Why do you identify as being agnostic? Are you agnostic about unicorns, fairies and the gods of other cultures? What is the evidence that leads you to agnosticism?
I identify as atheist, but am not offended at being referred to as agnostic. Agnosticism is a type of atheism.
think so, huh? It’s not possible to be a gnostic atheist, iyo?
@Deb57 “agnosticism means there is doubt” is an absolute statement though, right? Which i don’t mean that im disagreeing, agnosticism might kind of mean that, sure, although im not sure that that is the best definition...”doubt is not synonymous with belief” another absolute statement, and i gotta ask why not? Doesn’t “belief” infer “something i think is true, but might possibly not be true?” if only, right
It’s not rocket science, but there does seem to be like two definitions for every term, huh? We say “belief” but they are most often really “absolute truths” like you have described, and etc. Iow we are all basically speaking in tongues i guess
you don’t consider yourself a gnostic, but you just made five gnostic statements there, see
@Deb57 yes, i still regress into Gnosticism sometimes i guess, but im not meaning to be antagonistic, at least per se. I guess maybe it comes across that way? But regardless, imo that would be a failing on my part, ok; as i said, i might even agree with your gnostic statements, in a certain context, but they are basically self-labeling, as they are...not stated as opinions, but statements of fact, “this is that, that is this,” no qualifiers, see? Which im not meaning to say “bad” necessarily, but that any new information on the matter now cannot be assimilated, and will be labeled “antagonistic”
A point is that they are not stated/written as opinions, but as statements of fact, which label themselves, more or less; my choices now are to agree (and by implication, “be friends” ) or disagree, with the opposite effect, which we see manifesting, i guess bc i suck at signaling that as far as im concerned we can disagree and still be friends?
Why does any disagreement now mean that we are automatically enemies? I think we are trained into this via being taught to reason from the Hegelian dialectic, wherein i am now framed as “opposition” maybe?
Anyway, my reservations @ “doubt” are bc imo doubt is usually just another form of belief? Believing the opposite thing? So, while i am possibly the worst person for you to hear this from, as you are now defensive where i am concerned and will naturally reject everything i suggest, i mainly meant to forward a definition of gnostic/agnostic that is more functional, more to the point, which has nothing to do with “God” per se, since of course no one knows whether there is a “God” or not
And my apologies if that up there seems antagonistic to you, ok; i actually thought i was agreeing with you at many points, and unfortunately i am still blind to what may have bothered you up there. And i can’t move on until i get that part i guess, so now im pissed lol
I'm agnostic because I have no knowledge of any gods existing. I'm atheist because I believe in zero gods, due to a lack of evidence.
even xeno, wow. So then, who does have knowledge of any gods existing, xeno?
Religion is just stupid. Ridiculous, boring.
I 'identify as agnostic' in situations where people seem uncomfortable discussing atheism.
I read a thought from Greta Christina many years ago that represents my thoughts on the issue well. I'm paraphrasing from memory here so I apologize for inaccuracies in the specific wording.
Throughout history we thought that many effects had supernatural causes -- the sun was Apollo carrying a lamp across the sky, thunder was dwarves bowling in the mountains, whatever. But as we looked at things more closely, we found secular explanations for things to replace the previous fantasies.
But how many times has it gone the other direction? 'I used to think there was a secular explanation for an effect but now I realize it was caused by that god over there, or the rabbit's foot in my pocket, or the spell I cast.' -- Exactly Zero .
As human ignorance reduces, so too does the influence of the supernatural including gods.
Reminds me of the comment about the God Of The Gaps. The gaps are getting smaller all the time, your god keeps shrinking, but never seems to grow back.
Would that it were so. ........... I can remenber being a kid on the streets of yonkers, in 1949, thinking that with the growth of modern science,there's no way this religion nonsense could last more than another 20 or 30 years
You're right of course. Religion has a massive following and no motivation to go anywhere in the foreseeable future.
I don't believe in the progress fairy either -- science won't eventually solve all our problems.
We'll just have to go on the best way we can -- as unpleasant a statement as that is. Ha, ha, I guess.
You just basically paraphrased the whole point of the Bible, believe it or not
For me, it is the unknown that leads me to identify as agnostic. Unicorns and fairies are well enough defined that we could identified them if they turn out to be real. But since we have no evidence of them, we have no reason to believe they exist. The same is true of God's from all sorts. They are defined well enough we could identify them if evidense is found for their existence. But a God could exist in a form we are not yet able to define. So, for me, agnostism isn't about any or all God's as defined, but a God that has yet to be understood. I have heard others describe themselves in this same way and consider themselves atheists, and I prefer agnostism.
I am agnostic because I am open to all probabilities.
I would say the same thing, only substitute "possibilities".
@MrDragon Where did you see a picture of a unicorn? It is quite possible that I would bet it's not probable you saw a picture of a unicorn.
@JeffMurray on the internet, where else? It's amazing what you can find on the internet. lol
I am not agnostic. I am gnostic that nobody has ever produced any falsifiable evidence to support the existence claims of any those entities.
is there not an atheist site that you would be more comfortable maybe?
@bbyrd009 I enjoy the company here.
I don't "identify" as Agnostic. I proclaim I am an Atheist.
My primary identity is nullifidian: one who has no faith or religious belief. If someone wants to call me an atheist or an agnostic, such labels don’t concern me as I am comfortable wearing both.
You Lost me at "both".... but Good for you!
My dictionary (Shorter O.E.D. ) has two definitions concerning atheism. It says that atheism means "without god" and an atheist is "someone who denies or disbelieves the existence of a god". It doesn't seem to include the state of believing there is no god. This seems to narrow the gap between atheism and agnosticism.
As I really can't imagine that there is a god, have never been offered convincing proof that a god exists, but can't see way to prove that there are no gods, I remain agnostic about the whole subject but atheistic in being without a god.
My gardener is coming to convert the bottom of my outdoor space into a wildflower garden soon so perhaps I'll spot some fairies before the autumn.
“an atheist is "someone who denies or disbelieves the existence of a god". It doesn't seem to include the state of believing there is no god”
I’d love to know the difference? Bc no offense but what im hearing right now is “atheists can be just as big a hypocrites as fundamentals”
@bbyrd009 Hi, yes, thanks, it does my head in. So, if denial is spoken, then it may not reflect belief. (Probably some discussion here ) and "disbelief" is not given in my dictionary as a belief in the negative case, but simply as lack of belief in the positive case.
It is possible that different dictionaries give different or slightly different meanings to some words, as I get the impression that some people regard the word "atheist " to mean someone who believes that there are no gods - an actual belief.
I hope this clears up my point of view
What led me to agnosticism was the lack of evidence either way. I'm more inclined to the non-existence of a deity but I don't think there's any evidence.
That is street epistemology I believe. Lol
emphasis on the lol?
Because I honestly do not know, I do not know anybody who has a firm answer based on facts. And to be perfectly honest it does not matter that much to me when it's over it's over I'm here now I'm going to live now. To me it's way too much to do about nothing.
I suppose I'm agnostic about those things too, and atheist about all of them. If you want to consider theoretical degrees of agnosticism, I guess I feel there's a greater degree of certainty about unicorns and faeries because there's no currently-unknown information they can fill the gap for and they are purported to be on Earth and visible. But then as soon as you add parameters to the concept of god (like using the Christian conception of god) the tables flip and it becomes more possible for unicorns to have existed because the Christian conception of god is a logical impossibility.
I don’t identify as agnostic. I identify as Robin. If any one ask me about the existence of god, then I may use the word ‘agnostic’.
No evidence lead me to agnosticism.
Because that is what it says on my T-shirt!
And in brackets on the back (theist) or (atheist)?
@waitingforgodo (Musician)