and theists are one in the same: one is certain that god (or gods) exist; the other is certain they do not.
Your arguments are uncannily similar (think about it). You both put your belief in something - even lack of belief. You really need to understand the concept that "belief" is at the core of human existance: if you "believe" this reality, if you "believe" in your existance, if you "believe" in the knowledge of your fellow man, then everything you think or do is based either on belief, or on innate (genetic) reflex.

Furthermore, I believe (there's that word again) that part of the human condition is having an innate belief in an omnipotent force - whatever form that takes at whatever stage in life you are at.

You believe you are superior to me. I believe I am superior to you. There is a heirarchy of omnipotence in the human condition limited only by a lack of omnipotence itself!

I mean, who made you God? ;-)
 

Beefbisquit

Well-Known Member
Is that athiesm? Are you sure?


I'm not talking about language at all. You simply don't get it. That's OK. You're right. Pointless.

Same as your take on "I think therefore I am". Sorry, but do you even know what that is supposed to represent?
Lol - yes, I've studied Descartes rather extensively, thanks!

And yes, "Encyclopaedia Britannica". Very good . . .
Yes, facts are good. Established definitions are good, too. They allow rational people to continue on their discourse.

. . . except there is no such thing as a "nonanthropomorphic God". If humans define it, by its very definition it is anthropomorphic.
An anthropomorphic god would mean giving human like qualities to god, maybe instead of sneering and telling people they don't know about philosophy (when they have a degree in Phil. no less, LOL) and you should start reading about pantheism and Spinoza. Thanks!
 

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
Here ya go connery.. pulled from google since none of the other explanations are getting to you.

atheist.. "a person who disbelieves or lacks belief in the existence of God or gods"

Not sure exactly what "disbelieves" means? well here you go again.. "be unable to believe (someone or something)."

read the definition of atheist 10 times.. 50 times.. 100 times, until you get it into your head. It should make sense by the 100th time.

athiests and theists are one in the same: one is certain that god (or gods) exist; the other is certain they do not.
- connery

how does this fit the atheist definition? Maybe I shouldn't get into this since others have already tried and failed, not because they're wrong.
 

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
atheism is a lack of belief. Saying "I believe god doesn't exist" is a belief.

definition of belief.. "an acceptance that a statement is true or that something exists." "trust, faith, or confidence in someone or something."

in order to say god doesn't exist, you'd have to have faith, trust, and confidence that he doesn't exist since there's no evidence to back that claim. This fits the definition of a belief.

saying god doesn't exist is a belief.. atheism is a lack of belief. what's not to get? very simple.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
Ah. "Mental masturbation" . . . "circle jerk" . . . I get it now. ;)

Ah but what is a "circle"? Is not the whole world a circle? Do people not jerk all around it? In your eagerness to belittle you seem to forget that we are all on the wheel, and those you jerk today may end up jerking you tomorrow.

“Society is intrinsically a legal fiction,” says Baudrillard; however, according to Long, it is not so much society that is intrinsically a legal fiction, but rather the genre, and some would say the defining characteristic, of society. The example of nihilism prevalent in Gibson’s Idoru emerges again in Neuromancer. But an abundance of discourses concerning the role of the writer as participant exist.

“Narrativity is part of the meaninglessness of truth,” says Lacan. Precultural Marxism suggests that society, somewhat surprisingly, has significance. However, any number of deconstructions concerning submodern discourse may be found.


The main theme of the works of Gibson is not deappropriation as such, but predeappropriation. In Count Zero, Gibson affirms precultural Marxism; in All Tomorrow’s Parties he reiterates structuralist discourse. In a sense, Lyotard promotes the use of precultural Marxism to deconstruct colonialist perceptions of sexual identity.


“Class is unattainable,” says Sontag. Lyotard’s essay on neodialectic modernist theory implies that the task of the poet is social comment. It could be said that Derrida suggests the use of precultural Marxism to read and analyse sexual identity.
Nihilism holds that language serves to marginalize the proletariat. Thus, Sartre uses the term ‘semiotic situationism’ to denote a mythopoetical totality.


Marx’s analysis of nihilism states that reality is capable of deconstruction, given that truth is distinct from language. But the ground/figure distinction which is a central theme of Gibson’s Mona Lisa Overdrive is also evident in All Tomorrow’s Parties, although in a more subdialectic sense.

http://www.elsewhere.org/pomo/
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
In all of these descriptions here I've yet to see this one!

Scientism




:o
I tired to discuss this with my FB page, which is about science/skepticism, and you would have thought I suggested killing babies. Although I feel the vast majority of what is labeled as scientism is not, I feel we can admit scientism is possible without weakening any scientific position. What I found is that many people who identify as skeptics refuse to acknowledge the term. The way I see it, if someone calls me a cynic, I define what a cynic really is and describe how a skeptic is different. I take the same approach with scientism. We cannot refute the accusation unless we define what scientism is, but the conversation stalled at trying to define it because people are apparently threatened by the term. Meanwhile, the next day I posted about the extinction of the black rhino which was largely due to the poaching of horns for alt-med purposes, and many people expressed that studies prove conservation efforts do not work, so basically it's a waste of time to care. Although this is an isolated and small instance, it seems pretty close to scientism to me.

But mostly what I see as being labeled scientism is actually objectivism.
 

bluerock

Active Member
Why is this thread reminding me of H.G. Wells 'The Island of Dr. Moreau'? Perhaps it is all the "Big Thinks" and references to same. While they are surely a form of amusement to pass the time (and collect money in the case of professional Big Thinkers), it's just whistling past the graveyard to me.
 
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