tsig
a carbon based life-form
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2005
- Messages
- 39,049
Now this has to be a script, surely? I'd hate to think that a real person came up with it.
Actually it's just what you're saying.
Other than ridicule do you have any answer to it?
Now this has to be a script, surely? I'd hate to think that a real person came up with it.
Actually it's just what you're saying.
Other than ridicule do you have any answer to it?
Sure but you'll be graded on it.Can we ridicule too?
Hmm. Could you explain that? I'm sincere. What is that supposed to mean? Is it supposed to extend the original analogy? I'm assuming you weren't just trying to be cute.And for the poets, bald isn't a hair colour. But atheism is a wig.
Actually it's just what you're saying.
Other than ridicule do you have any answer to it?
The "books" in the library at Alexandria were a physical fact of the natural world. Before the destruction of the library, it was possible to prove which books were in the library. If a catalog were found in an excavation, it would be possible to prove which books were in the library. Therefore, it is not the same as something that cannot be proved or disproved. Unless you believe that various manifestations of deities were actual events in the natural world, subject to proof, in which case your comparison is valid.But there are things we can't prove either way, but that are truth-apt. Which books were in the Great Library of Alexandria? Was the Bhagavad Gita there? It is possible, but can we we can't know for certain. And yet it is not true for some people but not for others. It either was there or it wasn't.You didn't read my post carefully. Here it is, to refresh your memory:
I was talking about belief in the sense of faith, that is, belief in things that cannot be proved or disproved. Your examples do not fall into that category and, thus, do not refute my point. In addition, my comment about "don't demand that others believe the way they do" was about belief (remember that I'm using it in the sense of faith). And, in fact, many religions, and other groups, do demand that "others believe the way they do." Wars have been fought over the issue of conflicting beliefs.
Your argument only used one possible definition of atheism. Another definition is a belief that there is no god. Atheismdict:Your statement:
Belief in god = non belief in god
then divide by "in god"
therefore
belief = non belief.
This type of atheism is by definition a belief. Your argument refers back to this quote, which is talking about more than just one atheistic belief system and so includes the "belief" type of atheism:noun
1.the doctrine or belief that there is no God.
2.disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings.
If you are going to subdivide "religion" into "what this particular religion believes" then why should you not subdivide "atheism" into "what this particular atheistic belief system believes". Is it possible to be an atheist without subscribing to one of these atheist belief systems? Of course it is, just as it is possible to be religious without subscribing to a particular formal religion.
Well, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, and explain it just one more time.
A belief system that includes, as a necessary element, the existence of god is a religious belief system.
A belief system that includes, as a necessary element, the non-existence of god is an atheistic belief system.
Other belief systems don't include or exclude the possibility of god. I wouldn't describe those as religious or atheistic.
A belief system that explicitly claims that atheism is true, together with other elements, can reasonably be described as an atheistic belief system. Marxist communism undoubtedly qualifies in both theory and practice.
Claiming that atheism is just the absence of belief doesn't affect this. Communism is much more than just the absence of a belief in god. It includes all kinds of beliefs about the nature of human society. It is quite obviously a belief system, and it's quite obviously atheistic. To claim the contrary is merely perverse.
But if you insist on conflating the two, let's not forget that both 2*2=4 and -2*-2=4, which would allow us (if we indulge a taste for 'cute') to claim that -2= 2. Just as nonbelief=belief.
Atheists have one connective string, and that is the lack of a belief in any deity. Any addition you put will fall outside of the "atheist" spectrum, into politics or ethics or philosophy. We are not bound by any moral code, nor any collective trajectory; atheism is not governed by any obligations outside of the prerequisite of holding no belief in any gods. That's why these "belief system" peddlers have to adjust their diction, because there is nothing systemic or plural about this.
This is the reason why explaining someone's political opinions through denoting their atheism sounds disconnected, because it's like pinning down someone as a Democrat due to the fact that they own a poodle.
Zeus is a God though, so atheism includes lack of belief in Zeus. However, I also don't believe in ghosts or reincarnation or David Icke's reptilian shape-shifters, or any number of other impossible absurdities that have nothing to do with atheism; I suspect my 'lack-of-belief system', such as it is, is related to skepticism, and atheism is just one lack-of-belief in that 'lack-of-belief system'.So here's a challenge. For those who say that atheism is a belief system, what about the similar belief system centered around the fact that Zeus doesn't exist?
Zeus is a God though, so atheism includes lack of belief in Zeus. However, I also don't believe in ghosts or reincarnation or David Icke's reptilian shape-shifters, or any number of other impossible absurdities that have nothing to do with atheism; I suspect my 'lack-of-belief system', such as it is, is related to skepticism, and atheism is just one lack-of-belief in that 'lack-of-belief system'.
So here's a challenge. For those who say that atheism is a belief system, what about the similar belief system centered around the fact that Zeus doesn't exist?
I expect that most people could answer yes or no if asked "Does the god Zeus actually exist?" so one could easily identify who was in the group and who wasn't. It's also a loyal and stable group, since most start to identify with the belief at a young age and keep the faith all their adult life.
Do people with that belief, do more harm than good, compared to other groups? What charitable work should they get credit for? Should they get credit for helping end conflict in the Middle East, since it's one thing that both Israelis and Palestinians can agree on?
Agreed. Skepticism implies atheism, but not vice-versa.But are all atheists by definition skeptics? Like for example, are Marxist communists by definition skeptics? I wouldn't think so.
Well, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, and explain it just one more time.
A belief system that includes, as a necessary element, the existence of god is a religious belief system.
A belief system that includes, as a necessary element, the non-existence of god is an atheistic belief system.
If you are going to subdivide "religion" into "what this particular religion believes" then why should you not subdivide "atheism" into "what this particular atheistic belief system believes". Is it possible to be an atheist without subscribing to one of these atheist belief systems? Of course it is, just as it is possible to be religious without subscribing to a particular formal religion.
There are plenty of people who have only a vague idea of what they might believe in. In fact, religious belief is far more likely to be vague because it deals in things that are ill-defined and unimaginable.
And you for some reason only want to consider what the religions do, and ignore the atheistic belief systems.
Can I use that for future examples of the over-stretched analogy?
If we want to find out if medicine works, we compare what happens when people take the medicine with what happens when people don't take the medicine. A test that only dealt with one and not the other wouldn't tell us whether the medicine was very good.
If you want to know if religion is, in a general sense, good or bad for society, you have to look at societies with and without religion.
You said you were "a good person". If you think that means anything, then you are subscribing to a cosmic abstraction.