While
the existence of self professed weak atheists IS an argument for weak atheism as a position to be called atheistic, the existence of strong atheists IS NOT an argument for weak atheism to not be called atheistic.
The
exclusive existence of strong atheists might be, but the premise for such an argument would be clearly wrong.
If we change atheism to strong atheism, we reject weak atheists.
If we keep atheism as lack of theism, we don't reject strong atheists.
If you want to change atheism to "belief in the non existence of gods", you're going to be rejecting many self professed atheists.
If you keep it as "non belief in the existence of gods",
you aren't rejecting the strong atheists.
enaidealukal wrote:
Jashwell wrote:
A) Many self professed atheists merely lack belief
B) The definition of atheism according to most dictionaries allows for lack of belief
C) The etymology of the word clearly professes lack of theism (hence is the literal meaning of a-theos)
D) The original meaning
entirely encompasses the new meaning. When have you heard of a word becoming narrower in scope?
A. Many self-professed atheists actively disbelieve.
Which is included by lack of belief.
Nobody is saying ONLY weak atheists should be atheists, and I'm not saying all atheists merely lack belief.
B. The definition of "atheism" according to most dictionaries allows for (if not explicitly mentions) disbelief.
... disbelief is lack of belief, but that aside,
Once again,
this is included by weak atheism. It is not an argument against calling weak atheism an atheistic position.
C. The etymology of the word appears to also be consistent with disbelief.
I'm not sure what definition of disbelieve you've got - it appears you think "I disbelief X" means "I believe Not X". This isn't the case.
If I believe that you're holding up a number of fingers, and I disbelieve that you're holding up an odd number of fingers, that doesn't mean I believe it's even.
The etymology of atheism
explicitly means lack of theism. It's consistent with strong atheism
because it's already included in atheism.
D. All the time. Technical fields employ more precise (i.e. narrower) language as a matter of course.
Give an example?
"Tradition of atheism" To my knowledge, it's only a tradition according to theists.
Atheism, as an intellectual position, is no exception- it has its influences and predecessors, and a history of its own. "Atheism" originally meant heresy, and only fairly recently (the last 300-400 years) came to mean some sort of opposition to, rejection of, or at least absence of theism- originally an atheist was merely a blasphemer, not a non-believer.
"In early ancient Greek, the adjective theos (, from the privative - + "god") meant "godless". It was first used as a term of censure roughly meaning "ungodly" or "impious". "
(Atheism in Pagan Antiquity, A.B. Drachmann)
When we trace atheism, in anything resembling its current form, back as far as we can, we end up with guys like Meslier, d'Holbach and Diderot, and philosophers like Hume, Nietzsche, and Marx. But then, as I said, theirs, and the views of their heirs, even down to comtemporary atheists, is a cognitive, intellectual and reasoned position. A definition of "atheism" that fails to capture that fact by also regarding the position towards theism of inanimate objects, animals, and non-linguistic humans as atheism is already problematic.
Except it doesn't. -ist denotes a person exclusively.
This is like me saying "the definition of theist includes rocks that believe in God".
If a rock could believe (which, without tacitly accepting a form of disproving the existence of souls, you can't prove a rock can't believe - but that's a different matter) it'd be a theist.
"I'm not a theist".
That includes inanimate objects too.
This isn't a sensible objection.
Some theists like WLCraig regularly, with no respect to what the other actually believes, assert that atheists have a burden of proof, when many atheists are weak atheists.
And Craig is right- provided that the atheist has made an assertion/claim (such as in a debate). Burden of proof pertains to discussions, debates, arguments- not beliefs. And it falls on anyone making a claim, whether they are asserting God exists, that no God exists, or that
Pepsi is better than Coca-Cola.
Yes, but he does it
against weak atheists.
Weak atheists don't claim.
On the other hand, beliefs have something similar to a burden of proof- epistemic justification. Knowledge is distinguished from belief, and reasonable belief is distinguished from unreasonable belief, on the basis of justification- the reason one has for holding a given belief, the evidence supporting it. For instance, if I guess that its raining today in London, and it turns out it is, I didn't know anything, because I had no justification for this- it was a lucky guess. Similarly with a belief- one's belief is reasonable, and a true belief constitutes knowledge, if and only if it is justified; it is held on the basis of sufficient evidence. And this applies to any belief one holds, whether it is positive or negative, theistic or atheistic, or concerning the weather in the UK. In other words, atheism doesn't get a free pass from having to be properly justified (the epistemic equivalent of a burden of proof), simply because it is a "negative" or even "default" position. But this is often exactly what is intended when we hear someone like Dawkins say that atheism is the default position, it is merely the absence of belief, and therefore the atheist doesn't have to have any evidence for this belief. This is mistaken, and worse, its an unnecessary cop-out, as I already pointed out.
Lack of belief
does get a free pass.
If I said God doesn't exist, I would have a burden of proof.
If you think I need a burden of proof to not accept that he does, then there's no point discussing anything.
If you said "it's going to rain tomorrow at 3pm" and I said "I don't believe you", I don't need to prove that it isn't going to rain - it might rain - I'm simply not accepting your claim.
Regardless of whether or not WLCraig agrees with most dictionaries, the other's beliefs are important, and lack of belief is clearly a popular viewpoint for many self professed atheists.
Well, or at least that's what they say- often for the reason mentioned above. Oftentimes, they want to have their cake and eat it to, and in other contexts their position sounds an awful lot like positive disbelief rather than a mere absence of belief. And yet, when the question arises, "what is the evidence for atheism", all of a sudden atheism is a negative, default position and blah blah blah.
If they're a strong atheist, they have a burden of proof.
Dictionaries don't change words because some holders of a belief are being unreasonable or shifting the goalpost.
But in any case, as above, this point holds in the other direction- active disbelief is clearly a popular viewpoint as well.
What you mean is included by lack of belief in the existence of a god.
Active disbelief includes explicit weak atheism, a lack of belief in the existence of a god (i.e. refusal to accept the claims of theism). The only thing it doesn't include is implicit atheism (which is the only kind that's reasonably arguable).
At the very least, there is no reason to disagree that given the large number of atheists who are weak atheists
Or that a large number of people who self-identify as atheists are "strong" atheists...
Subset of lack of belief.
even if dictionaries didn't already, they should incorporate lack of belief as a new context.
Well, but why? Do they have some emotional attachment to this particular word, "atheist"? As I said, it seems perfectly appropriate to call what is often referred to as "weak" atheism "non-theism", and this has the result that atheism, non-theism, and agnosticism no longer overlap, and the term "atheism" ceases to be so broad that its close to meaningless. This seems like a win to me.
Because it's a popular usage.
Agnosticism is in the awkward position of being a very sketchy word.
You think that it's clear cut but it isn't.
Etymologically, agnosticism means lack of knowledge. An agnostic by this doesn't hold the belief that you can know whether or not a God exists.
(Most people who are weak atheists also use this definition of agnosticism)
Multiple dictionaries disagree - some accept this and some instead take agnosticism to be weak atheism.
We already have terms like agnostic atheist, agnostic theist, gnostic theist and gnostic atheist. Weak atheist, Strong atheist, implicit atheist, explicit atheist.
Even if you changed the definition of atheism,
these words wouldn't change, as they ONLY mean with respect to non-believers.
Multiple sources and most people who claim to be atheists take this as the definition.
Wait a min- I was ok with "many", but I'm not sure about "most". Can you source this- that "most" people who consider themselves atheists are using it in the sense of absence of belief rather than disbelief? I guess it could be true, but I've never seen any surveys or anything establishing that this is the case (also, important to note that in itself this wouldn't mean a whole lot).
I meant in this thread. I said it right after "20 odd pages of the thread", but I guess I put a new line in.
Sorry if I wasn't very clear.
Disbelief is explicit absence of belief by the way.
For practical reasons we should accept atheism as a-theism or lack of theism (as denoted by the a- prefix), as "godlessness" or not having gods, as the definition that many atheists use.
Well, but what practical reasons? I don't see any practical reasons to prefer that over and above the alternative- and as I've said, the alternative has the practical advantage of
being more precise.
A-D
No, it doesn't have the advantage of being more precise.
It excludes a definition for no good reason.
You can't use "its more precise" as a reason for excluding a definition.
It's like if I redefined rectangle to mean square because it's "more precise", ignoring the names of other rectangles that aren't squares.
As the definition that fits the already existing concepts of weak atheism, implicit atheism, explicit atheism, agnostic atheism, half of which are not compatible with belief that no gods exist.
I don't see that as an advantage at all- we want language to be
more clear, not less.
Yes. Hence we shouldn't redefine atheism to mean strong atheism, thus creating multiple terms that will continue to be used and meaningful in the same sense but will oppose the new definition. Hence we shouldn't say to weak atheists "you aren't atheists". That's not very clear.