MrStakhanovite wrote:
I think Deists and Pantheists are Atheists.
That's strange.
MrStakhanovite wrote:
I think Deists and Pantheists are Atheists.
EAllusion wrote:That's strange.
MrStakhanovite wrote:EAllusion wrote:That's strange.
Maybe, but it's how I think. I think atheism has become conflated with naturalism, rather than not being theism. Deists like Voltaire and Pantheists like Spinoza were pretty regarded as atheists of their time.
EAllusion wrote:Tarksi, Stak -
You defined atheist as "not theist." But not everyone who is "not theist" is an atheist. Deists, for example.
EAllusion wrote:I don't think atheism equates to naturalism.
I just think atheism is a statement about not believing in gods.
EAllusion wrote:I find your use strange because it's off the path of how the term is generally used.
Mad Viking wrote:You've accurately described my model. It's my experience that most theists WON'T admit that they don't know even though it is clear they don't when you engage them. It's not my problem if they don't understand the terms correctly. I tell them when given the opportunity.
An agnostic theist is one who doesn't know if God exists but believes one does.
Some Schmo wrote:
I've mentioned this before:
theist = agnostic with faith
atheist = agnostic without faith
Ceeboo: I would agree that in reality, EVERYONE is actually agnostic in that they don't know whether god(s) exist.
Not always. And, I've found, not even generally. In my own experience, rarely.Individuals pray generally with intent to manipulate whatever they regard as God for their own benefit.
Relative to what?“Faith” is relative not absolute.
You bet! Isn't the Christian admonition to explore God's Creation wonderful?For example, many pray for “healing” then go to the doctor or hospital for medical science to provide “healing.”
You have no idea what faith is. Going to the doctor is an excellent demonstration of faith. Faith in our fellow human, created by God, faith that God's universe is predictable, the medicine we take, and so on.If they had “faith,” what is the need for doctors or hospitals? Hence, “faith” is relative.
You mean belief in the evidence you allow one to consider.Belief contrary to evidence
They do indeed. And virtually every MC I've known would council otherwise.There are those theists who refuse modern medicine and rely exclusively on prayer and faith. While their number is minimal, such theists exist.
Because religion is evil?Roman Catholics and Lutherans and other Christian denominations build hospitals. Why?
I'm not so sure. You may mean that a CS more readily attributes an event to a miracle, but the working definition is the same. It would seem.Christian Scientists (who aren’t in the least scientific) don’t build hospitals and don’t employ modern medical science. They are believers in miracles but don’t view a miracle as a Methodist does. Hence “miracle(s)” is likewise relative to other countervailing views.