I dislike the definition of Atheism being merely lack of belief and not disbelief — WiseMoron
I know that atheism isn't a religion, but how can you have an opinion on the same subject that you have no belief nor disbelief in? — WiseMoron
Isn't the latter a better description of "apatheism" rather than atheism?I think the distinction you might be after is between 'strong atheism', which believes strongly that there is no God, and 'weak atheism', which doesn't claim to know, but also says it's not an important question. — Wayfarer
That may be overstating it a bit, but I think the diagram does have some problems.If the definition of Atheism is merely lack of belief, both of these diagrams make no sense whatsoever. — WiseMoron
How am I employing it in a bastardized form? — darthbarracuda
The bad rap of atheism (people insisting it's a claim to knowledge, rather than a lack of belief or disbelief) is what drove people to try and redefine agnosticism in this way. — VagabondSpectre
Many people are skeptical of human knowledge pertaining to god but they believe in god none the less. — VagabondSpectre
You can choose to use the word agnostic that way if you wish. It would be consistent with how some people currently use it, but not consistent with the meaning it had when originally coined by Thomas Huxley. Nor is it consistent with Bertrand Russell's use. As one of history's most famous atheists, Russell described himself as an Agnostic Atheist.Which makes them theists, not agnostics. — darthbarracuda
Disbelief is a claim of knowledge. Any sort of belief is held because it is seen as true, even if one is a fallibilist or whatever. — darthbarracuda
Agnosticism applies to things outside of the god debate. — darthbarracuda
Which makes them theists, not agnostics. — darthbarracuda
Can you define what GU and AU is? That would help me a lot because I kinda get what GU is. AU is a group that has no strong belief or disbelief, but they are convinced that it's not possible for others to know one way or the other? Two very interesting groups imo.The GUs are an interesting group. They have no strong belief or disbelief themselves but they are convinced that it is possible for others to know one way or the other. — andrewk
It seems to me that we do not walk about carrying beliefs about what is not the case, at least if its the sort of thing which we haven't given much thought. So I could be an atheist if I were the sort of person who came across this category "atheist" and said, well, yes, that is something I do not have a belief in.
It also seems to me that a person could actively form a disbelief, or a belief that God does not exist, and so could be an atheist. — Moliere
What's common between both positions is specifically: lacking belief in god. — VagabondSpectre
Yes but it has to to with knowability, not belief. It's an epistemic position about whether something is knowable, not whether it is believed. — VagabondSpectre
A theist who claims their belief in god is based on faith rather than knowledge is a good example of an agnostic theist. — VagabondSpectre
If you truly do not know if God can be known to exist, then you are an agnostic, plain and simple. Nobody actually goes around denying knowledge of God and yet believing anyway. That's stupid. — darthbarracuda
In terms of being logical and being very certain beyond doubt that trillion of dollars exist, you must have the requirement of first hand experience in seeing it physically. Therefore, you heavily believe trillions of dollars exist because of conformity, yet aren't 100% certain beyond doubt that it exists. — WiseMoron
But since when did absolute certainty become a requirement for belief? Why is it so important? — darthbarracuda
Nobody knows that they know God exists, but that doesn't matter at all. What matters is their belief. — darthbarracuda
But certainly nobody actually claims that they have absolute knowledge of God's existence. If they do they're a hack. — darthbarracuda
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