Ron_Tomkins
Satan's Helper
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- Oct 29, 2007
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What types of gods do you believe in?
I believe in the same God that Carl Sagan and Richard Feynman believe in. That is: The sum of all the laws of physics.
What types of gods do you believe in?
I did not suggest you did say it was. I was asking what you thought about it out of genuine curiosity. Thank you for the response.No, never said it was. I am an agnostic atheist. I just get annoyed by people telling me that being agnostic makes me a fence sitter. Maybe it's because I hate people who try to tell me what I ought to think, or because I hate people who see things only in black and white, or maybe it's because I can't stand people who try to tell me my position is wrong when they can't justify their own.
Would you say you have theistic beliefs because you believe in the laws of physics?I believe in the same God that Carl Sagan and Richard Feynman believe in. That is: The sum of all the laws of physics.
Ok, so how can you reject the possibility that YEC is right and that a god capable of miracles created the Earth 6,000 years ago exactly the way science would predict it would have been at that time?No I'm not.
I just get annoyed by people telling me that being agnostic makes me a fence sitter. Maybe it's because I hate people who try to tell me what I ought to think, or because I hate people who see things only in black and white, or maybe it's because I can't stand people who try to tell me my position is wrong when they can't justify their own.

And I do not think that concepts related to this topic should be taboo just because some people might be insulted that somebody who does not believe in any gods is an atheist, just because they also happen to be agnostic. It might ruffle feathers? Oh dear! Won't somebody please think of the agnostics?![]()
Would you say you have theistic beliefs because you believe in the laws of physics?
I was not saying that all agnostics are atheists.
But if a person does not believe in any gods, they are atheists regardless of where they are on the knowable/unknowable axis. It's a matter of definition: atheists are people who do not believe in gods.
Why?
It's just another refusal to answer the question and avoid being called an atheist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theological_noncognitivismSome theological noncognitivists assert that to be a strong atheist is to give credence to the concept of God because it assumes that there actually is something understandable to not believe in. This can be confusing because of the widespread belief in God and the common use of the series of letters G-o-d as if it is already understood that it has some cognitively understandable meaning. From this view strong atheists have made the mistaken assumption that the concept of God actually contains an expressible or thinkable proposition. However this depends on the specific definition of God being used.[3]
As with ignosticism, the consistent theological noncognitivist awaits a coherent definition of the word God (or of any other metaphysical utterance purported to be discussable) before being able to engage in arguments for or against God's existence.
Not if you understand the Ignostic and theological noncognitivist position.
Quote:
Some theological noncognitivists assert that to be a strong atheist is to give credence to the concept of God because it assumes that there actually is something understandable to not believe in. This can be confusing because of the widespread belief in God and the common use of the series of letters G-o-d as if it is already understood that it has some cognitively understandable meaning. From this view strong atheists have made the mistaken assumption that the concept of God actually contains an expressible or thinkable proposition. However this depends on the specific definition of God being used.[3]
As with ignosticism, the consistent theological noncognitivist awaits a coherent definition of the word God (or of any other metaphysical utterance purported to be discussable) before being able to engage in arguments for or against God's existence.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theological_noncognitivism
No. Maybe you should try reading and quoting the whole post, instead of just picking out one response.Ok, so how can you reject the possibility that YEC is right and that a god capable of miracles created the Earth 6,000 years ago exactly the way science would predict it would have been at that time?
If there can be a god that can perform miracles, then the young Earth creationists can be right. How can you reject the possibility of YEC while not rejecting the possibility of a god capable of performing miracles? What justifies the place where you draw the line between these two claims? It certainly looks like you are treating the two claims differently.
Okay, so you are agnostic about YEC. You are unwilling to reject the possibility that God created the Earth 6,000 years ago.If YEC states that god made the world to look older than it actually is, then it is just faith, it cannot be tested, and cannot be proven false or true. One can be agnostic about such a god, and such a situation.
Once again you quote only part of my post.Okay, so you are agnostic about YEC. You are unwilling to reject the possibility that God created the Earth 6,000 years ago.
Consider any absurd claim that one can only test probabilistically -- say that saying "greenburg" once a day reduces your chance of getting cancer. What would it take for you to "reject" this claim? Would a test of 100,000 people over 50 years that showed no reduction in cancer rates, coupled with the arbitrariness and stupidity of the claim, be sufficient for you to reject it?I can not reject the possibility that the universe was created midway through this sentence and made to appear precisely as if that was not the case because of magic.
I can, however, disregard it as a stupid idea not worth any attention.
How do you test the claim that the Universe was brought into existence 6000 years ago but looking perfectly in every detail like it formed naturally 4 billion years ago?Consider any absurd claim that one can only test probabilistically -- say that saying "greenburg" once a day reduces your chance of getting cancer. What would it take for you to "reject" this claim? Would a test of 100,000 people over 50 years that showed no reduction in cancer rates, coupled with the arbitrariness and stupidity of the claim, be sufficient for you to reject it?
Or what it just be a stupid idea not worth any attention? After all, the cancer reduction could be slight. Or some defect in the testing protocol might have messed up the results. Or any of a number of things.
I submit that you're unjustifiably granting theistic claims a special status you wouldn't grant to any other claim. *Any* other claim with the same status as far as evidence, arbitrariness, and test failures, would result in you rejecting the possibility. Yet you don't do this for theistic claims. For some reason, you insist on leaving the door open for these claims and no others.
I reject these kinds of claims completely, on many different grounds including that a claim that cannot be tested even in principle is incapable of being true. Someone who "claims" that the universe is a particular way as opposed to another way that is indistinguishable in principle from the first way is not actually making a claim but rather a pseudo-claim. It may have the form of a claim, but does not actually *claim* anything.How do you test the claim that the Universe was brought into existence 6000 years ago but looking perfectly in every detail like it formed naturally 4 billion years ago?
Go on, how do you test it?