They aren't synonymous — Hanover
You're making a strained epistemological argument. — Hanover
If we suggest that Dawkins is an agnostic because he's left open the possibility that the earth might be flat, pigs might fly, and God may possibly exist, the only true atheist would be the dogmatic atheist, who rejects the existence of God regardless of the evidence, but that would reject the scientific epistemology most atheists rely upon. — Hanover
don't appreciate the claim that some atheists are as bad as religious fundamentalists and then put words in their mouths to indicate that that is in fact the case. — praxis
If someone asserts that there there is a celestial teapot orbiting the Sun, or an angry unicorn on the far side of the Moon, or that 9/11 was an 'inside job,' one will justifiably demand evidence. "It's possible, but what's your evidence for so outlandish a claim?" It is the same with God, say many atheists. The antecedent probability of God's existence, they think, is on a par with the extremely low antecedent probability of there being a celestial teapot or an irate lunar unicorn, a 'lunicorn,' if you will.
But this is to assume something that a sophisticated theist such as Thomas Aquinas would never grant, namely, that God, if he exists, is just another being among the totality of beings. For Aquinas, God is not an ens (a being) but esse ipsum subsistens (self-subsistent Being). God is not a being among beings, but Being itself. Admittedly, this is not an easy notion; but if the atheist is not willing to grapple with it, then his animadversions are just so many grapplings with a straw man.
Why can't God be just another being among beings in the way an orbiting teapot would be just another being among beings were it to exist? I hope it is clear that my point is not that while a teapot is a material object, God is not. That's true, of course, but my point cuts much deeper: if God exists, he exists in a way different from the way contingent beings exist. — Maverick Philosopher
Not sure what you mean by fundamentalism being weakest for of theism. Not important though, just curious. — praxis
I will add that, as many people have pointed out, usually in vain, the new atheist depiction of God is remote from the conception of deity maintained by philosophy of religion. — Wayfarer
Dawkins often states that a 'creator' must be 'more complex' than what it creates, so if God created the Universe, he must be fantastically complex (not to mention BIG!) It's a thoroughly anthropomorphic image, much more characteristic of folk beliefs in sky-fathers than anything held by actual theologians. It is really a kind of 'straw God' argument - attacking a kind of deity that few but the most stubborn fundamentalists hold to. — Wayfarer
Dawkins often states that a 'creator' must be 'more complex' than what it creates... — Wayfarer
Have you even read what Dawkins has to say? — wonderer1
It’s the characterization of ‘weakness’ that I don’t follow. How does fundamentalism in religious belief lack power or strength compared to religious liberalism, or however you contrast fundamentalism? — praxis
You should be honest when bringing him up. It’s probably a good idea for the moderators of a philosophy forum to be intellectually honest. — praxis
But I'm done debating Dawkins, I shouldn't have brought him up — Wayfarer
Everyone you are disagreeing with has provided sources, with quotes. — Leontiskos
Everyone you are disagreeing with has provided sources, with quotes. You have provided neither. — Leontiskos
I could only find religious believers saying that Dawkins claims ‘science disproves God’. Dawkins himself says things like:
I believe, but I cannot prove, that all life, all intelligence, all creativity and all design anywhere in the universe is the direct or indirect product of Darwinian natural selection. — praxis
But they do overlap in some instances, like people claiming the Bible says the earth is flat — Isaiasb
all I know Dawkins or Harris has made the claim that "science disproves God" and I just can't find it. — praxis
He might not use the exact phrase — Wayfarer
There are plenty of examples. — Wayfarer
throughout his popular writing career has held up science as an example of rational thinking and religion as no more than bigotry and superstion — Wayfarer
Do you think that the degree to which religion stunts people's ability to engage in critical thinking is not something to be concerned with? — wonderer1
Religious discourse is a special type of discourse. It's meant to instruct the people in religious themes, praise the religious doctrine and the religious figures, proselytize to outsiders. It's not meant to encourage critical thinking as critical thinking is understood in secular academia. — baker
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