Time to make a stand for atheism here. Let me start with this, than proceed to the general topic:
Originally posted by Gothmog
Just to be clear, athiesm is disbelief in God or denying the existance of God - not simply 'not believing' in God. I edited my above post to reflect that point, which I felt I hadn't been clear about before. So an athiestic stand does imply true knowledge, it is the agnostic stand that does not. Of course the agnostic also believes that no one has true knowledge of the nature of God or 'Creation'. That is where the belief comes in as I cannot know for sure. I assure you that I am as true an agnostic as you will meet.
You know, Gothmog, you are not the first one who says that to me, and not the first one who I challenge with that response. Anyway, I do not accept to have my true stand challenged due to narrow dictionary definitions.
See, the
dictionary.com defines atheism this way:
a•the•ism
1.
a. Disbelief in or denial of the existence of God or gods.
b. The doctrine that there is no God or gods.
2. Godlessness; immorality.
So, without even entering the realm of how exatcly "disbelieve" differs from "not believing", I have to ask: should I think that I am immoral just because of that silly definition? I don't think so.
Let’s also see the definition of agnosticism.
ag•nos•ti•cism
n.
1. The doctrine that certainty about first principles or absolute truth is unattainable and that only perceptual phenomena are objects of exact knowledge.
2. The belief that there can be no proof either that God exists or that God does not exist.
See, if we go for it, in the religious aspect, than in fact there is no mention of the concept being held here, that they refuse to claim knowledge, but they also are allowed to not take all given information with the same value. It's you that added the part that gives it a reasonable stance, because this here puts you in a position where you
have to accept the hypothesis “there is God” to the same value of the hypothesis “there is no God”, without room to weight the two opposite views accordingly to their logical value, but only accept them as equal: I don’t know either way, so they are the same… after all, “there can be
no proof”.
In that sense, actually, Newfangle would be right in his description of agnosticism. It would be a appeal to ignorance, as it would state
a priori that no knowledge of God can ever be found, what, according to the metaphysics definition being held in this thread, would be to think of it as a perfect axiom, and hence, an axiom doomed from it’s inception.
It also would be, as he said, to equate logic with lack of logic, because it demands that you take whatever info and label than “insufficient”, refusing to take a stand, no matter if one side is, despite not proven without a doubt, to be logical virtually beyond reasonable doubt.
Yes, the dictionary dot com definition of agnosticism would imply all that… but in fact, I don’t think that’s your stand, nor the stand of any of the agnostics here. And I don’t throw it in the thread saying “here is what you really are, get used to it!”. I realize the lack of describing power of those words.
It’s the same with atheism. I do not claim that I
know there is no God. I just claim that I don’t believe in it. That’s the definition of atheism I stand for. If you want to call it moderate atheism, be my guest. If you still say that I can’t define atheism like that, because the dictionary say I can’t, well, let’s come up with a new name to define the position I take. Personally, I suggest calling it “intelligentism”, so I can always define me as an intelligent person

; anyway, you get my point… my stance don’t change, regardless of what the dictionary says.
As for the actual point of the thread, I had already went through this with Pontiuth Pilate; I do know that, philosophically speaking, to obtain perfect knowledge is impossible. This is true about the existence of God, but it’s also true about the existence of cockroaches.
What I perceive of agnostics is that they draw an arbitrary line, like “from this on, I begin to feel in doubt”. I, personally do not feel like that. Despite the fact that my senses are limited, and my comprehension of reality is limited, and that I cannot offer a completely virtuous prove of absolutely anything, I do use empirical and logical thinking as tools to separate what is minimally acceptable from what isn’t.
So, we are back to the Gods and cockroaches, and for effect I might add aliens to this mix.
I can’t prove perfectly that there are cockroaches; maybe those bugs are a creation of my mind, no one else actually sees them or think of them, and every time I squashed one, I was simply deluding myself. However, I do think that the characteristics of the bug does not make them illogical in principle, and I feel comfortable to believe in them.
As for Aliens, well, did they come to earth? I doubt it, there is no serious evidence of that (or maybe I’m deluding myself about it

). Anyway, if someone asks me if Aliens exist somewhere out there, I’ll honestly say that I don’t know. If there is life here, there can be somewhere else. I lack data to tell, but they also don’t strike me as illogical in principle. Hence
here I can reasonably place myself in a position of doubt. Guess I can define me as an Alien Agnostic, but that’s ok, after all we have settled that I can also define me as intelligent.
Finally, there is God. Accepting him as true is pretty tricky. It involves more than doubling universe’s complexity; invalidating all scientific knowledge we possess (as it’s a factor that can change the results of any experiment arbitrarily, demolishing their prediction value); that the rules of the universe aren’t really rules; that there are man that are better and wiser than any other man (namely Jesus and prophets in Christianity, for example), that the bible is a perfect book that have, hidden in it’s pages, all information humanity will ever need, and a lot other impossibilities and nonsensical information, almost to no end. And most of those consequences remain even when we retreat from an specific God to a obscure omnipotent entity.
So, there we have it. My intellectual honesty forbids me from categorically ruling out the “there is a God” thesis… but the same intellectual honesty tells me that this is a possibility to which I should not give serious value. Hence I feel pretty comfortable to state that I am an atheist, or an intelligent if you will.
As I once said, to place myself in a position of doubt, I require a doubt of greater virtue.