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  • Hallucinogen
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    No, to me you either believe it or you know it. Knowing is stronger than believing.mentos987

    This entails that saying you know something means you don't believe it, which is absurd.

    Not to me, uncertainty indicates that you are not certain.mentos987

    You said the opposite of this in your previous comment.

    There's a binary distinction between certainty and uncertainty — Hallucinogen
    Not to me. The term “uncertain” would indicate 5-95% certainty.
    mentos987
  • Hallucinogen
    333
    Opposition shouldn't be read to mean "denial of" — Hallucinogen
    Well, you said it yourself:
    Antitheism means opposition to the existence of a God — Hallucinogen
    Lionino

    Yes, so "opposition to something" doesn't mean "to deny". It means moral opposition.
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  • mentos987
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    This entails that saying you know something means you don't believe it, which is absurd.Hallucinogen

    "absurd" why? Knowing is simply a degree higher on the scale of certainty . If my certainty drops from having known something then I may start believing it instead.

    If someone asks me "Do you believe you need oxygen to survive?" then I answer, "No, I know I need oxygen to survive".

    If they ask me, "Do you know what the weather will be like tomorrow? I answer, "I believe it will snow".

    You said the opposite of this in your previous comment.Hallucinogen
    Uncertainty and certainty are both scales 0-100%, inversions of each other.
    Being certain is a step on the certainty scale: 95-100%
    Being uncertain is a step on the certainty scale: 5-95%

    You can't be certain and uncertain about the same thing. But being certain does include a small degree of uncertainty (0-5%).
  • Hallucinogen
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    "I am opposed to the pilot-wave", everybody understands that as thinking that pilot-wave is a bad theoryLionino

    Because you're talking about an object in that case, not a being.

    Opposition to the existence of something is clearly denial of existence.Lionino

    The kind of opposition indicated by the "anti-" prefix is moral. See: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/anti-
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  • Hallucinogen
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    If someone asks me "Do you believe you need oxygen to survive?" then I answer, "No, I know I need oxygen to survive".mentos987

    But this isn't a case of you not believing that oxygen is needed to survive. You believe it because of what you know.

    "I believe it will snow".mentos987

    And you believe it because you know something.

    Being certain is a step on the Certainty scale: 95-100%mentos987

    You said earlier that knowledge is 95 - 100% certainty.
    Your new comment means that you can be both uncertain and certain, in contradiction to your last comment.

    Not to me, uncertainty indicates that you are not certain.mentos987
  • mentos987
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    But this isn't a case of you not believing that oxygen is needed to survive. You believe it because of what you know.Hallucinogen

    I do not believe it because I know it. I am above the threshold of certainty that is indicated by the word "believing". If you suggest that I merely believe something when I think I know it, I may take that as an insult.

    And you believe it because you know something.Hallucinogen
    Not necessarily, I can be unsure about it. However I probably have some experience that suggests that it will snow. But yes, I can know some things and use that to form beliefs about something else. The belief is weaker than the knowledge though.

    Not to me, uncertainty indicates that you are not certain.Hallucinogen
    My bad, it is supposed to read "Being uncertain indicates that you are not certain".
  • Ludwig V
    2.4k

    I got involved in this because I'm interested in the debate about religion. We've ended up with the connection to epistemology, probability theory and so on. In a way, there's nothing wrong with that, and we could pursue our differences (which are many and radical) even on this thread. But I don't want to get absorbed in those subjects just now, and you clearly have a thoroughly thought through system in place, so that debate would be quite demanding. I expect you will get more out of a discussion with people who appear to be more on the same page, or at least the same book, as you.
  • Bob Ross
    2.6k


    The relationship is not temporal but one of dependency. If we're rational, belief depends on knowledge.

    This doesn’t make sense to me. You seem to be saying that we must have knowledge of X before we can believe X; but then you say it is atemporal: can you give an example?

    Beliefs that we formulate without knowledge are usually predictions or estimations

    Isn’t this a temporal dependency?

    This also seems like you are saying that we just need to have knowledge of Y (as opposed to X) to believe X, which is compatible with the etymological schema.
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  • Ludwig V
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    I should have said that I learnt a lot and enjoyed the debate. Perhaps we'll meet again. SIgnor (Senor?) Lionino.
  • Hallucinogen
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    Not necessarily, I can be unsure about it.mentos987

    You're misrepresenting what I said. I said: "And you believe it because you know something". The thing you are unsure about is the thing you believe, which you believe because of some other fact that you know.

    However I probably have some experience that suggests that it will snow.mentos987

    And the experience is what you know.

    But yes, I can know some things and use that to form beliefs about something else. The belief is weaker than the knowledge though.mentos987

    So this agrees with my original point, meaning you shouldn't have written "not necessarily". What you're now doing is acknowledging that belief coincides with knowledge, which undermines the continuous scale between the two you were advocating for. Since belief is based on knowledge, I can believe in something in which I know.

    I think that what you are doing is using belief as a synonym for uncertainty and knowledge as a synonym for certainty, but incorrectly representing this on a continuum in which certainty and uncertainty get mixed together, but not belief and knowledge, each of which you're representing as an admixture of certainty and uncertainty. It is in fact certainty and uncertainty that do not mix, being binary opposites, and belief and knowledge which can mix, shown by the fact that we base belief on knowledge and lack of belief on lack of knowledge.

    My bad, it is supposed to read "Being uncertain indicates that you are not certain".mentos987

    But that means the same thing. What you wrote was that "Being certain is a step on the Certainty scale: 95-100%" so I pointed out that you earlier that this is what knowledge is, not what certainty is. "You said earlier that knowledge is 95 - 100% certainty." Saying that certainty is a step on the certainty scale means you're mixing uncertainty together with certainty, which is a contradiction that I earlier pointed out.
  • Hallucinogen
    333
    This doesn’t make sense to me. You seem to be saying that we must have knowledge of X before we can believe X; but then you say it is atemporal: can you give an example?Bob Ross

    By dependency, I mean logical dependency. So believing X requires having knowledge about the concept of X. Our beliefs have a structure, so in order to believe, we have to have knowledge in that structure as well as knowledge of how the thing believed in fits into that structure.

    "Beliefs that we formulate without knowledge are usually predictions or estimations"
    Isn’t this a temporal dependency?
    Bob Ross

    Validating a belief as rational (as knowledge) can depend on information we don't currently have access to, yes.

    This also seems like you are saying that we just need to have knowledge of Y (as opposed to X) to believe X, which is compatible with the etymological schema.Bob Ross

    I have to know what the president of the United States is in order to have a belief about who will become president in the future.
  • mentos987
    160
    some other fact that you know.Hallucinogen
    Nah, I can believe something based on other beliefs.

    I believe it will snow because I believe someone said so to me earlier. Knowing is not a requirement for believing.

    And the experience is what you know.Hallucinogen
    Experience is not the same as knowing. In my experience, the earth is flat.

    What you're now doing is acknowledging that belief coincides with knowledge,Hallucinogen
    No, in this case, the beliefs derived from knowledge does not refer to the same thing. I know it snows now so I believe it will snow tomorrow.

    uncertainty together with certainty, which is a contradiction that I earlier pointed out.Hallucinogen
    Uncertainty and certainty are the scales themselves. Being certain and being uncertain, those are the actual levels of certainty, and they are separate. However, being certain can still contain a degree of uncertainty (0-5%).
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  • Hallucinogen
    333
    I believe it will snow because I believe someone said so to me earlier. Knowing is not a requirement for believing.mentos987

    You couldn't rationally believe what they said if you had no knowledge it was possible, e.g., if you don't know what snow is or don't know that it can snow.

    Experience is not the same as knowing. In my experience, the earth is flat.mentos987

    But you know what the Earth is because you experience standing on it. What you directly experience is what leads to knowledge, and you don't experience the roundness of the Earth, so it's not an appropriate example to prove your point.

    No, in this case, the beliefs derived from knowledge does not refer to the same thing.mentos987

    It still refers to knowledge.

    Uncertainty and certainty are the scales themselves. Being certain and being uncertain, those are the actual levels of certainty, and they are separate. However, being certain can still contain a degree of uncertainty (0-5%).mentos987

    This just doesn't make sense. They're separate but they overlap?
  • Hallucinogen
    333
    Every object is a being.Lionino

    By being I meant something with a mind.

    'Anti-' means opposition, that is what the dictionary says. You ascribe this "morally" adverb to the word opposition when it is not there. There are countless examples of 'anti-' prefixed words without moral meaning.
    https://www.dictionary.com/browse/anti-ageing
    https://www.dictionary.com/browse/anti-id
    https://www.dictionary.com/browse/anti-romantic
    https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/anti-aircraft
    The word anti-matter itself indicates reverse, instead of moral stance or counter-action.
    Lionino

    You're right. Anti-theist can mean asserting God doesn't exist.
  • mentos987
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    don't experience the roundness of the Earth, so it's not an appropriate example to prove your point.Hallucinogen
    But I can experience that it is flat. I think it is a great case for experience not being knowledge.

    It still refers to knowledge.Hallucinogen
    Maybe to your definition of knowledge. If everything was based on what I call knowledge, there would be less mistakes all around.

    This just doesn't make sense. They're separate but they overlap?Hallucinogen
    “Uncertain” and “certain” does not overlap. “Uncertainty” and “certainty” are scales, they can overlap, they have no thresholds. A degree of uncertainty will always contain the inversed degree of certainty.
  • Bob Ross
    2.6k


    By dependency, I mean logical dependency

    This sort of “logical dependency” you described is not atemporal.

    I have to know what the president of the United States is in order to have a belief about who will become president in the future.

    Exactly, so you could believe that the next president will be Bob without knowing it: that’s exactly how agnostic atheism works.

    You have now conflated the knowledge used to formulate the belief in X with the need for knowledge of X to formulate the belief in X.
  • Hallucinogen
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    This sort of “logical dependency” you described is not atemporal.Bob Ross

    Then I don't know what your criteria for atemporality is or how you're reaching any conclusion about what is temporal and what isn't.

    Exactly, so you could believe that the next president will be Bob without knowing it:Bob Ross

    No, I can have an irrational belief that turns out to be incorrect, based on fallacy or just lack of knoweldge, or I can have a rational belief that turns out to be correct based on knowledge.

    that’s exactly how agnostic atheism works.Bob Ross

    It doesn't work at all, it pushes together agnosticism, defined as lack of knowledge, together with atheism, a knowledge claim regarding the same thing.

    You have now conflated the knowledge used to formulate the belief in X with the need for knowledge of X to formulate the belief in X.Bob Ross

    The "need" is rationality, it's not being conflated with knowledge itself. One arrives at belief from knowledge through rationality.
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  • Hallucinogen
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    Let's see what the relevant dictionaries say:Lionino

    How are you deciding "relevant", other than as a way of describing the reference that supports your own view?

    I should point out that appealing to dictionaries is going to be completely fruitless for your side of the argument, since dictionaries aren't reason-giving.

    Hence, the OP.
  • Hallucinogen
    333
    Let's see what the relevant dictionaries say:

    A Dictionary of Atheism Stephen Bullivant and Lois Lee: "A belief in the non-existence of a God or gods, or (more broadly) an absence of belief in their existence".
    A Dictionary of Philosophy (3 ed.) Simon Blackburn: "Either the lack of belief that there exists a god, or the belief that there exists none."
    A Dictionary of Psychology (4 ed.) Andrew M. Colman: "Rejection of belief in God. atheist n. One who rejects belief in God."
    The Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World: "The Greek for atheism is ‘not to recognize the gods’ or ‘deny that the gods exist’ or, later, ‘to remove the gods’."
    Lionino

    And they aren't even incompatible with the definition I gave or the OP either. So you aren't even proving me wrong by pointing these out.
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  • Hallucinogen
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    Which one seems more relevant to philosophy of religion's terminology?Lionino

    It's you that said one is more relevant than the other, not me. I'd say "relevance" of a definition comes down to popularity and history.

    Correct me if I am wrong, but the OP mentions dictionaries and definitions at many pointsLionino

    As a way of debunking what the OP is aimed at debunking - the idea that definitions prove what things are.

    and some arguments seem to be based on these definitionsLionino

    They aren't.

    This whole argument references the sourced definition of atheism you used.Lionino

    The argument doesn't depend on the definition, it mentions it as an example of how atheism should be defined based on the argument.
  • mentos987
    160
    @Hallucinogen
    Is believing a ridged state for you? Are you equally sure about all your beliefs?
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