f you're acknowledging that there's a non-contingent first entity then you're not an atheist about a necessary entity. — Hallucinogen
Possibly in some realms of the imagination; not in my reality.Metaphysical necessity is mutually inclusive with being eternal and omnipotent, so the acknowledgement concedes a lot of important ground to theism. — Hallucinogen
They, the words, have to be well-defined so that at least at first they seem to be applicable in both. So your first problem is your words. — tim wood
Your second is your presuppositions: each of your propositions contains at least one that is unclear or questionable. — tim wood
Just for example, everything that is in a sequence has a starting point. A circle is a sequence. A circle has no starting point.... — tim wood
There is no first (or last) number on the real number line. — 180 Proof
(i.e. both being and not-being simultaneously) — 180 Proof
Lastly, atheism denotes rejection of theism (i.e. theistic conceptions) — 180 Proof
It's uncommon to see an argument with multiple premises, all of which are false. — SophistiCat
I haven't acknowledged any 'entities', necessary or otherwise — Vera Mont
I don't know what the first entity was. I will never know. — Vera Mont
And, AFIK, atheism is unbelief in deities, not entities. — Vera Mont
I'm not an atheist about any specific proposition of your choosing; I'm an atheist by virtue of disbelieving in all deities. — Vera Mont
Possibly in some realms of the imagination; not in my reality. — Vera Mont
The point is that denial of a necessary entity entails a contradiction. — Hallucinogen
Lastly, atheism denotes rejection of theism (i.e. theistic conceptions) but not any nontheisms (e.g. animism ... pandeism, acosmism). — 180 Proof
"Was" typically means you're acknowledging it existed. — Hallucinogen
No imaginary spirits, gods or djinns are necessary. Belief is optional.The deities of monotheism and deism are all metaphysically necessary entities, so disbelief in all deities entails disbelief in those metaphysically necessary entities. — Hallucinogen
(1) Existence is a series of entities and events. — Hallucinogen
(4) If all entities are contingent, then there’s no necessary (non-contingent) entity. — Hallucinogen
– IFF "a necessary entity" is not itself a contradiction in terms, which it is as I've pointed out.The point is that denial of a necessary entity entails a contradiction. — Hallucinogen
Even if one concedes a necessary entity (note it doesn't have to be an entity at all.) you still have said nothing about a contradiction in atheism. — DingoJones
You have to deal with this:
Lastly, atheism denotes rejection of theism (i.e. theistic conceptions) but not any nontheisms (e.g. animism ... pandeism, acosmism). — 180 Proof
Because it renders everything else in your argument powerless. — DingoJones
The point is that denial of a necessary entity entails a contradiction. — Hallucinogen
– IFF "a necessary entity" is not itself a contradiction in terms, which it is as I've pointed out. — 180 Proof
That is an assumption - an unsupported supposition. — T Clark
You seem to be claiming, without stating explicitly or providing support, that existence in a series of events implies contingency, i.e. causation. — T Clark
Rejecting theism but not nontheism doesn't mean not rejecting theism... it's still rejecting theism. Get it? — Hallucinogen
To deny theism is to deny a necessary entity... — Hallucinogen
(1) Existence is a series of entities and events.
— Hallucinogen
That is an assumption - an unsupported supposition. — T Clark
No, it's not an assumption. It's a description made possible by distinguishing events and observing entities appear and disappear as conditions change. — Hallucinogen
Whatever else is meant by (ontologically) "necessary", this modality also implies unchangeable. The only way X is unchangeable in relation to every other changing Z (i.e. non-necessary Z) is that X itself is simultaneously X & not-X, or always in a state of all of its possible relations/modes; thus, self-contradictory.Also a "necessary being" is a contradiction in terms insofar as for it to be "necessary" means that "being" is unchangeable (i.e. both being and not-being simultaneously). — 180 Proof
Atheism involves disbelief in, and/or denial of, a necessary being, because metaphysical necessity is a defining feature of an omnipotent, eternal creator. — Hallucinogen
And you read my response to it, hopefully? To deny theism is to deny a necessary entity, which entails a contradiction. Rejecting theism but not nontheism doesn't mean not rejecting theism... it's still rejecting theism. Get it? — Hallucinogen
(1) Existence is a series of entities and events.
(2) For all series, having no 1st term implies having no nth term.
(3) The universe has an nth term. — Hallucinogen
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