TooCurious said:
Yes. Knowing and believing are two different things. This is important with regard to my following statements.
Sometimes I think this is the only point we will ever agree on.
TooCurious said:
No. You can believe something that you do not know with certainty to be true.
No. You cannot believe something to be true while at the same time knowing that it might not be.
TooCurious said:
Remember, "knowledge" and "belief" are different things.
Oh I remember.
TooCurious said:
Consider two hypothetical married men. We'll call them Man A and Man B. Both have a long commute to work, and as such are away from their wives for many hours each day
Ok.
TooCurious said:
Both believe that their wives love the and are faithful to them
Ok.
TooCurious said:
Neither man can know with certainty that his wife is faithful to him, because both are away from home for long hours
This is where your example breaks down for me. If you say that both men truly believe thier wife is faithful undoubtedly because they love them and probably because the wives have reciprocated that love then they cannot have any knowledge of doubt or the possibility of unfaithfulness - because their belief would override thier knowledge or the other way around.
So I wouldnt say...
Neither man can know with certainty that his wife is faithful to him, because both are away from home for long hours
I would say...
No observer seeing objectively from the POV of the men can know with certainty that the mens wives are faithful to them, because both are away from home for long hours
Forgive me but you still have not demonstrated how a person can have doubt and certainty in thier minds at the same time.
TooCurious said:
Both, however, believe the proposition, "my wife is faithful to me" to be true. Man A's wife is indeed loving and faithful. Man B's wife is having an affair. Belief, therefore, is independent of knowledge, or fact. Belief does not involve the same kind of falsifiable, factual certainty that knowledge does.
I completely agree.
TooCurious said:
No. If I present you with a sealed box and tell you that there is a banana inside it, you may choose to believe or disbelieve my statement. However, without opening the box or performing some other test, you cannot know with certainty what, if anything, the box actually contains.
Again if I choose to believe then that completely overrides my knowledge about the possibility of the banana existing because then in my mind I would be certain which leaves no room for doubt.
TooCurious said:
I suppose you're entitled to define the word however you like; please realize, however, that most if not all atheists here will disagree with your definition, and meaningful discussion is difficult if all parties are not using compatible definitions of the basic terms.
Perhaps. But dictionaries do list the definitions of Athiesm as "denial" or "rejection" of God and not just "disbelief". So both definitions seem equally valid however these two distinct definitions can lead to a disagreement over the nature of the argument at hand which is quite silly.
Dictionary.com said:
3 results for: Atheism
http://dictionary.reference.com/help/luna.html
noun 1.the doctrine or belief that there is no God. 2.disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings.
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- Disbelief in or denial of the existence of God or gods.
- The doctrine that there is no God or gods.
- Godlessness; immorality.
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n 1: the doctrine or belief that there is no God [syn:
godlessness] [ant:
theism] 2: a lack of belief in the existence of God or gods
WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University
TooCurious said:
Because the terms "atheist" and "agnostic" express different ideas.
According to your definition a "weak atheist" is half an agnostic because he does not profess belief in the existence of God all the while remaining silent about belief in the non-existence of god (am I correct ?)
TooCurious said:
You're entitled to that opinion. You are, however, mistaken, as I've tried to explain.
Well you are also entitled to your opinion. And for the record your example didnt clarify much.
TooCurious said:
Please don't tell me what I am or what my beliefs are. I would have the courtesy not to do the same to you. I AM an atheist, as I do not believe that any gods exist.
First lets make this clear. I am not calling you anything. I am telling you what you are calling yourself when you label yourself a "weak atheist" because by your definition of the term its more or less an agnostic.
TooCurious[FONT=Verdana said:
Again... atheism and agnosticism address different topics. Agnosticism addresses knowledge. Do I think it's possible to know whether or not there are any gods? No. This means that I concede the possibility, remote as I may think it is, that I might be wrong. However, I think it's vastly more likely that I'm right, and that there are no gods. Thus, I'm an atheist.[/font]]
Again knowledge and belief cannot co-exist when they are in opposition. So it is incorrect for you to say "probably no god exists so that means no god exists" (sic)
TooCurious said:
"Agnostic," without an atheist/theist qualifier, just means, "I don't and can't know whether or not there are any gods. There might be, there might not be. I'm really not sure."
"Agnostic atheist" means, "I can't know for certain if there are any gods, but I have no reason to believe that there are, and it seems most likely to me that there aren't, so I don't believe there are any gods."
"Agnostic theist" means, "I can't know for certain if there are any gods, but I think or feel that one or more gods exist, and so I believe, even though I can't be certain."
Read above. You yourself said that agnosticism addresses knowledge, so how can you put a "belief qualifier" to the term when in this case knowledge and belief are in complete contradiction as one makes an assertion and the other doesnt ?