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Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
#1
Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
Hai. So, yesterday I was watching the Drunken Peasants Podcast... ...with ben and TJ bringing you opinions of the news from an altered perspective... and there was a video by a feminist reviewed where she equated atheism to cyberbullies(What?!), and instead of identifying as an atheist, she identifies as a secular humanist. Again... What?! So, I wrote in an IRC chat I run for the show:

<IanHulett> So, by her logic, me being a Theological Noncognitivist, I'm not an atheist. lolwut?

Then one of the chatters responds with:

<H***A**R***> One could say that you have to understand a claim before you can take a position of belief or disbelief on it. I'm an ignostic, and I think that nonsense claims, like god, fail before you can take a position of belief or disbelief.

So... wait... if I'm a theological noncognitivist, I'm not an atheist? I sort of see his point, but I still don't fully understand. Whether I can or can't take a position of belief or disbelief, I still don't actively believe in God(atheist), in other words, I still lack a belief in God(atheist again), all that's different is that I believe "God" is a nonsensical concept. That's why I am a theo noncog. But aren't I still an atheist, because I don't actively believe in god?

If someone can help me understand further, I'd be grateful.
If pinkie pie isn't real, then how do you explain the existence of ponies, huh? If ponies are real, then that's proof that Pinkie Pie is real. Checkmate, christians!  Heart
_______________________________
Let's stop fighting and and start smiling! This is our one and only life to live... let's be friends and live it with smiles! Big Grin

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#2
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
By the definition most here use, you'd still be an atheist.
The fool hath said in his heart, There is a God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.
Psalm 14, KJV revised edition

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#3
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
Theism/Atheism is what most of us would probably consider to be a binary concept, by which I mean, you either believe in it or don't. If you don't, it doesn't so much matter why you don't, you would still be in the same camp as the rest of us(even if in a different section). Take it this way, does a Baptist stop being a Christian simply because they don't consider the papal doctrines infallible?

Same kind of thing here.
I would more generally advocate that one only leave one entrance into their mind(reason), and keep the rest of it rather closed, as it is one hell of a lot easier to shovel shit in than it is to get it out.

If the evidence and reason for you to believe something isn't really any better than the reason you should believe some rural farmer from Arkansas got anally probed by interstellar visitors, then you probably shouldn't.

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#4
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
If you do not actively believe in some kind of god, you are, by definition, an atheist.
There is nothing demonstrably true that religion can provide mankind that cannot be achieved as well or better through secular means.
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#5
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
Yeah I'm ignostic, which is pretty much the same thing I believe.

It seems there is some debate, but I'd say we are still atheists. Being atheist isn't about taking a position, it's about not taking a position. And you can't take the position to believe in something if you don't understand what it is.

I mean, I lack a belief in loads of weird things that I've never heard of. What are they? I don't know, I've never heard of them. But I don't believe in them, so I'm a-weirdstuff.

Once a claim is made meaningful, only then can we actually believe in it at all. We may have believed in such a thing before then had it been explained properly, or even believed in it under a different name. (God is the universe, blah blah.)
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#6
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_atheism

This explains it pretty nicely
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#7
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
(September 1, 2015 at 12:03 pm)IanHulett Wrote: Hai. So, yesterday I was watching the Drunken Peasants Podcast... ...with ben and TJ bringing you opinions of the news from an altered perspective... and there was a video by a feminist reviewed where she equated atheism to cyberbullies(What?!), and instead of identifying as an atheist, she identifies as a secular humanist. Again... What?! So, I wrote in an IRC chat I run for the show:

<IanHulett> So, by her logic, me being a Theological Noncognitivist, I'm not an atheist. lolwut?

Then one of the chatters responds with:

<H***A**R***> One could say that you have to understand a claim before you can take a position of belief or disbelief on it. I'm an ignostic, and I think that nonsense claims, like god, fail before you can take a position of belief or disbelief.

So... wait... if I'm a theological noncognitivist, I'm not an atheist? I sort of see his point, but I still don't fully understand. Whether I can or can't take a position of belief or disbelief, I still don't actively believe in God(atheist), in other words, I still lack a belief in God(atheist again), all that's different is that I believe "God" is a nonsensical concept. That's why I am a theo noncog. But aren't I still an atheist, because I don't actively believe in god?

If someone can help me understand further, I'd be grateful.

It is going to depend on the exact definitions one uses.  If you define "theist" as someone who believes the statement "there exists at least one god" is true, and an "atheist" as not a theist, then an ignostic or theological noncognitivist is an atheist by that definition.  If, however, you define "atheist" as someone who believes the statement "I do not believe a god exists" is true, then an ignostic or theological noncognitivist would not be an atheist by that definition, because the ignostic or theological noncognitivist does not regard that statement as meaningful due to having a key word that is regarded as meaningless.

"Atheist" is a term in English that has at least two common meanings, one being "not a theist" and another being "belief that there is no god."  An ignostic or theological noncognitivist would not be an atheist in the second sense of the term.

But this is being explained by me in a manner in which the term "god" is being regarded as meaningful.  A true ignostic is not going to say that he or she is not a theist, if "theist" is defined as "someone who believes at least one god exists," because the ignostic will not regard that as meaningful and will not even say that the term "theist" has been shown to be meaningful.  So one would not assert that one is not a theist in that sense of the word if one is really an ignostic.  That is, assuming that the ignostic is being honest and not speaking nonsense.



To make this more clear, imagine a statement made in a language you do not understand.  If you don't understand German, then this will do for a start:

Es regnet.

Now, if you don't know what it means, you are not in a position to say it is true, nor are you in a position to say it is false.  Nor are you even in a position to know that it is meaningful, if you do not understand any German at all.  In such a case, the proper response is simply to ask what it means.  One ought not say it is true, or that it is false, or practically anything else about it, except that one does not know what it means.

To give an even closer example, let us consider the following:

You are a Säugetier.

As long as you do not know what "Säugetier" means, you should not be saying that you are one, are not one, or may or may not be one.  As far as you know (if you know no German), it may be meaningless, and so saying pretty much anything about it would be nonsensical.



See:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theologica...ognitivism

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignosticism

"A wise man ... proportions his belief to the evidence."
— David Hume, An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, Section X, Part I.
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#8
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
Why is it even important? You are you and it's up to you to identify youself with what you see as appropriate.
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#9
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
(September 1, 2015 at 2:57 pm)abaris Wrote: Why is it even important? You are you and it's up to you to identify youself with what you see as appropriate.

It matters if one wishes to communicate one's beliefs to others.  Using words improperly often leads to a failure to communicate.

"A wise man ... proportions his belief to the evidence."
— David Hume, An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, Section X, Part I.
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#10
RE: Is it logical for a Theological Noncognitivist to identify as an atheist?
(September 1, 2015 at 2:42 pm)Neimenovic Wrote: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_atheism

This explains it pretty nicely

Maybe my lack of knowledge could still fall under agnosticism. That being: I don't know nor understand enough about God or his existence, so I choose not to take a position on the matter.  It sounds like even though I feel the concept of God makes no sense, especially with the contradictory definitions, that would still fit under agnostic atheism. So, it sounds like I could still identify as Agnostic Atheist. Am I correct on this assumption?
If pinkie pie isn't real, then how do you explain the existence of ponies, huh? If ponies are real, then that's proof that Pinkie Pie is real. Checkmate, christians!  Heart
_______________________________
Let's stop fighting and and start smiling! This is our one and only life to live... let's be friends and live it with smiles! Big Grin

-- Book of Pinkie Pie 7:3
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