Thanks for replying, Soarwing.
The first thing I'm going to do is just a posting hint. Click the "quote" button at the bottom of any post and you'll be presented with a screen of the post which excludes all other quoted items. This prevents endless repitition. Copy the whole thing and then paste it repeatedly, trimming it to just the part you want to reply to, surrounged by the bracketed {quote} text {/quote} thingies. That way, you can easily separate what the other person said versus what you said. It takes a little practice, but it makes reading (and replying) to your posts much easier. But just this once, I'll do the editing.
My Christian family won't talk to me about religion, so I need somewhere to "vent" I suppose. Ironically, I'm a bigfoot nerd who thinks that there probably is something to that phenomenon. - Go figure.
I think a lot of us are here because we need to vent. It is a good, safe place to do it. Nobody knows who you are. You can be as free as you like.
Then only "unicorns with evidence deserve belief" is also a philosophy. Rendering the word "philosophy" meaningless IMO.
Unicorns with (good) evidence
do deserve belief, and yes that is a philosophy. Anything with good evidence deserves belief. But I don't believe this renders philosophy meaningless. I would define Philosophy as "the rules by which beliefs are based". Yeah, a lot of times the rules are stupid and as a result, the philosophies that use them are self-contradictory and worthless.
Infants are atheists. No belief in god(s)=atheist. "Non-theist" is the the same as atheist. Generally I would say that atheism should be limited to human beings, but by definition, atheism would include dogs, amoebas, infants and people in vegetative states, etc.
That is why I don't accept this definition. If I join a society of atheists, I don't expect to see dogs and amoebas in there. I expect to see people who have considered the question of God.
If you asked somebody what they thought of God and they said, "What is God?" would you mark them down as atheist? I wouldn't. If you explained the concept of God to them, well then, they have now considered the concept of God, so they can legitimately be called "atheists" if they say they don't believe in any god(s).
ETA. See Dr. Kitten's excellent post on "
privative" for a better explanation than I have given.
"Belief" without enough evidence for belief is irrational. Regardless of the comfort or whatever it might bring. I don't know that there aren't magic elves on Mars, but I still lack belief in Magic Martian Elves. I don't need to KNOW to not have magic elf belief. Simply lacking a belief isn't a knowledge claim.
I agree. Knowledge and belief are two different things. Belief without evidence is (by my definition) irrational. Still, one must allow that others may define it differently. By understanding what others mean, we can have a discussion without pushing hot-buttons, like calling a sane person "irrational".
For what its worth, I hold some irrational beliefs. So do you. That doesn't make either one of us, on the whole, irrational.
That's okay... I like the challenge. To hold beliefs that cannot be rationally demonstrated as true - to me - is a good definition of irrational.
You mean like Bigfoot?
Seriously though, this is exactly what I mean. Most, if not all people hold some irrational beliefs. I only found out recently that the old story about swimming less than an hour after eating would give you cramps, was utter BS. It was irrational, because I had only accepted it on the word of others, not because I had any evidence. I can give you other examples of where I am irrational. You have given us one of yours. Such is the burden of being human.
Theists are sure that they believe in god. Otherwise they aren't theists. Being "not sure" is not accepting something to be true or false.
Agreed. Being sure you believe is not the same as being sure of your belief. But I think most people would admit that their beliefs have changed over time and may change again. Being sure you believe is like being sure you will vote for a certain party this election. It doesn't mean you will
always vote that way.
I can't be unsure of whether I own a car, but yet believe that I do own a car at the same time. If one is not sure but still has belief in what one is unsure about, then that person is irrational.
I disagree. I am not sure, as in 100% sure of anything. I have things for which there is so much evidence that it is indistinguishable from being "sure", such as gravity, evolution, the value of oral hygene and the stupidity of rap music, but I
must retain the willingness to be proved wrong by good evidence, or else I am, as you say, irrational.
Thanks for the welcome!.... hopefully I can contribute something and learn while I'm at it!
You already have contributed. Please continue to do so. We will learn from each other.