Agnosticism is, therefore, a valid form of belief. — Banno
Regarding Panpsychism↪Cheshire What do you think? — Banno
You mention, "a valid form of belief." What does that mean? And if there are invalid forms, what would they be? — tim wood
We are left with three possible forms of considered belief:
Committing to a belief that god exists
Committing to a belief that god does not exist
Not committing to either belief
Agnosticism is, therefore, a valid form of belief. — Banno
Looking it over it seems like you would have to ascribe a "will" or at least disposition to a collective mind in order to claim Panpsychism is a type of God. It seems like the closest thing rational conjecture can get towards i.e. the only thing one might reasonably pray to without the need for a storybook. It seems distinct enough not to be called God, but significant enough to destabilize an entrenched atheist with a soft spot for western notions of karma.↪Cheshire Panpsychism is a position on the separate question of what God is (or would be, if he existed). One can take any of the aforementioned positions on any notion of what God is, and take a different position on each different notion of God. — Pfhorrest
The possible range of beliefs are:
A) one believes that god exists, or
B) one believes god does not exist, (disbelief);or
C) one, after due consideration, chooses not to commit to believing in god, nor to commit to disbelieving in god or
D) one has not formed an opinion because one has not considered the issue (lack of belief)
Position A is (amongst other things), theism. B is atheism. C is agnosticism, and D pig ignorance, which for the remainder of this post, I’ll ignore. — Banno
A) one believes that god exists, or
B) one believes god does not exist, (disbelief);or
C) one, after due consideration, chooses not to commit to believing in god, nor to commit to disbelieving in god or — Banno
Placing the two possible existential statements within the scope of the two possible belief statements delivers four possibilities. One can:
i. believe (god exists)
ii. not believe (god exists)
iii. believe (god does not exist)
iv. not believe (god does not exist) — Banno
I don't believe in a God, but I do not know that god doesn't exist. — Tom Storm
You are either convinced of something or you are not. I am not convinced a God exists. That's the belief part taken care of for me. — Tom Storm
You need to add E:
E) after considering the issue, one finds it impossible to form an opinion (in effect, this is lack of belief; the very act of considering the issue has rendered it undecidable, moot).
This is a possible natural, organic consequence of having thought and read and discussed about the issue a lot, from different perspectives. — baker
You say you don't believe in a God, but you do you disbelieve in a God? You say you are not convinced a God exists, but are you convinced a God does not exist?
The important difference between an atheist and an agnostic is that the former is convinced that a God does not exist. — Janus
I have heard no reasons to accept the proposition that a God exists. So I don't believe in God. But I cannot say that I know God does not exist. Show me how belief and knowledge can't be separate things. — Tom Storm
D) one has not formed an opinion because one has not considered the issue (lack of belief)
Position A is (amongst other things), theism. B is atheism. C is agnosticism, and D pig ignorance, which for the remainder of this post, I’ll ignore. — Banno
It's nothing to do with conflating belief and knowledge. Have you heard reasons to accept the proposition that God does not exist? Do believe there is no God? — Janus
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