Jeeesusssssss, what a dog's breakfast, all over something relatively simple. As a proponent of the Douglas Adams, In Your Face kind of atheism, I have an interest in this very subject and have written a couple of articles about it. It's why I am The Atheist and why the movement I'm involved in are "Extreme Atheists". The word has been polluted by namby-pamby, mincing around, "we're not anti-" brigade.
Let me just re-assert, before I answer a few of the posts worth answering, one point. Atheism = NO GOD. The definition of atheist does not allow for wavering. If your position is "there almost certainly isn't a god and I truly believe none will ever be found", you're not actually an atheist, you're almost an atheist. Do we need to research the meaning of the word "no"?
Now for some posts - how the hell did I miss this thread????
You hold out this stereotype of atheists as people who are saying "nope, there absolutely positively cannot be any form of deity whatsoever. I can't prove it, I just know it." I don't know anyone who claims that.
Well, now you do.
But then it seems that atheism relishes in ignorance. A willfull determination to not consider more because we can't detect more.
I see you've revised your opinions, based upon this thread. I salute your attitude.
Quick aside to RandFan, I forgot to copy your post, but I see you obviously use the same [lack of] skills in every thread or disagreement you have.
Philosophy is all front, and no substance.
Truer words are rarely written.
There is a good reason why atheists have to be very assertive (perhaps even appearing glib to someone with faith) in making their points - your average religious person has had their reasoning capacity so seriously dulled that a normal reasonable argument about the existence of their god completely misses the point. This is their "faith" in action - their blind belief regardless of evidence, need or discussion. Atheists have to be aggressive to get past this.
A person with faith will rarely change their mind and will often not even consider the existence of an alternative no matter how compelling. Almost every atheist I know will change their mind presented a reasonable argument. As it happens there aren't any so we come across looking like a bunch of people that won't change our minds - but that is only because we haven't been given a remotely reasonable reason to do so.
I would certainly be amenable to proof of my view being wrong, but in the lack of it, I'm happy to have 100% confidence in my atheism. As usual, your simple statement is 100% correct and should have been a thread-stopper. It wasn't!
What people do makes a difference. What they believe doesn't unless you are now going to provide evidence that it does.
I didn't see this get adequately answered, it was early on the thread, but really, you must be able to tell the difference between sectarian and other violence in the world?
However atheism does not require faith for belief.
Really? Have you proven the reasons for atheism yourself, or do you have faith in the work of others?
Repeat after me, Huntster, "I will not argue from definition and I will not play semantic games".
Well, I would have thought argument from definition, especially when it's one as clear, concise and accurate as "atheism" is the one in question was absolutely critical! If you can't agree on a simple definition, the debate's meaningless.
Theism and atheism are binary, it’s either or, they are mutually excusive and exhaustive. You either believe something or you do not.
And for a/theism, you either believe there is NO GOD or you believe there IS A GOD.
Partially correct. Atheism is a religion.
Grrr, you're winning an argument hands-down, then come out with that!
Atheism has some similarities to religion. It is NOT a religion! Methinks you just went one step too far with that one! I got my .45 ready, Pilgrim!
Atheism is not concerned with the universe at all. Maybe if I type really slowly you'll get this. Atheism is concerned with one question, and one question only, namely the existence of god. One is an atheist if one can answer Do you believe in God? with an honest no. That is all there is to atheism.
That's another nearly, but not quite. Atheism isn't a lack of belief, it's a belief that there is NO GOD.
I should have been more clear. I only meant that atheism was not, by definition, the active denial of God.
See above - it is.
This thread was fairly interesting up until about page 6, it's pretty obvious Hunster really struggles to 'get' Atheism and is trying to understand it using the constructs of his own beliefs. He's looking for the holy book of Athiesm which defines what it means to be an Athiest - unfortunately he can only find the dictionary. He's then using this to tell other people what they think/believe/have faith in despite them telling him he is wrong.
He just doesn't understand it and he never will. Worse still, he doesn't want to. The concept of a faithful Athiest is ridiculous... faithful to whom? to what?
There are no rules to athiesm. No ethics or codes to follow. Even athiests themselves will argue over what athiesm actually means because there are so many different views contained within the catch-all heading.
The word itself carries the definition though - it is the opposite of theism. You are one or the other. In the same way that things are either symmetrical or not (asymmetrical). You can further subdivide it if you want but then you just get into arguments over definitions.
Mate, I hope you keep a copy of that post and this thread somewhere handy in the future, because it will help reinforce one thing - Huntster is right. I've pointed out the only mistake he's made - so far(!)
So, yes, I'm agreeing that atheism is faith-based, because, unlike Scotsmen, Dutchmen and any other -en or -ist you wish to come up with, we can define "atheist" with 100% accuracy.
Agnostics, humanists, rationalists and Buddhists lack belief in god, but they aren't necessarily atheists. Atheists don't lack belief, we hold the belief - the
faith - that our opinion of there being NO GOD, is correct. That faith is based upon science having given the answers to the questions we ask. It isn't proof - we leave that to "sceptics", who must worry everything to a slow death without 100% "evidence". Common sense can't be bought.
Accordingly, Huntster is quite right. He is quite correctly using the terms "atheism" and "faith" in their actual meanings, while many of the posts have missed this concept entirely. You can get caught up in all sorts of arguments about "strong" and "weak" atheism - it's a black and white subject. You are either an atheist or not.