Ok.
If you believe that you can't know,then how can you proclaim the knowledge of "not knowing anything exist?"Isn't God constitute everything so therefore God exist?
I have no idea what you mean? But I'll guess. I can't know that but I can be damn sure that God may or may not exist? There's no therefore about it, consistently speaking, God has as much proof as IPU and FSM, but I don't think debating there existence would make much of a conversation, in other words you could apply your proposition to anything and you still wouldn't get anywhere meaningful.
Yeah, they're so close! They just need to be harangued until they join us!
You could try reason?
Atheists don't require absolute proof, or insist that "we must be right", only that the valid course of action in regard to notions of god is dismissal as rubbish.
Good just as long as you refrain from saying God exists and stick to saying that you don't care, which is the only really atheisticlly weak postion you can make without straying towards faith again.
Well, knowing how shifty those agnostics are, I bet they'd probobly hate them with a burning passion.
How can you hate someone who is neither for or against your argument, it's like Zap Branigan hating the neutrals
Small point. I would argue that the theist is more misguided if only because he allows his beliefs to control his day to day life whereas the atheist does not.
Only if he's wrong.
I consider myself an atheist only because, based on my life experience, I would guess that there are no gods. I do not presume to be right. If I encountered evidence to the contrary this position might change.
If you had to guess, one way or the other, which position would you choose?
I'd chose not to guess, it's a cop out like I said but it gives you peace of mind and more people to converse with at dinner parties without offending anyone
I don't know of any agnostics who pray or attend worship services "just in case", so as near as I can tell the only practical difference between an agnostic and an atheist is whether one plays offense or defense in these sorts of "prove God doesn't exist" debate threads.
That's a neat little statement, I haven't played offense or defense meself I just don't have any answers, sorry, a bit bland but that's agnosticism for you
Dear Agnostic,
Why is it that, in every question of existence besides that of god, you (presumably) assume that the thing does NOT exist until given evidence, yet in the case of god you say you are "agnostic" on the issue (this assumes that you do not have any particular evidence for believing in god).
For example, were I to ask you if an invisible diamond is floating in front of your computer screen right now, you would say "no", not "i'm agnostic on the issue". That is to say, when we are asking whether or not x exists, we assume that it doesn't until evidence is given, rather than saying "I'm agnostic on x". So why is the question of god any different? Shouldn't we say that god doesn't exist until given evidence, rather than "I'm agnostic"?
And if you DO have evidence for god's existence (which would make the agnostic position more plausible), what is it?
And if you've already answered this question, just link me to that post.
Yours Truly,
Fifty Fiftyson
Proof of existence of God is an anathema to agnosticism, it would destroy it more absolutely than atheism.
I can if I like chose to say that there is a diamond floating in front of me, or their isn't, but since it only impinges on your reality in any real sense and has little impact on mine, I can chose to ignore it's importance, it's the same with God. Trying to place more percieved "import" in something that doesn't have evidence over something else is hardly going to sway me. Emotion or faith is irrelevant or imagination for that matter, the diamond is as real to me as God, but I rarely find I have to justify my position about floating diamonds. Essentially Like any good scientist I say if I can't prove it it is not relevant, particularly if their aren't a billion bilievers, as a good scientist though I cannot say it doesn't exist, that is beyond science, all I can say is that there is no proof. I think that explains my view point philosophically and scientifically.
Faith is more than that to me (but not in itself a reason), but that is one of the things it is, and I was just saying that agnostics who say that God might exist, but act as though He/She/it/They don't, are in an analogous position.
I have never acted as if God doesn't exist, that would be irrational and not consistent with agnosticism, that I'd say would be atheism.