Since ancient times, India has known atheists, but I have not heard of any agnostic person tlll in recent past. The idea of
agnosticism seems to have come to India from  the west. This word therefore puzzles me. A  theist afirms that yes, there
is a god in whom he believes. An atheist says that no, there is no god. Both of these are firm statements and each
 person making  these has something to say that is specific. However, the statement that "There is probably no god "
sounds hollow. It is as good as saying "There is probably some god."  In either case, someone who says this, does not
appear  to have much to say. If you have a 10% doubt that god may exist, you are an agnostic. It is the same if
you have 20% , 50% or 90% doubt. So where does agnosticism stand? Does it really mean anything? If an agnostic is
so much in un-resolvable doubt, should he declare himself as an agnostic, that is, a person not capable of resolving his
position?

The usual excuse for such a doubt is that no one can be 100% sure of anything, but we are so sure of many things in life.
If we have doubt on any subject, we take pains to resolve our doubt. Is it so difficult to resolve a doubt on the existance
of god that it can never be resolved and  so force a person to remain an agnostic for all his life? If this were so, there would
be no atheists in the world.  Does the agnostic lack  something that an atheist has? Or, does an atheist overstep a
limit of sound judgement?

Views: 770

Replies to This Discussion

Some that insist on the term agnostic rather than atheist are willing to accept the "life force" argument, or personal experience without clarification or evidence. The vague concept of god sidesteps the need for hard proof and leaves room for fuzzy boundaries of reality. 

I am surprised that people want rational, evidence based thinking for medical professionals (to receive helpful rather than harmful care), pilots and maintenance persons (so that the aircraft on which they are flying don't crash), banking and insurance (safety for their money and income stream...though that hasn't worked out so well lately), and more but are willing to accept irrational, non-evidence based thinking regarding god/creator/supreme being/life force and similar ideas.  Sam Harris nicely addresses this in several of his books and articles, so I won't try to add anything.

Like many terms, "agnostic" is one often misappropriated by those who wish to obfuscate something in order to serve an agenda, other than that which the term actually serves. -> "do not pretend conclusions are certain that are not demonstrated or demonstrable."

The antithesis of "faith".

Madhukar, I will remember your words as they are much more eloquent than those I have used to say the same thing. Thanks.

Madhukar wrote, "Does the agnostic lack something that an atheist has? Or, does an atheist overstep a limit of sound judgment?' 

For me, words like "agnostic" and "atheist", conjured up fear and doubt, even until this past week's discussions with so many people.

Asking myself, "Does god possibly exist?" my answer is clearly no; therefore fear and doubt have no reason for existing. By changing thoughts, feelings dissipated.  This feels ... I can't find a better word than good. 

"Asking myself, "Does god possibly exist?" my answer is clearly no; therefore fear and doubt have no reason for existing. By changing thoughts, feelings dissipated.  This feels ... I can't find a better word than good."

Faith, is like that.

BTW, atheist and agnostic are not at all mutually exclusive positions, they are the only pair of the possible 4, that are logically tenable.

Ouch! Faith is like that. OK, what I want is ... it all comes back to belief and faith. What I want is ... I'm going to the garden to think about this. 

Theist = Faith-based Belief + Burden of proof

Agnostic Theist = Faith-based Belief

Gnostic Theist = Faith-based belief + Burden of proof

Atheist = Non-belief

Agnostic Atheist = Non-belief

Gnostic Atheist = Faith-based non-belief + Burden of Proof

 

I am an atheist (a position, it isn't an identity), because of logic, reason and critical thinking. I will not abandon or loop-hole; logic, reason and critical thinking in order to: " ...pretend conclusions are certain that are not demonstrated or demonstrable."

If an atheist does not believe god exists and has no burden of proof

why does gnostic atheist have a burden? 

Because a gnostic atheist believes there is evidence of no god?

Joan, you understand the issue.  Either assertion, that there is / is not a god, requires evidence and can be disconfirmed in a variety of ways.  Generally, questions which cannot be falsified should be restated or reframed into one or more questions about which a (null) hypothesis can be made, and experiments and investigations made to gain evidence which would confirm or disconfirm the null hypothesis.  Predictions made on the basis of the idea can be further tests (as Joseph succinctly put it, a month or two ago) to confirm, modify, extend, or even disconfirm the original question, idea, hypothesis, etc.  But going any farther, for any statement, is an act of faith.  That's where the point about extraordinary claims requiring extraordinary evidence comes in.  If we're together in a windowless building (a shopping mall, for example) and I tell you that it is raining and that we should get out our umbrellas, you'd likely get out your umbrella because there really is not much cost to you if I'm wrong...you simply put your umbrella away.  Whether I was acting on old info (it was raining when we arrived) or something changed (it was raining, but stopped before we reached the door) is unimportant.  But if I tell you that the world will end in 2012, and that you should give me all of your money, you might want more evidence.

Greg, great example.

I watched Dawkins' debate with Archbishop Pell last night and I surely do miss Hitchens. 


Monday 9 April, 2012.
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/qanda/txt/s3469101.htm

A gnostic atheist thinks that there is definite evidence that there is no god.  That puts them in the same camp as a gnostic theist.  If they say there's evidence, they will be expected to produce it and submit it for scientific inquiry.  For a scientific mind, agnosticism is the only way to go.  There are things, like the sun going around the Earth, that we had observational evidence for.  Then we came up with bigger and better ways of observing and found out that our previous observations were incorrect.

For me at least, the "agnostic" part of my atheist views have nothing to do with doubt.  It has to do with having a logical margin of error that has to exist based on the fact I stated above.  It is my opinion that knowledge is almost synonymous with fact.  You can't say you "know" something if there isn't evidence to support it. If there isn't evidence you have to be willing to accept that you could be wrong.  However, you can go outside and observe a threatening sky and say "It's gonna rain today".  You know what the sky looks like when it rains, therefore, it's logical that you would think that.  But you're not ALWAYS right. That's where the margin of error comes in.  Science without a margin for error isn't science at all.

RSS

CONNECT WITH ATHEIST NEXUS

Latest Activity

Easton Le commented on blue pashmina's blog post Not believing in an afterlife does not mean i am a "sad' person.
"@Rachel: Realizing I have only one life to live also encourages me to live a happier and fuller life, as well as invest in a future I know I will not be around to appreciate. It seems only logical to me. @Dennis: I've always wondered what it…"
23 minutes ago
matthew greenberg replied to matthew greenberg's discussion Pope Francis says even Atheists go to Heaven
"Loren, i was thinking about you and your likely response as i was writing this post.  i know your rightful indignation with the papacy and share it, albeit probably with slightly less ire.  i must say that i just freaking love your pov.…"
26 minutes ago
Easton Le commented on Debra Stevenson's blog post Some Wiccans and their seeking approval from Christians
"I suppose in regions of the country where Christianity is a major influence in local culture working towards a level of acceptance would be in Wicca's best interest. When I visited a gem shop in the bible belt with one of my friends I learned…"
39 minutes ago
Loren Miller replied to matthew greenberg's discussion Pope Francis says even Atheists go to Heaven
"Hmmm, an outreach to atheists from the pope?  I wonder ... is this an attempt at engagement and maybe a dialogue ... or is it an act of desperation from an organization which may finally be recognizing that it is failing at both engagement and…"
46 minutes ago
Karim R. joined Darrel Ray's group
Thumbnail

Recovering from Religion

Unless you were raised by atheist parents, you probably had some recovering to do when you left religion. The purpose of RR is to provide a landing place for people when they jump from religion. With local support groups throughout the US, Canada, UK, and Australia, and real-time resources accessible to everyone, RR is where to turn when faith has lost its luster.See More
49 minutes ago
Ruth Anthony-Gardner replied to Ruth Anthony-Gardner's discussion Methane, more scary than we thought in the group Eco-Logical: A Group for Environmentalists
"In addition to the methane spike over Antarctica there was Is the permafrost's integrity breaking down? In sum, the half-life of methane in the atmosphere depends upon available hydroxyl ions to break it down. The oft cited values of methane…"
53 minutes ago
Easton Le commented on Randall Smith's blog post The Rednecks are coming, the Rednecks are coming
"Hello, Randall. Did you move to the region or have you lived there your entire life? I'm just curious because even my friends in the military who weren't rednecks and grew up in the region still loved motorcycles and racing. They…"
53 minutes ago
Sentient Biped commented on Sentient Biped's group Godless in the garden
"Rainy for several days now.  Down into the 40s.  Not much ambition. Some of the irises look nice, anyway. "
55 minutes ago

© 2013   Atheist Nexus. All rights reserved. Admin: Richard Haynes.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service