Replies
Last of the Fraggles said:
The 'ist' you refer to is part of the noun theist. The construction is a-theist not a-the-ist (to the best of my knowledge)
Therefore a-badger and a-theist are comparable. A-badger-ist would compare to a-theist-ist (and I'm not quite sure what that term would mean)
I've heard that argument before, and so I checked the etymology of atheist. There is a good deal of philosophical debate over lack of belief vs belief in the negative, but the etymology is pretty clear that it's a-theos (greek) for not god (or without god) and then ist so Person who believes not god, or person who is without god as you like.
Mister Agenda said:
What data would you require in order to concede it is reasonable to conclude that babies aren't theists?
I would need to know that the babies have not accepted the existence of a personified supernatural being of any kind. Given the irrationality of young minds and the dominance of parents in babies lives I personally don't think it's possible to be thinking, cognizant and lack belief in some kind of god concept, but it's an unknown so while I think it is likely all babies are theists to some form or another I would not make that claim because I can not demonstrate it empirically and it is an empirical claim. Perhaps as we get closer to decoding the programing language of brains we could monitor a person's development to see what they are thinking, but such a device is science fiction for now.
The Norseman said:
Here's where I disagree. The term 'atheism' is the null hypothesis; i.e., that the default is that there is no belief in god/gods. Thus, the term can be applied to babies, even with no input (or output for that matter from fMRIs for example) from the babies themselves.
I do not need to know the mind of a baby in order to say that there first must be evidence in order to support belief in the existence of a god or gods.
You have some interesting ideas here, but I'll touch on the last, quoted, first. Billions of people the world over believe in gods completely with out evidence. Are you saying that since they lack belief that the world is peopled with atheists, some of whom are lying about it?
Now on to both of you, if we were using god in the sense of a specific god, like the christian one, then I would agree with you, it is almost impossible to believe in that god without learning about the idea first. However established theistic concepts are not the only ideas which qualify as gods.
At a minimum a god is any personification with a supernatural element. If we can agree to that we can see that all the demons, angels, polytheistic, great spirits, ancestors, emperors and what not have that in common. Some kind of personification, and some kind of supernatural element.
At that point we just need to look at how children develop. Their active minds fill the world with all manner of personified supernaturals. In effect it is even easy to see that a baby could see it's parents in this light. Viewing them as all powerful, or infallible, dare I say omnibenivolent?
That is conjecture, but it seems very valid to me. What is fact is that children report having these ideas far more often than they report an absence of them. That is what I was driving at with atheism, and skepticsm, being learned behavior. Specific theistic ideas can be learned, but we also make up our own on the fly, every time we hear a bump and think, monster/ghost or whatever.
The Norseman said:
In fact, I go one step further back and say that the term 'god' must first be defined in a rational, coherent manner before one can say whether or not one is an atheist or a theist. You yourself further in this post (which I've snipped for brevity) even state this as a given -- that 'god' can mean just about anything. When one thing can mean anything, it actually means nothing at all.
Emphasis mine. Your argument for the fate of the word god better fits the result of your argument for the meaning of atheist. If you are an atheist until we establish a specific god for you to lack belief in than everyone is an atheist, if only out of ignorance, to the many ideas of gods I've dreamed up and haven't shared. The word would lose all meaning.
However to your point about gods, no not any concept, hopefully my point about needing some personification and a supernatural element will clear that up. There are certainly many, many god concepts, I think it is safe to say that you lack belief in all of them. For myself I'm holding onto hope for one, but functionally there are none acting in any way that would matter to where we are here and now.