Ooops, those attempts at bolding really didn't come out. Hope it's still clear. Re the point about "strong atheists," I can't recall anybody calling themselves one. But there are several here who call themselves "atheists" instead of "agnostics." The Ranting Atheist is an obvious example. The point from the Dawkins post is there are a very small number of true atheists - and everybody else is actually probably mislabeling themselves. Not sure we needed to get into these weeds, but I blame the Ranting One. |
The sidetrack about "what is an atheist/agnostic" started because some posters (including but not limited to me) talked about the hubris you need to claim you're 100% sure about anything.
So if you're 100% sure, then you're a "strict atheist" all right instead of agnostic. But you're probably also really egotistical. Not even Dawkins goes this far. |
The poster(s) who does this:
I'm not the Takoma poster being cut down, but telling people they don't understand words they used is unoriginal and worn out. It's also condescending and pompous. Same goes for the gratuitous links to dictionary.com. Same goes for the posters who tell others to "work on your reading comprehension." All of these are insults. They are not actual arguments based on facts or substance. |
Just wanted to point out that library is not speled "libary", either. |
The Repug poster. |
Dawkins does not go around calling himself an agnostic. He has explained in detail what he means by atheism and you have decided that he is not an atheist. But he calls himself an atheist. Dawkins is not mislabeling himself. |
You need to reread/read for the first time the quotes from Dawkins at 19:17 on the previous page of this thread. |
Dawkins calls himself a "De Facto Atheist" (level 6) instead of a "Strict Atheist" (level 7). Then he goes into some stuff about how level 6 is "temporary agnostic" or something.
Bottom line, though, "de facto" means "not exactly" as opposed to "de jure" which means by law, i.e. an actual atheist. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_facto After all the semantics, it basically means he's agnostic. |
True, but the semantics are important. That's why the FSM example is critical. Theists want to see Dawkins' self-identification as evidence that "even the most committed atheists aren't sure", but Dawkins is as sure there's no God as he is that there's no Flying Spaghetti Monster. Or Poseidon. They are all equally likely. This is an important and very relevant distinction. It's also one that many (not all) theists are quick to flag as "ridicule" or "ranting", when in fact they're nothing of the sort. They're a good-faith attempt to have an adult conversation. |
Sorry, that last one was me ranting. |
One last rant: Anyone who can read this article and come away from it with the idea that the main point of the camp is "discrimination" and "ridicule" of those who believe in religion has a deeply, deeply skewed perspective. Entitlement, persecution complex, and narcissism in full effect. |
That's like saying a Christian with occasional doubts is not really a Christian, and therefore Mother Theresa is out. |
By any definition, if you think there's even the slightest possibility God exists, even 1%, then you're agnostic, not atheist. Dawkins says he can't totally rule out God. Go back and re-read. He does NOT, as you claim, say he's "sure" God doesn't exist. Therefore, because he allows for a 1% possibility of God, he's agnostic, not atheist.
As a corollary, he, and both of us, are technically agnostic about the Flying Spaghetti monster. Unless you are willing to state you believe with 100% certainty that the FSM and Poseidon don't exist. The discussion should end there. I'd respect Dawkins more if it did end there. Instead, because he's uncomfortable with a wishy-washy label like "agnostic" or something, Dawkins drags us into these semantic games about "de facto" vs. "de jure/strict" atheists and "temporary agnostic practioner" or whatever that was. He says that as a "de facto" atheist he *acts* as if God and the FSM don't exist. But *acting* as if they don't exist does nothing, NOTHING, to eliminate that 1% possibility of God from his mind. Even though he says he acts in a "de facto atheist" sort of way (and he acts like there's no FSM), he's still thinks there's a 1% probability of God (or the FSM). So he's agnostic about God (or the FSM). |
Once more, with feeling: Dawkins does not call himself an atheist, in cases where he's really careful about defining the term. So why are you calling him an atheist? |
Yes, but conversely, theists are agnostic about FSM, Poseidon, and fairies to the exact same extent that non-theists are agnostic about all these phenomena. And the probability isn't 1%. There is a probability that the random movement of oxygen molecules in a room will lead them to cluster in a corner, leaving you to die of asphyxiation. It's a very, very, very low probability, but it's possible. That's the probability that any given religion's deity--or the Flying Spaghetti Monster--exists. |