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Old 05-15-2003, 02:56 PM   #21
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Quote:
Originally posted by beastmaster
Nevertheless, when someone walks up to me and says he/she is an agnostic, I am quite reluctant to say (or think) "no you're not" or "there's no such thing" or "you must lack access to your epistemic beliefs."

Certainly not, but neither do I think by calling oneself an "agnostic," a person actually means, "I literally do not know whether or not I believe in God."
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Although I have been a lifelong atheist, I have on occasion sauntered over to the borderline with pure agnosticism, and I never felt that doing so was a matter of intellectual dishonesty. To the contrary, the cause has typically been that I encounter *new* information that makes me think I understand *less* about god than I did before, and that causes me to sway toward agnosticism.

Absolutely. I think this is an important part of any philosophy.
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What's always kept me back in the atheist camp is that, I have concluded, after some wrestling, that the properties of god (in the generic) are sufficiently well-understood to form an inference as to its non-existence. But I don't think it would have been illegitimate for me to have made the jump over to "the Other Irreligion."
I'll get back to you on this one.
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Old 05-15-2003, 02:59 PM   #22
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In the view expressed by Professor Drange's essay, you can NEVER merely define yourself (or "label" yourself) as either an atheist, agnostic, or noncognitivist with respect to "God talk" without first defining what the word "God" actually means. In this sense, if the word "God" refers to "Jesus Christ" or "The Holy Trinity," then I'm an atheist, as I firmly believe there is more than sufficient evidence to disprove the existence of "Jesus Christ" or "The Holy Trinity" as being "God."

But with more-fuzzy definitions of what the word "God" means, particularly limiting the definition of the word "God" to merely being coincident with the so-called "First Cause" of the existence of our universe, there the evidence is not so clear, and based upon either Jim Still's essay on Wittgenstein or my own essay based upon the argument for anti-realism, agnosticism is logically mandated with respect to any such "fuzzy God concept."

In other words, there are claims made with respect to Christianity that are clearly not only falsifiable, but are in fact falsified in light of modern scientific knowledge, so as to be able to declare the Christian idea of "God" to be false. But with respect to a far simpler claim of the existence of a "First Cause" of our universe, there is no presently-reasonable way to falsify the claim that such a "First Cause" exists, and thus (with no pertinant evidence to evaluate) agnosticism with respect to a "First Cause" is virtually mandated. (See, for instance, the two essays I refer to in the above paragraph.)

Accordingly, while I'm clearly an atheist to any Christian, to my friends here in the freethought movement, I'm about as committed an agnostic as will ever exist.

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Old 05-15-2003, 03:08 PM   #23
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Default Re: What the heck is an "Agnostic?"

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Originally posted by Zadok001
So, I guess my question is this:

Is it possible to define 'agnostic' such that it becomes a valid response to 'Do you believe God exists?', and such that it remains exclusive of 'atheist' or 'theist'? i.e., can you find a definition of 'agnostic' that is relevant to one's belief in God, and that doesn't just mean '(a)theist'?
The answer to your question is clearly "yes!" In fact, I suspect that there are a plethora of such answers, as a clear reading of Professor Drange's essay on this topic will disclose. Please read Atheism, Agnosticism, Noncognitivism by Professor Ted Drange. (While Professor Drange and I might disagree on the definition of "agnostic" he proposes, he remains a good and solid friend, and a strong supporter of the Internet Infidels!)

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Old 05-15-2003, 03:09 PM   #24
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Originally posted by Philosoft

Certainly not, but neither do I think by calling oneself an "agnostic," a person actually means, "I literally do not know whether or not I believe in God."[/B]
Well, maybe not. Skepticism is important.

But, unlike your theoretical person, if *I* ever started calling myself an agnostic, it would be because, quite literally, I no longer understood enough about god to form an inference as to its probable existence or non-existence. And I can realistically *imagine* that happening -- it's not just a trivial, theoretical footnote. God is a very slippery concept and I can see it completely slipping away out of my grasp.
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Old 05-15-2003, 04:02 PM   #25
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Originally posted by beastmaster
But, unlike your theoretical person, if *I* ever started calling myself an agnostic, it would be because, quite literally, I no longer understood enough about god to form an inference as to its probable existence or non-existence.

See, I don't think atheism necessarily entails a universal "inference as to it's probable... non-existence." I feel comfortable defining atheism as any lack of belief, regardless of the strength of the conviction. It enables one to outright reject most conceptual manifestations of the J-C God, while maintaining the ability to alter one's belief system based on future evidence.
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And I can realistically *imagine* that happening -- it's not just a trivial, theoretical footnote. God is a very slippery concept and I can see it completely slipping away out of my grasp.
Absolutely, and I think most staunch atheists would acknowledge this possibility.
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Old 05-16-2003, 10:07 PM   #26
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Default Re: What the heck is an "Agnostic?"

Quote:
Originally posted by Zadok001
I am unconvinced that the question "Do you believe in God?" can be answered with "I'm agnostic."

I disagree.

Those who believe in God are 'theist.' Those who do not believe in God are 'atheist.'

Those who refuse to make a positive or negative opinion because of the total lack of evidence are being truthful. Agnosticism is saying that I am not going to answer the question about a hypothetical unsupported entity with no evidence at all. The agnostic says that the question is silly. Why answer silly questions since you really can not? A scientist does not make statements like "there are not such thing as Leprechauns." He regards the question as silly.

Now, there doesn't seem to be room here for an entity that describes itself as neither atheist nor theist. i.e., you either believe in a deity, or you don't believe in a deity. The only possible middle-ground is "I don't know whether I believe in a deity or not." But I find it hard to accept that there is a state wherein one is NOT AWARE of one's own beliefs!

Wrong. It is rational to assert that one needs not have an opion on every silly hypothesis made by various self-appointed prophets, when there is not evidence for or against the hypothesis. In science we do not waste time writing up a protocol to study a hypothesis that has no logical or evidential support. Anything that we study by protocol has to have enough evidence to make the hypothesis worth investigating. God is such a hypothesis.

Perhaps one's beliefs are in flux, believing in a deity one day and not the next, but that would merely make one flucuate being 'atheist' and 'theist.' The only way to adequately define 'agnostic' in this case is to use a conglomeration of the definitions of 'atheist' and 'theist,' in which case the whole process seems to be meaningless.

You are confusing indecision with rationally withholding consideration of acceptance for some hypothesis unsupported by evidence.

So... What the hell's an 'agnostic?' Some people define it as "Someone who doesn't know whether or not God exists," but this definition means the condition of agnisticism has NO BEARING on the question "Do you believe in God?" If that definition holds, it seems that answering "I'm agnostic" is no more coherent than answering "I have a green jacket."

Rubbish. To the question "do you believe in God?" The real agnostic replies, "the question is irrelative, and irrational. With no evidence, I am under no obligation to render an opinion."

The question of whether one KNOWS God exists is entirely distinct from the question of whether one BELIEVES God exists.

You are splitting semantic hairs. For most "believers" belief is knowledge in their opinion. Knowledge itself is relative. It changes. We once knew the world was flat and the sun revolved around Earth.

So, I guess my question is this:

Is it possible to define 'agnostic' such that it becomes a valid response to 'Do you believe God exists?', and such that it remains exclusive of 'atheist' or 'theist'? i.e., can you find a definition of 'agnostic' that is relevant to one's belief in God, and that doesn't just mean '(a)theist'?
Agnosticism is a rational assertion that one needs not have an opion on every silly hypothesis made by various self-appointed prophets, when there is no evidence for or against the hypothesis.

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Old 05-30-2003, 07:15 AM   #27
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Default Re: What the heck is an "Agnostic?"

Quote:
Originally posted by Zadok001
I am unconvinced that the question "Do you believe in God?" can be answered with "I'm agnostic."
Will clarify this in another thread, but a better question might be "Is there God?"

When someone answers "yes" to that question, then they are some form of theist, organized religion or something else. When someone answers "no" to that question, they are an atheist. Then there's people like me, who look at that question and can't answer yes, or no. I call that agnostic.

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So you've got this set of humans. By the law of non-contradiction, for each individual human it is either the case that the subject believes in God, or it is the case that the subject does not believe in God.
The law of noncontradiction doesn't state that everything has to be in black and white. It just says you can't simultaneously believe in God and not believe in God. I might have my doubts about the validity of that law, but those doubts would be outside the realm of logic since all logic depends on the notion that (a and not a) is false.

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But I find it hard to accept that there is a state wherein one is NOT AWARE of one's own beliefs!
That's just the thing. Agnostic literally means "not aware." (A- for the not, gnostic for the awareness). As near as I've been able to learn, obscure sects/cults aside, gnosis is the awareness or inner knowledge of some sort of universal truth or spiritual guidance. Agnostics do not have that.

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Is it possible to define 'agnostic' such that it becomes a valid response to 'Do you believe God exists?'
The problem with that question is both atheists and agnostics are going to say the same thing: "No." It's a fallacy of false dilemma: "No" can refer to both lack of belief or belief in lack. The response "I'm agnostic" is usually what I use when I'm tired of being grouped in with people who believe things, atheist or not.
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Old 05-30-2003, 07:27 AM   #28
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Default Re: Re: What the heck is an "Agnostic?"

Quote:
Originally posted by Hans

How an agnostic would answer the questions:

Do you believe god(s) exist? No.
Do god(s) exist? Unable to determine.


How an atheist would answer the questions:

Do you believe god(s) exist? No.
Do god(s) exist? No.


The only philisophical difference between the atheist and agnostic is how the second question is answered.
It is wrong to assume agnostics do not believe in god. An agnostic person can have personal belief in god yet claim to be unable to determine if a god exists.
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Old 05-30-2003, 12:40 PM   #29
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Default Re: What the heck is an "Agnostic?"

Huxley coined the term "Agnostic" in the 19th century to describe the position that states that the question of god's existence is insoluable. In other words that we cannot, in principle, know whether god exists or not. In a sense it was a tongue cheek dig at the intelligentisia of the era who pretended to some special knowledge of the world.

There's more here
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Old 05-30-2003, 05:00 PM   #30
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Default Re: What the heck is an "Agnostic?"

Quote:
Originally posted by Zadok001
But I find it hard to accept that there is a state wherein one is NOT AWARE of one's own beliefs!
Believe it.

I call myself agnostic for the time being because I am not in a position to thoroughly research. I am in a strict fundamentally Christian home, and I am not allowed to believe anything different without being punished. So I will call myself agnostic (or a freethinker, to be safe) until I go to college and progress from there.

I know I have an abnormal situation (sort of), but I can certainly understand the reason why other people would be called agnostic.

Quote:
Originally posted by Hans


How an agnostic would answer the questions:

Do you believe god(s) exist? No.
Do god(s) exist? Unable to determine.


How an atheist would answer the questions:

Do you believe god(s) exist? No.
Do god(s) exist? No.


~Tricia
 
 

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