What makes equally balanced agnosticism "true"? I can see what makes a 90 degree angle a right angle, but that doesn't mean that the only true angles are right angles. There's a complication here, because although right angles are not the only true angles, there is such a thing as a true right angle. But I think that only shows that one needs to be clear about what criterion of truth is at work in each use. You can choose to call equally indifferent agnosticism the only true agnosticism if you like. But I need a better reason than that.In the argument that I was referencing, true agnosticism (not knowing whether p) is probabilistically unlikely (almost impossible), as the overall doxastic sway will almost always be towards p or not-p. — Lionino
I don't see that agnosticism with a preference one way or the other is restricted to the context of religious belief.I mixed the actual sense of 'agnostic' with its sense in the discussion of belief in God here. — Lionino
I'm puzzled about suspension of judgement. It is one of the non-genuine doxastic attitudes, and yet you use the same phrase to describe "true" agnosticism.I quote Matthew McGrath — Lionino
I don't quite get this distinction. I suppose you mean that religious beliefs are not rational. I think that is true, but the thread, as I understand it, limits the discussion to rational belief - I'm not sure whether there's such a thing as non-rational knowledge, but there might be, or perhaps some non-rational factors can be part of a knowledge system. After all, scientific beliefs are supposed to be based on a commitment to truth. Isn't that a non-epistemic factor?not doxastic but declarative. — Lionino
But it does seem important to me to note that religious belief may not be entirely rational. — Ludwig V
What makes equally balanced agnosticism "true"? — Ludwig V
I can see what makes a 90 degree angle a right angle, but that doesn't mean that the only true angles are right angles — Ludwig V
But I think that only shows that one needs to be clear about what criterion of truth is at work in each use. — Ludwig V
I don't see that agnosticism with a preference one way or the other is restricted to the context of religious belief. — Ludwig V
I'm puzzled about suspension of judgement. It is one of the non-genuine doxastic attitudes, and yet you use the same phrase to describe "true" agnosticism. — Ludwig V
If any non-epistemic factors make a belief "non-doxastic" — Ludwig V
I suppose you mean that religious beliefs are not rational. I think that is true, but the thread, as I understand it, limits the discussion to rational belief — Ludwig V
After all, scientific beliefs are supposed to be based on a commitment to truth. Isn't that a non-epistemic factor? — Ludwig V
If I don't believe in the existence of God, any god, because there is no evidence for its existence, what does that makes me? An agnostic, an atheist, an agnostic atheist?
I don’t see any problem with that. As you point out we manage perfectly well with no fine line between “red” and “violet”. Picking out and sorting through the varieties of agnosticism is quite interesting. But what is the actual problem that all this is intended to solve? Or is it just a tidy mind?"Agnostic" is somewhat used as a catch-all word for the third position. But that is just how many people seem to use the word, very lax. — Lionino
This proposal, presumably, makes both belief and non-belief rare to impossible just as your similar proposal for agnosticism makes that rare to impossible. What's the advantage in that? I think not accepting p and not accepting not-p is much more than a fine line.there is no fine line to separate agnosticism from believing that p or not-p — Lionino
I think the problem is your obsession with arranging everything on a single scale. The obsession with degrees of belief makes for a tidy diagram but smothers the distinctions that might actually matter here. WHat is the problem you are trying to solve here?I would reply that {leaving "agnosticism" to an arbitrary range that we are supposed to intuit whether we fall under or not in the moment}, like 'red', is not productive, — Lionino
I don't follow this at all. I can understand being agnostic with a leaning towards theism and being agnostic with a leaning towards atheism. But the business with percentages and doxastic attitudes is over my head - especially as we now have true agnosticism and truly doxastic. Perhaps I just haven't kept up with the argument.Thus, if we want to have a third position that does occur often, it would be not a genuine doxastic one, which for me is suspending judgement, which can coexist with weakly believing and weakly disbelieving — true doxastic attitudes. — Lionino
Even if you are right about what scientific belief is about, it is still a commitment to truth.I believe that scientific belief is more about "will this also happen in the future?" than anything else. There is a commitment to regularity in scientific beliefs for sure, I am not sure if I would call that an epistemic or non-epistemic factor. — Lionino
I think you are missing the difference between not believing in the existence of God and believing in the non-existence of God. Admittedly, for some purposes, the difference may not matter much. But if you believe that "God" is an incoherent concept, it does matter.f I don't believe in the existence of God, any god, because there is no evidence for its existence, what does that makes me? An agnostic, an atheist, an agnostic atheist? — Alkis Piskas
Right. :up:To me you're describing classic atheism. You're not saying the jury's out on the existance of gods, you're saying in the absence of evidence I don't believe in any gods. — LuckyR
You're not saying the jury's out on the existance of gods, you're saying in the absence of evidence I don't believe in any gods. — LuckyR
I think not accepting p and not accepting not-p is much more than a fine lin — Ludwig V
Can you figure how these are different?
IN the absence of evidence, not believing amounts to the jury still being out. But perhaps out of hte building, rather than still in the deliberation room. I can't see any practical difference.
IN the absence of evidence, not believing amounts to the jury still being out. But perhaps out of hte building, rather than still in the deliberation room. I can't see any practical difference. — AmadeusD
Not so much. Most common entities without evidence for their existance are in the "I don't believe in it" category not the "well, it's possible" category of most. — LuckyR
But that number is severely diminished in intellectually rigorous circles (such as here). — LuckyR
A good example. The jury is out. Out of hte building. No energy spent on the proposition. But affirmative disbelief is not there. It's merely not engaging.— OkAy, do you have evidence it is not there though? — Lionino
Picking out and sorting through the varieties of agnosticism is quite interesting. But what is the actual problem that all this is intended to solve? Or is it just a tidy mind? — Ludwig V
This proposal, presumably, makes both belief and non-belief rare to impossible just as your similar proposal for agnosticism makes that rare to impossible — Ludwig V
I think the problem is your obsession with arranging everything on a single scale. The obsession with degrees of belief makes for a tidy diagram but smothers the distinctions that might actually matter here. WHat is the problem you are trying to solve here? — Ludwig V
but smothers the distinctions that might actually matter here — Ludwig V
I can understand being agnostic with a leaning towards theism and being agnostic with a leaning towards atheism — Ludwig V
It would help me if I had some examples of clearly epistemic and clearly non-epistemic factors. Ditto for doxastic and non-doxastic. — Ludwig V
Not necessarily. I prefer an overview of what's happening. When I understand that, I might do a bit of tidying up, but only if it serves some purpose. Tidying up just for the sake of a system is regimentation, which has its uses (in mathematics and science, for example) but I see no virtue in it for its own sake - and it can be oppressive to people and misleading in philosophy.Isn't philosophy's goal to tidy up our minds? — Lionino
It's OK. Your diagram was clear enough for me to work that out. It is a lovely diagram.Edit: I forgot to add and I am not uploading the file all over again. Left arrow is 180º degrees, right arrow 0º degrees, and upwards arrow 90º degrees. — Lionino
These lists are very helpful. I wasn't expecting anything like that. I would have counted everything you've listed as epistemic or doxastic. Does emotional commitment (like belief in God) count as believing strongly and believing something reluctantly (like believing that your friend has scammed you) count as believing weakly?Doxastic attitudes: believing that p and its adverbs (strongly, weakly) — Lionino
But that's just a consequence of how you present the phenomena. a single point on the scale seems improbable. 89 degrees is also highly improbably, But a range between 85 and 90 is more probable. You assign so many values to all the other beliefs that you create a specific impression of the relationship between them. It's got nothing to do with what's actually going on.If there is a problem to solve, for me, it is that true agnosticism (90º degrees belief) hardly exists. — Lionino
Not considering something seriously isn't the same as positively a firm disbelief that it is possible.
I'm not sure what you're getting at here. There's no doubt that many beliefs are held, but not on rational grounds; that doesn't mean the people who hold them are irrational or that they don't really hold those beliefs. But it is always interesting to ask whether a belief is held on rational grounds and if one wants to know whether that belief counts as knowledge, it is essential to ask that question.The epistemological status of belief is relevant only to those who insist it must be. — Arne
So in the terms in that quotation, agnosticism would be neither belief not disbelief, but, perhaps suspension of judgement or a belief that the question is malformed and therefore unanswerable..... though atheism isn't (for most) possession of proof positive that gods don't exist, it is the disbelief in gods (regardless of the source of the disbelief). — LuckyR
The epistemological status of belief is relevant only to those who insist it must be. — Arne
Tidying up just for the sake of a system is regimentation, which has its uses (in mathematics and science, for example) but I see no virtue in it for its own sake - and it can be oppressive to people and misleading in philosophy. — Ludwig V
emotional commitment (like belief in God) count as believing strongly and believing something reluctantly (like believing that your friend has scammed you) count as believing weakly? — Ludwig V
Agnostic because there's no (not enough) evidence is one thing; agnosticism because the concept of God is incoherent is another; agnosticism because religion is the cause of much evil is yet another. — Ludwig V
I think you are fastening on a specific feature of belief - that it can be strong or weak - and turning that into an entire system. But belief is more complicated than that. — Ludwig V
Well, that certainly seems to make sense. But that may be stereotyping, No doubt you will feel that it makes sense also that I have no background whatever in those disciplines. Apart from philosophy, you could say that my background is in literature, music and history. That doesn't mean I don't think that physics and mathematics are unimportant in any way. I've always taken an interest in what's going on as part of the laity.my background and (one of my) passions are physics and mathematics. — Lionino
H'm. Do you have a background in logic, specifically the truth-functional calculus? In that system, everything is either true or false. The law of excluded middle applies. When a sentence is malformed (Chomsky's "colourless green ideas sleep furiously" is a good example), you have a problem. You can say that it is not a sentence or a malformed sentence (not a wff) and hence no truth-value can be assigned or that it belongs in some third class (truth-value). But you cannot say or believe that it is true and you cannot say or believe that it is false. The same applies to the contradictory - "Colourless green ideas do not sleep furiously" in this case.That is our difference, I only count the first as agnostic. Recognising p as incoherent for me implies believing not-p. — Lionino
I don't think philosophers are comfortable with irrational belief. But many beliefs have emotions attached to them. We're not machines.I was dealing primarily with rational belief, where evidence and logic are used as justification. I tried searching into irrational belief and emotional belief and I could not find much unfortunately. — Lionino
Something that sometimes happens is a bad basis for generalizing about the concept. Your example is a case of what some people would call "wishful thinking". But I don't accept that you can rule it out as a belief just because it is awkward for you.I can say however that emotional commitments such as "I believe my wife is not cheating" can sometimes not be belief. Sure, they say "I believe", but what they really mean is that they "want to believe", but in the back of their heads they know it is not true. I am not sure if in someone's psychology reason and emotion will always be separate in belief-formation, or if they mix sometimes. — Lionino
What do you mean "discarded"? If I come, reluctantly, to the conclusion that my spouse is cheating, the emotion doesn't disappear. Most likely, it will be reinforced.I would say that for believing something reluctantly, the "reluctantly" is the "I want to believe part", which can be discarded when we give an assesment of the strenght of the belief. — Lionino
I've no problem with you unfolding the fan. But it wasn't clear to me that you think that the strength or weakness of belief is proportional to the evidence, - or perhaps you mean "should be" proportional to the evidence? I just think that's not the whole story. One factor that hasn't been mentioned is the idea that some propositions have a special status in that they are foundational and more or less immune to refutation. This is the category of what used to be called a priori or "analytic".Many people hold the black-and-white view of belief where you either believe something or you don't, or the black-white-grey view where you believe, don't believe, or disbelieve. — Lionino
H'm. Surely what your diagram means is not just a detail?Whether we want to call a region of those shades "strongly believe" and the other "weakly disbelieve" is simply a semantic detail. — Lionino
But it is always interesting to ask whether a belief is held on rational grounds and if one wants to know whether that belief counts as knowledge, it is essential to ask that question. — Ludwig V
If I don't believe in the existence of God, any god, because there is no evidence for its existence, what does that makes me? An agnostic, an atheist, an agnostic atheist? — Alkis Piskas
Knowing something indicates a certainty of 95-100%
Believing something indicates a certainty of 50-95% — mentos987
Having faith in something is when you simply choose to add a percentage of certainty. E.g. 55% belief + 41% faith = knowing that God exist.
How do you feel about this? — mentos987
Not to me. The term “uncertain” would indicate 5-95% certainty. "Certain" would be 95-100%.There's a binary distinction between certainty and uncertainty — Hallucinogen
Not to me, knowing is a step above believing.But not between belief and knowledge (they can coincide, — Hallucinogen
I think that knowledge can contain a small degree of uncertainty.where certainty and uncertainty are paradoxically included — Hallucinogen
I don't follow.Likewise, if we only have uncertainty at our disposal, then we don't have belief in it. We would just have lack of belief. — Hallucinogen
I do not follow. Lack of belief can come from contradictions, no?The same fallacy arises on the other side of the spectrum. Lack of belief can't mean less than 50% certainty, because lack of belief only (rationally) comes from lack of certainty/knowledge. — Hallucinogen
you have the relation backwards between beliefs and knowledge. Knowledge, traditionally, is a true, justified, belief. A belief is not determined after one recognizes they have knowledge — Bob Ross
The etymological schema is going to say that we formulate beliefs, which are not yet knowledge — Bob Ross
e.g., I believe that the tree I walked passed 3 days ago is still there even though I have little justificatory support for it, etc — Bob Ross
then there is a meaningful difference between those who claim to only believe something and those who believe it and know. — Bob Ross
. If you see any logical fallacies in the way I use my definitions, feel free to point them out. — mentos987
Certainty in X cannot coincide with uncertainty in X, so suggesting that they're not disjoint is a fallacy.Not to me. — mentos987
But not between belief and knowledge (they can coincide, — Hallucinogen
Not to me, knowledge is a step above believing. — mentos987
I think that knowledge can contain a small degree of uncertainty. — mentos987
Likewise, if we only have uncertainty at our disposal, then we don't have belief in it. We would just have lack of belief. — Hallucinogen
I don't follow. — mentos987
Lack of belief can come from contradictions, no? — mentos987
5-50% certainty would indicate disbelief.
0-5% certainty would indicate knowing that something is not true.
The term “uncertain” would indicate 5-95% certainty. — mentos987
And what do you call someone who does, other than "atheist"? — Hallucinogen
Antitheist. — Lionino
When I say I "know" something I mean that I am highly confident, not 100% certain. So yes, my "knowing" does contain a degree of uncertainty.Certainty in X cannot coincide with uncertainty in X, so suggesting that they're not disjoint is a fallacy. — Hallucinogen
No, to me you either believe it or you know it. Knowing is stronger than believing.Belief and knowledge don't coincide to you? One cannot believe in something and have knowledge of it? — Hallucinogen
Not to me, being uncertain only means that you are not certain. You can still believe something and be uncertain of it. uncertain 5-95%, believing 50-95%If you only have uncertainty in something, then you don't have belief to any degree in it, only lack of belief. — Hallucinogen
In that case, I did not follow.Already debunked all of this. — Hallucinogen
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