Kurieuo wrote:I wonder what edwardmurphy would make of the following argument I happened to stumble upon
Ed?
1) Lack of belief on a subject entails one is unaware to that subject of belief.
2) The moment one becomes aware to a subject of belief, they conceive of something about that subject of belief.
3) If you conceive something about a subject, then that something counts as a belief about that subject.
4) Therefore, one has a belief on any subject that they become aware to. (from 1, 2, 3)
Let's extend this argument...
5) The person who claims "to lack a belief in the subject of a belief" shows an awareness of that subject of belief.
6) It is not possible for a person to lack a belief in a subject that they are aware to (from 4).
7) Therefore, it is a contradiction to say "I lack a belief on some subject" since such presupposes an awareness to that subject.
And finally...
Atheists who claim that they lack a belief of God are full of doodoo. (from 7)
Meh, more games. It's really important to some Christians that atheism be defined as "The belief that gods don't exist" because they think it will let them evade, or at least share, burden of proof. I think that the argument misses the point because it takes atheism - a belief about an unverifiable claim made by theists - and tries to turn it into a belief about gods. Theists have beliefs about gods. Atheists have beliefs about theism.
Kurieuo wrote:edwardmurphy wrote:Kurieuo wrote:edwardmurphy wrote:I'm not sure why you get to define what it means to be an atheist, but I'm not inclined to accept it.
Have you defined what it means to be an Atheist?
atheist - a person who does not accept the theistic proposition (that gods exist)
What would that look like?
For example, to someone who says to an Atheist:
"I believe God exists as revealed in Israel and via Jesus."
The Atheist as you define would respond, "
I do not accept... [insert words]"
...your claim because it is unverified and unverifiable, but if you can provide me with a sufficient empirical evidence then I will reconsider my position.
edwardmurphy wrote:Kurieuo wrote:edwardmurphy wrote:Also, atheism isn't a belief system. Religions are vast and complex belief systems. Atheism is the rejection of religions and the gods they're founded on. Calling atheism a belief system is akin to calling bald a hair color.
Is mere belief in God a belief system?
Does that count as religion?
1) No. A system is a bunch of parts that, together, form a whole.
2) It would be ridiculous, but I believe in freedom of religion so I if someone were to tell me that "I believe in god" was their entire religion I'd take their word for it.
I'm wondering what is it that defines religion to you?
Does one need to subscribe to a particular authority such as a church.
Dictionary definition is belief and worship of God, but I don't really consider myself religious.
I do believe in Christ, but that said, I don't subscribe to any religious body and consider myself quite free thinking.
The main point of difference I see between an Atheist and myself is that I believe in the truths Christ revealed.
Hmm, now I think on it that's not entirely true, because there's so much I believe points to God that I couldn't possibly believe God doesn't exist.
At the same time, short of Christ, I'd be lost about who the heck this God is.
In any case, just offering some further reflection here.
There seems to be a lot of baggage that I don't see of myself attached to the word "religion".
What are your thoughts?[/quote]
I think that a religion is best described as a system of beliefs based on the worship of a supernatural entity/entities. I don't know that one necessarily has to attend church to be religious, but I think they have to have some sort of consistent belief system. If they don't then they'd be more spiritual than religious, no? Then again, maybe not. Who knows. "Religion" is one of those words that gets used and abused quite a bit and it means different things to different people. I'm hardly an authority, you know?
I think the beliefs that you're describing are what people mean when they say they're "spiritual but not religious."