lol...I don't think anyone understood that :Pshell wrote:Yes, it was a long sentence......and umm.......*blushing*.......huh? *blushing bright red*
Some people think that our tendency to believe is evidence that God exists, basically.

lol...I don't think anyone understood that :Pshell wrote:Yes, it was a long sentence......and umm.......*blushing*.......huh? *blushing bright red*


I am opposed to this because it doesn't correspond to usual usage. In my personal experience, people assume agnostic to mean "I do not know and am neutral about the issue", while atheist means "I do not believe". If I were to call myself an agnostic, people would assume the former, and this does not reflect my views. Furthermore, I'd bet that most, if not all, people who answered the poll as "atheist" would admit to also being agnostic if they used the "real" definition.Alliteration wrote:I think you're still missing the point, as you've just merely restated your position once again. Yes, we're arguing semantics. My argument is that "agnostic atheist/gnostic atheist" is unnecessarily long-winded, and makes discussions less clear. Basically what I'm saying is this: the stance that you refer to as "agnostic atheist" should be referred to as simply "agnostic", and the stance that you refer to as "gnostic atheist" should be referred to simply as "atheist". It's Orwell's third rule of good writing: If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
If your own stance is what you refer to as agnostic atheist, are you for some reason opposed to simply referring to yourself as agnostic? If so, why? If my ideas are adopted, no one is going to mistakenly think that you might be some sort of theist.
No, it means that I do not believe in the arguments, or think they hold validity, in the same way that I don't believe in compatibilism in the problem of free will.Alliteration wrote:You also said, "although how this would work is beyond me". I hear this a lot...and every time, I've found that it's an indicator that the speaker has not read very much modern atheist philosophy - perhaps you should pick up some works by J.L. Schellenberg, Graham Oppy, Gregory Dawes, J.H. Sobel, or William Rowe.
Well, why didn't you just say that to begin with? *giggling*Alliteration wrote:lol...I don't think anyone understood that :Pshell wrote:Yes, it was a long sentence......and umm.......*blushing*.......huh? *blushing bright red*
Some people think that our tendency to believe is evidence that God exists, basically.

I have a flight to catch, so real quick post....Handcuffed wrote:No, it means that I do not believe in the arguments, or think they hold validity, in the same way that I don't believe in compatibilism in the problem of free will.


And these people are of course wrong.Alliteration wrote: Some have argued that the mere existence of such a need to know (and the observation that belief in God seems to crop up time and time again) is evidence of God; because positing God's influence as an explanation meets more of the criteria for a good explanation (simplicity, explanatory power, explanatory scope, makes predictions, and is falsifiable) than the next most likely idea - that it's a misfiring of certain parts of our brain related to curiosity and the need for companionship.
EDIT: Holy crap, that is a long sentence :P

I'm actually not sure about this. On the one hand, some people have made some pretty convincing cases. On the other hand, there's the question of what God's motivation would be in doing so - if (for example), Islam turns out to be true, and Allah has planted a tendency to believe in us...well, it's caused quite a few people to "follow the wrong path", so to speak. The problem I have with it is that there's only a general tendency to believe in some sort of deity, nothing specific about God's identity or character is involved.Shell wrote:Some people, I assume does not include you? *smile*


There's a lot of assumptions here - what if God isn't interested in correcting our behavior, or smiting us? And what if God values belief which is gained as a result of some sort of intellectual or emotional journey, as opposed to belief for the sake of belief?CheerfullyInsane wrote:First of all, if there is some sort of omniscient, omnipotent being, surely he can come up with better ways to correct our behaviour, than vague hints through our subconscious.
An 8-foot neon sign saying "Behave, or I will smote thee!" seems a bit more to the point.
It depends on what you mean by "reason"...is there a purpose? Maybe, maybe not. Is there a cause? Yes, of course. I think most people approaching this subject are looking for a cause, as opposed to a purpose.Second, the question of "why are we here?" is the wrong question.
First you have to answer this question: "Why should there be a reason for our existence?"
I know the knee-jerk reaction of most people will be "But there must be a reason!", but I've never met anyone who has been able to adequately explain to me why that is.
Are you implying that theism is an ad hoc explanation?Humankind seems to have this built-in need for causality, and if there isn't one readily available, they'll invent the damn thing. Doesn't matter if the reason they invent for us being here is utterly ludicrous, just as long as there is a reason.


True, there are rampant assumptions. Then again, a divine being/higher power is a bit of an assumption in the first place, so it's not as if I'm straying from the path, as it were.Alliteration wrote: There's a lot of assumptions here - what if God isn't interested in correcting our behavior, or smiting us? And what if God values belief which is gained as a result of some sort of intellectual or emotional journey, as opposed to belief for the sake of belief?
It has to be purpose that people are looking for.It depends on what you mean by "reason"...is there a purpose? Maybe, maybe not. Is there a cause? Yes, of course. I think most people approaching this subject are looking for a cause, as opposed to a purpose.
Absolutely. Theism has always been used to explain what otherwise would lack explanation. Natural phenomenons tends to be pretty high on the list.Are you implying that theism is an ad hoc explanation?
Are you implying that there are some events with no causal link to any other events?

1) This is a tu quoque fallacy.CheerfullyInsane wrote:True, there are rampant assumptions. Then again, a divine being/higher power is a bit of an assumption in the first place, so it's not as if I'm straying from the path, as it were.
No; it would merely reduce the question to a purely academic one. Intellectual curiosity.To answer the second question, if god (divine being/higher power gets too much to type every time) isn't interested in guiding us, the whole point becomes moot.
If god simply is, without rules or consequences, there's no reason to examine the hows and whys.
That would be like worrying what the lawn thinks of you.
Again no...these people are looking for a first/ultimate cause of everything, not what caused them specifically to exist.It has to be purpose that people are looking for.
If all they're looking for is what caused them to be here, I can answer that right now:
It's called parents.
This doesn't apply when a theist is making an "inference to the best explanation" argument (also known as an abductive argument). Robin Collins has an argument in the Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology along these lines. In fact, he even explains why it's not ad hoc.Absolutely. Theism has always been used to explain what otherwise would lack explanation. Natural phenomenons tends to be pretty high on the list.
I'm sure that by now we can all agree that thunder isn't created by Thor riding his chariot across the sky, right?
Which also explains why theism, generally speaking, has a harder time of it when science advances.
One of the sad things about dogmatic beliefs is that they have to try and encompass every new discovery within their very restrictive world-view.
Now, even in 'advanced' civilizations there's a murky spiritual movement, but the beliefs serve the same purpose.
It is simply the needs that have changed.
Instead of explaining disasters, volcanoes and so on, the spiritual nowadays fill other voids, such as giving meaning to ones existence for instance, or simply someone to blame when things go awry.
Doesn't mean it's any more real than Thor in his chariot, it's just harder to disprove.


1) True.Alliteration wrote:1) This is a tu quoque fallacy.
2) In this case, God would be the conclusion, not an assumption.
Do you really think that people are looking for a cause, without also looking for purpose?Again no...these people are looking for a first/ultimate cause of everything, not what caused them specifically to exist.It has to be purpose that people are looking for.
If all they're looking for is what caused them to be here, I can answer that right now:
It's called parents.
And why doesn't it apply?This doesn't apply when a theist is making an "inference to the best explanation" argument (also known as an abductive argument). Robin Collins has an argument in the Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology along these lines. In fact, he even explains why it's not ad hoc.