Belz...
Fiend God
Hey, the mods said skeptigirl and skeptic something or other were confusing people. It wasn't my fault.![]()
For people who stop reading words after 7 letters, maybe.
By the way, I seem to sense a pattern in your avatars...
Hey, the mods said skeptigirl and skeptic something or other were confusing people. It wasn't my fault.![]()
Ah, so it is a false belief in Mods. Is there a Mod? Can there be a Mod who is omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient? Can a Mod lead us to salvation? Do you believe in Mods?
It's a belief, not a lack thereof. Hence, it's based on certain amount of faith.
I dislike the 100% thing. I'm certain, for all practical and theoretical intents and purposes, that there are no supernatural entities. I am willing to reexamine this conclusion if and when new evidence for these entities is presented, but not until then.
I believe this makes me a "hard" atheist.
Yes. And I would say you share my position.
(And I also dislike the 100% thing. As well as disliking "chance" and "possibility" in the same context. No, it is not possible that there is a god in any meaningful sense of the words used.)
Well if something is annihilated I wouldn't say it exists. So that one should be easy enough.
Oh, absolutely. If you allow god to mean 'some vague idea of something somewhere which is just well you know...yeah...cool' then you're going to have problems disproving them. The ignostics are on to something after all.
Because if it's meaningless, how can it be 'god'?
I just mean that a lot of these concepts are defined to exist in such a way that their existence and non-existence are not different. A 'god' that exists only in a parallel universe and doesn't interact in any way with this universe at any time for example, doesn't exist in any meaningful way.
I'm not sure where this is going, I disagree that relevant for humans needs to be explicitly stated.
Sometimes. It depends what is meant. In practical terms not running to the store can mean walking to the store or running to somewhere that isn't the store.
In practical terms not believing X can only really mean believing not X.
If you want to consider that trust in science, evidence, and the laws of physics is faith, be my guest.
I consider myself quite justified to deny the existence of the supernatural until someone can show that it exists.
Not that I'm grinding this particular axe, but how is this for a non-falsifiable 'god'? - entity created the universe - entity merely observes the universe - entity does not respond to prayer - entity does not intervene in any way with the universe post-creation I don't think I can disprove this (unless of course I have a finite definition of how the universe was created, exclusive of other explanations).
It is simply a construct that if someone feels more 'comfortable' knowing that 'something' is watching over them, its their personal security blanket, nothing more.
Its contrived, yes. And it isn't something that I would agree with. However it also isn't 'wrong', and nor does such a belief system interfere with how one lives their life (ie - such an entity makes no comment about abortion, martyrdom, circumcision, gay marriage etc...) So - perfectly compatible with my atheistic worldview.
Doesn't prove much except a philosophical point.
Yes, it is faith. Very well founded faith. Just like believing that gods do not exist.
For all practical purposes, we're on the same page. The reason I'm an agnostic atheist is because I can't truthfully answer the question "Can you rule out all gods?" with a "Yes!". Can you?
Well, of course it's odorless. Duh...![]()
You seem to be defining the word 'faith' so broadly as to render any meaning of the word with no distinction.
You seem to be defining the word 'faith' so broadly as to render any meaning of the word with no distinction.
Sure, it's possible for a person to do so; since you fail to define what you mean by '[all] gods' you are then leaving the definition up to the person asked, and by her own internal definition, the answer can be truthfully and satisfactorily answered "yes!"
Orderless farts are the same as non existent....Oh wait.
The fact that someone could be oderlessly farting proves god!
Welcome to sillyville- with 2 "l"s.
How so? Belief is a better word in that situation but serves the same function. We generally define knowledge as justified true belief. Knowledge of physics, chemistry, etc. is based on beliefs that appear to be true (to the closest approximation we can get) and are certainly justified.
Knowledge that gods don't exist seems to follow the same pattern.
We don't speak of any of our knowledge of the world as absolute and I don't think we can speak of our knowledge about the non-existence of gods as absolute. Gods are still a logical possibility, however incredibly unlikely they are.
Could you rephrase that? I'm having trouble parsing it.
As for the first part, I was using faith in the sense: 'confidence or trust in a person or thing'. I thought that was an accepted usage of the word.
Leaving the definition up to the person asked? I wouldn't think so. It's about any definition. The person who answers a question about 'all gods' based on just their own definition doesn't understand the question.
What if I believe in the Holy Universe-farting Monkey that farted the Big Bang but annihilated itself in the process? How could you falsify that, for example?
Not that I'm grinding this particular axe, but how is this for a non-falsifiable 'god'?
- entity created the universe
- entity merely observes the universe
- entity does not respond to prayer
- entity does not intervene in any way with the universe post-creation
Yes, it is faith. Very well founded faith.
For all practical purposes, we're on the same page. The reason I'm an agnostic atheist is because I can't truthfully answer the question "Can you rule out all gods?" with a "Yes!". Can you?