From the American Atheist website:
Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods. Atheism is too often defined incorrectly as a belief system. To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
Agnostic isn’t just a “weaker” version of being an atheist. It answers a different question. Atheism is about what you believe. Agnosticism is about what you know. — Tom Storm
Agnostic - Doesn't know if God exists or not
Atheist - Denies God's existence entirely — Philosophim
Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods. Atheism is too often defined incorrectly as a belief system. To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
Agnostic isn’t just a “weaker” version of being an atheist. It answers a different question. Atheism is about what you believe. Agnosticism is about what you know. — Tom Storm
An atheist merely abstains from belief. They do not assert that God does NOT exist. — AmadeusD
Agnosticism as long as I've heard it has mean that you don't know enough to determine one way or another where there is a God or not. An atheist asserts there is no God. — Philosophic
"Atheism is too often defined incorrectly as a belief system" Ah, ok, so its knowledge then. — Philosophim
from belief is because you rely on knowledge. To rely on belief is because you abstain from knowledge. Atheists know that God does not exist because there is no evidence for it. Just like I know magical unicorns don't exist, there's no evidence for it.
An agnostic is a person who remains unconvinced that there is enough evidence, or lack of evidence, to make an assertion one way or the other. — Philosophim
Like many atheists I do not say there is no god since that is a positive claim which requires demonstration. — Tom Storm
Suffice to say you are wrong here and just repeating the incorrect descriptions. Abstaining from belief requires no knowledge. It is precisely a lack of knowledge that leads one to abstain. No evidence? Ignored. — AmadeusD
Seems like an unnecessary distortion of agnostic and atheism that causes confusion for someone who's not comfortable saying what they know. — Philosophim
Perhaps we need a new word. — Philosophim
Yes, but you deciding to make a decision based on a lack of evidence is knowledge, not belief. — Philosophim
, I know there aren't. Not because I've been to the moon, but because no one has given me validated evidence that they exist on the moon. — Philosophim
Not because I've been to the moon, but because no one has given me validated evidence that they exist on the moon. — Philosophim
What? No it isn’t. That’s entirely non sequitur. It’s a lack of knowledge of the existence of God/s. It is neutral. It is not a decision. It is in fact NOT making a decision. — AmadeusD
I know that there are tons of things that I have never heard of nor experienced any evidence for, yet I do not claim they do not exist. — mentos987
Odd how riled up you are over this. I'm an atheist. I know God doesn't exist. Its not that hard. You seem to be confusing that knowledge means you have the burden of proof. You do not need a burden of proof to know things don't exist. Its up to those who want to prove that something exists to have the burden of proof. I think this is more of an issue of "What is knowledge" than anything else. — Philosophim
So if someone asked, "How do you know X", you would provide your proof as such. This does not negate my point. — Philosophim
Abstaining from belief requires no knowledge. Sorry if that’s not how you feel. — AmadeusD
So if someone asked, "How do you know X", you would provide your proof as such. This does not negate my point.
— Philosophim
No, I would not claim I know there are no green men on the moon. But I would argue against it. — mentos987
. If you claim to not know it, then argue that there are no green men on the moon, you believe it. — Philosophim
Now you're just switching up what I stated. If you claim to know something, you would do what I noted to proove that you know it. If you claim to not know it, then argue that there are no green men on the moon, you believe it. — Philosophim
. If you claim to not know it, then argue that there are no green men on the moon, you believe it.
— Philosophim
Err nope. Arguing against the likelihood of something does not require knowledge that it “isn’t”. Your misinterpretations are starting to seem trollish — AmadeusD
When I hear people say they "know" something about religion I will automatically translate that to "believe", because religion is such an unknowable field. — mentos987
Theists believe in God. Theists may claim they know God exists, but its never held up to any standard of knowledge, so becomes faith. — Philosophim
I do not think that atheists truly knows that god does not exist, since it is too hard to prove. — mentos987
To claim things don't exist requires no burden. Someone has the burden of proof to claim God exists — Philosophim
And here I thought we had a nice parting of the ways. You're simply asserting, "I'm wrong" then calling me a troll. Control yourself and bow out of a conversation between myself and the another poster please. — Philosophim
:ok:Anyone is free to claim whatever they want. Knowing is another matter to me. — mentos987
Who's calling themselves an agnostic atheist? — Philosophim
That's just misunderstanding the definition of the terms. — Philosophim
You cannot prove a negative. Proving something requires what's called, "The burden of proof". Someone must present evidence of what they are claiming exists. To claim things don't exist requires no burden. — Philosophim
An atheist merely abstains from belief. They do not assert that God does NOT exist.
An agnostic believes/thinks we can’t know if God exists.
They can co-exist in one entity. — AmadeusD
Anyone is free to claim whatever they want. Knowing is another matter to me.
Consider this; scientists have spent the last 50 years trying to prove Einsteins theories. They are slowly finding that most of them are true. Does this mean that the theories were not true until we proved them true? Did we know them to be false until we proved them to be true? — mentos987
At the very least, if you accepted the definitions that are actually used for those terms, the ambiguity would disappear and the words would already (and they do!) serve the purpose your trying to reinvent the wheel for. — AmadeusD
Do you think matter that travels faster than the speed of light can exist? — Hallucinogen
All of this was proven wrong in the OP. What's your reason for thinking atheists do not assert God does not exist? And what do you call someone who does, other than "atheist"? — Hallucinogen
I could say exactly the same thing back. You're just asserting you are correct because you believe you are correct. When I disagreed with reasons, you just got upset. If enjoy conversations with people who have different ideas than you, act like it. You can disagree with respect and not get upset at the other poster. Well, unless they start insulting you first, then have at it.
Forgiven, just don't do it again. — Philosophim
So perhaps this is best left alone if that’s the MO. — AmadeusD
I know there is no matter that can travel faster than light as of today. I believe we might find something in the future. — Philosophim
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