I don't think it is much possible to warrant a belief in non-existence, unless logically impossible. — AmadeusD
You only increase the viable distance, you don't make it infinite. And greater distances means more alternative destinations, making it less probable we'd be the target. I don't want to debate the plausibility of aliens here. My point is simply that my belief that aliens have not come here is warranted by my belief that it's extremely improbable - so improbable that it's not worth considering.we have no idea whether the aliens have cryo-stasis technology to overcome time constraints - so if we're entertaining that they exist I don't see why we would believe rather than posit, that they haven't visited Earth. Its logically possible, and we have no reason to entirely discount it. — AmadeusD
It's zero. There are no rocks on the moon with the molecular structure of a cabbage. If there were, it would be a cabbage, not a rock. You could loosen the exactness of the required likeness and match any probability you like. So instead, let's consider Russell's teapot: we're warranted in believing there is no teapot orbiting the sun between earth and Mars, even though it's logically possible, but grossly improbable.[The chances of finding one with the exact shape (down to the molecular level) are zero.]
They are not zero. It is logically possible. — AmadeusD
I simply suggest that if you have no reason to doubt she's human, then you actually DON'T doubt she's human and ergo you believe she's not an alien. We all believe lots of things, even though it's logically possible we're wrong. Believing x does not entail believing ~x is logically impossible. It just means we feel we have sufficient justification.As it is, I have merely no good reason to doubt. But i could not justifiably believe it, as i've never done anything by way of investigation on that. — AmadeusD
Then your belief in ~ solipsism seems unwarranted. But regardless, we've identified another difference of opinion regarding warrant, and these differerences of opinion are far more relevant than semantics.
I do not [accept that there can be non-evidential warrant] — AmadeusD
That's your opinion, based on your own semantics, so it's irrelevant to me.That you're using a word wrong, making your label incoherent. It's like saying "A glass table made of wood". — AmadeusD
Here's what you miss: If you agree a deist isn't agnostic, then you should agree I'm not a deist.If you agree a Deist cannot claim God/s are unknowable
then that precludes the deist-entertaining from being agnostic, as it is incoherent to the deism concept. Not sure what's being missed here? — AmadeusD
No. I don't believe God is discoverable. You have a far too rigid view of semantics, and it's impeding you from understanding positions that don't fit neatly into your semantic framework.You say you're open to deism being true - which means you believe that God is discoverable.
Out of all the things that could possibly exist, very few actually exist. So something that is merely possible, has a low probability of existing. That's sufficient reason to conclude that a mere possibility doesn't exist: you'll rarely be wrong. — Relativist
My point is simply that my belief that aliens have not come here is warranted by my belief that it's extremely improbable - so improbable that it's not worth considering. — Relativist
It's zero. There are no rocks on the moon with the molecular structure of a cabbage. If there were, it would be a cabbage, not a rock. You could loosen the exactness of the required likeness and match any probability you like. So instead, let's consider Russell's teapot: we're warranted in believing there is no teapot orbiting the sun between earth and Mars, even though it's logically possible, but grossly improbable. — Relativist
I simply suggest that if you have no reason to doubt she's human, then you actually DON'T doubt she's human and ergo you believe she's not an alien. We all believe lots of things, even though it's logically possible we're wrong. Believing x does not entail believing ~x is logically impossible. It just means we feel we have sufficient justification. — Relativist
No. I don't believe God is discoverable. — Relativist
And yet, you apply that label to me. — Relativist
No. No it wasn’t. — AmadeusD
And the citation has been provided more than once. — AmadeusD
Just bloody look at the words lol. — AmadeusD
atheism -- The theory or belief that God does not exist. — Oxford Reference
As Tom helpfully provide earlier in the https://www.atheists.org/activism/resources/about-atheism/ — AmadeusD
They are anti-theists. ... Anti-theism. That there is NOT deities. — AmadeusD
A-theism literally means not theism. It doesn’t contain anything close to a positive claim. — AmadeusD
No, anti-theism is moral opposition to God on the basis that belief in God is harmful to people. It's not an ontological claim, but a moral one. — Hallucinogen
Then you have a burden to explain why that's the case. Insisting on your own definitions isn't reason-giving. — Hallucinogen
I did -- I gave the Oxford definition in the OP. — Hallucinogen
All of this is making me think that you didn't read the OP. — Hallucinogen
No, anti-theism is moral opposition to God on the basis that belief in God is harmful to people. — Hallucinogen
This reasoning doesn't follow, because if theism is the opposite of belief in God, rather than lack of theism, then it's the positive claim that belief in God is false — Hallucinogen
Knowledge and truth are not the same thing. — Philosophim
Knowledge is the most reasonable conclusion we can make with the information we have at the time. That can change as new information comes about. — Philosophim
We can only assume that what we know is the closest to the truth at the time — Philosophim
because at the time rationality and reality are not contradicting our conclusions. — Philosophim
And what do you call someone who does, other than "atheist"? — Hallucinogen
I disputed this over many posts. Finally, I got it across to you:I would say you're an anti-theist, and a deist. — AmadeusD
Then you're not a deist. — AmadeusD
Yes, you did. See the bolded statement, above.Relativist: "[Belief that a nonpersonal, non-interactive creator exists is consistent with deism as typically defined. I do not believe this, so I do not call myself a deist] And yet, you apply that label to me."
Im done. I've been over this three times now and you've outright ignored it to ascribe to me a claim which i have not made — AmadeusD
I'm attending the actually, etymologically sound usage of the words. Why would you accept randomly-ascribed meanings that don't fit the etymology. — AmadeusD
That isn't looking at the words - that's taking a definition that fits your point. — AmadeusD
The one provided by an institutional atheist organisation has much more authority, imo. — AmadeusD
2. I have identified robust meanings for these words which avoid double-counts, inaccuracies and inconsistencies, on my view. — AmadeusD
Here is the thing: why should philosophers of religion be able to redefine a word that is at least 2000 years older than their field? A word that many people identify and have identified with while not implying the meaning the SEP claims is standard. It may be fair to say we should use the standard definition here since we are technically talking about phil of rel, but why use atheism when the meaning is better encapsulated in 'antitheism', which the IEP calls "positive atheism"?
In any case, I am very skeptical of the SEP's claims of "standard" or "consensus". Sometimes I fail to confirm the existence of thoa quite relse consensuses when I look into the topic myself. — Lionino
You are right that in Ancient Greek atheos - I'm sorry that I don't have an Ancient Greek keyboard - didn't mean exactly what it means now. Though, on a closer look, Plato does, it seems, use that word to mean "denying the gods" (in the Apology). But otherwise, it seems to mean "godless" or "ungodly" (in Pindar, Sophocles and Lysias) and "abandoned by the gods" (in Sophocles). The meaning in your quotation from Bacchylides does seem to be "ungodly". — Ludwig V
Perhaps the most relevant change is the invention of the term "agnostic" by T.H. Huxley in 1869. Before that "atheist" could comfortably cover both agnosticism (no assertion or denial) and atheism (denial). Huxley's point was precisely to draw that distinction and once it is drawn, "atheism" needs to move over. People seem to have found this distinction important, and so Huxley's coinage has taken root in the language. (Yes, of course you can check that claim in a dictionary!) — Ludwig V
But I don't think ancient Greek usage is, or should be, a final authority on what a word means now. For me, the meaning of a word is what it is used to mean and the users of a language may not know or care how the ancient Greeks used it. — Ludwig V
Then what happens when there is "antitheism"? Should "atheism" move over as well? If yes, where? If no, what happens with "antitheism"? — Lionino
I can't see any mileage in arguing about what the words mean. The best one could do in a situation like the one we are in is to make an agreement about how to use the words and then deal with any substantial issues. — Ludwig V
Something that seemingly can't be reinforced too much. — wonderer1
who might want to insist that agnosticism is a variety of atheism — Ludwig V
And they may call themselves an agnostic at the same time because while they do not believe in god, they believe that something should exist, but they don't know what. — mentos987
While I do not insist upon anything, is this what you asked about? — mentos987
I'm not sure I fully understand this and I'm not sure it is right.Belief is connected to knowledge through rationality. If you believe something and you're rational, it's because you know something. If you lack belief in something and you're rational, it's because you lack knowledge in it. Likewise, having knowledge in something makes it rational to believe in it, and lacking knowledge makes it rational to lack belief in it. — Hallucinogen
Yes, of course. I didn't mention that, for me, "" and "faith" are very closely related - and "erusr" and "loyalty" are as well.And "faith" — mentos987
OK. There is good reason to think of any opinion or attitude to religion as, in a sense, religious. There are complications - there always are - but I'm not sure that anything important hangs on them.I'd say so. Although to me they are more of a way to declare yourself unconvinced. — mentos987
In France and Sweden — Ludwig V
dystheism and maltheism — Ludwig V
there is at least one religion (legally established as such in the USA) that is atheist - Scientology - and Buddhism is agnostic - or at least the Buddha was. — Ludwig V
I can't see any mileage in arguing about what the words mean. The best one could do in a situation like the one we are in is to make an agreement about how to use the words and then deal with any substantial issues. — Ludwig V
The obvious etymology is clearly in favour of the latter meaning — Ludwig V
I'm also wondering who might want to insist that agnosticism is a variety of atheism, rather than being a distinct position. Where does this idea come from? How does it affect the eternal debate? — Ludwig V
If you are referring to Royal Academies of language, the same is the case for Castillian. Also to some extent Portuguese and Galician. English indeed does not have that in any country afaik. — Lionino
Add Jainism to the mix in case someone wants to reject that Buddhism is a religion. — Lionino
Thanks for all these snippets. I was worrying about anti. Those two meanings combined didn't make any sense. But that explanation works perfectly. (My Greek is very rusty.)Both I would say, ἀντί can mean 'face-to-face' among other things. — Lionino
I'm not sure exactly what a "nonce-word" is, but I agree that mal-, dys- and miso- theism are pretty marginal. People love a label for a doctrine, especially if it can be given a name derived from Greek or Latin. But it wouldn't be practical to label every variety of possible doctrine about God. "ant-theism" is a stretch for me, but does seem to identify a worth-while difference and it has a certain antiquity that might serve as respectability.Thie are more like nonce-words, like misotheism; antitheism is more established, though not as much as atheism admittedly. — Lionino
I don't have a reason to quarrel with you, though I would classify not knowing whether... as epistemic. On the other hand, where would you put someone who thought that the concept of God, at least in Christianity, is incoherent, so that either assertion or denial are inappropriate? Or, I saw a translation of a Buddhist text that had the Buddha saying that the question was "undetermined"? Neither of those is suspending judgement.I defend a similar position in this thread on this post, reserving agnosticism to not an epistemic position but a declarative one, of suspending judgement. — Lionino
I'm not sure exactly what a "nonce-word" — Ludwig V
On the other hand, where would you put someone who thought that the concept of God, at least in Christianity, is incoherent, so that either assertion or denial are inappropriate? Or, I saw a translation of a Buddhist text that had the Buddha saying that the question was "undetermined"? Neither of those is suspending judgement. — Ludwig V
OK. It seems that nothing hangs on what we say, so we don't have to say anything.A nonce-word is a word that is made for that specific reason and abandoned after. Maltheism is a word that was made for a game, if I recall it properly from yesterday. — Lionino
The difficulty with the third truth value is that it is very hard to stop at three. One could probably make a case for thirty-three.a third truth-value — Lionino
Yes. Your two cases are different and there are probably others. Best to leave it at that.As to undefined, it depends on what it means. — Lionino
You're doing the opposite. Atheism has always meant denial of God's existence and it's only recently that new atheists began to popularise the "lack of belief and nothing else" definition. — Hallucinogen
Selecting any definition is selecting one that fits your point. If anything, this reveals that your original basis "Just look at the bloody words lol" was poorly-informed. — Hallucinogen
And you say this right after complaining I'm taking a definition that fits my point. It shows you're not sticking to your original basis, which you claimed was "just looking at words". Now it has to be from a specifically atheist source, all of a sudden. — Hallucinogen
It doesn't, because as pointed out in the OP, defining atheism as lack of belief doesn't distinguish it from agnosticism, since agnostics also lack belief in God. — Hallucinogen
es, you did. See the bolded statement, above. — Relativist
An atheist is simply not a theologian, atheists can still have faith in other things. "God" is just too clumsy of an answer for me. Gods were always created by man as a means to not have to explain things, but rather enforce. To justify actions taken to one's self. — Vaskane
I don't have a reason to quarrel with you, though I would classify not knowing whether... as epistemic. — Ludwig V
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