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Simply put, atheism means the absence of theistic belief. That's it. It doesn't mean anything else. Atheism is not a religion, a philosophy, a worldview, or anything similar. It is not the conviction that there are no gods, ghosts, angels, etc. Rather, it is the absence of a belief that these things are real...Atheism is nothing more than the lack of belief in a god or gods.
Atheism comes from the Greek "a - theos," and since the "a" prefix means "without" or "the absence of," we must first make sure we understand theism. Theism refers to the belief that some sort of god or gods exist. A theist is one who accepts the theistic claim (i.e., some sort of god or gods exist). An atheist is one who does not accept the theistic claim. That is, atheism means "without theism" and refers to the absence or lack of theistic belief.
Atheism does not require absolute certainty that god(s) do not or cannot exist. Some atheists may indeed claim such certainty. These individuals are sometimes described as "strong atheists." Nobody disputes the existence of such atheists. The point is that certainty is not a necessary condition of atheism. One who asserts that there "probably" is no god is still an atheist. In fact, one need not assert anything to be an atheist. One need only refuse to accept the theistic belief claim.
Atheism: A = no, not. Theos = God, the divine. Atheism is a dogmatic insistence that there is no God, no divine.
Agnostic: A = no, not. Gnosis = certainty. Agosticism is the position that we simply do not have "certainty" but leaves all options as possibilities.
If my position is that there is no life currently on Mars - that is a dogmatic insistence, a position of certainty. And, yes one could argue that there is a 'burden of proof' involved: however, it might be difficult to agree on what "evidence" would or would not be accepted and how the arbitration would be processed. But it is a dogmatic position. If my position is that I don't know if there is life on Mars - that's simply the statement of an unknown; it leaves open the possibility but notes that I don't have confidence or assurance either way.
IMO, the opening poster is simply pointing out a philosophical point: there is no absolute certainty (about pretty much everything). I can't KNOW in any absolute, totally objective manner than I even exist ("I" certainly COULD be some program running on some machine on Mars) - we ALL assume/believe/chose MUCH, much that cannot be PROVEN in some absolute, objective sense. While I think it's good to acknowledge the universality of faith/belief, I think too much could be made of that.
For reasons that make no sense, Atheists often demand that the opposite position must present some PROOF (often in some absolute sense, often with "evidence" of a nature that excludes the possibility of the supernatural and thus contradicts the position). But they themselves entirely exclude themselves from offering the same for their own dogmatic position - that there is no divine. True - the Agnostic simply "opts out" by not taking a stand, one way or the other; leaving both positions as possibilities until, in their own view, sufficient evidence for one or the other is presented. IMO, the op is probably simply pointing out at in an absolute, objective sense - neither can actually do that, not the Theists or the Atheist (indeed, no one can do that for ANY position).
- Josiah
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