D
Damian
Guest
I keep running into conversations with people using the word “Atheism”. From an atheist, Atheism is an idea that doesn’t exist. Here’s how I and the other atheists use these words:
Atheist - Single position on a single question.
Question - “Are you convinced that the supernatural exists?”
Answer - “No, No I am not.”
The label “Atheist” is just that, someone who is not ,currently, convinced that the supernatural exists based on the bad reasons and bad evidence presented for why someone else does.
They are just unconvinced of your reasons for concluding this is true. It may actually be true, but they and you and everyone else, can not actually know this. But because you have been convinced this is true, does not mean those reasons that worked for you will work for someone else. You can’t get to a world view from not being convinced of something. There is no world view of I disbelieve X. You only have world views about what you do believe about reality, not what you don’t believe about reality.
Just like a jury member who is not convinced of the prosecution’s arguments for why the defendant is guilty.
Does the jury member have a world view now of “Not-Guilty-ism” because they were unconvinced? That does not exist. Same with the term “Atheism”. When jury member tells the prosecutor that they were not convinced of the arguments, can that prosecutor conclude anything about those jury member’s world view? politics? social clubs they attend? tenants? dogma? etc. that would guide their thought process to come to that conclusion? No, no they can not. That is why being an atheist does not have a world view of “atheism”, the same way “not guilty” does not have a world view of “not-guilty-ism”.
Why do I feel the need to point this out? - Many theist claim that they would not pursue someone who does not believe what they believe or if they found out later when dating them, that they would end all relationships with them. They would not date an atheist, they would work to destroy the relationship between their children and the atheist they are dating, etc. When pressed on why they would be bigoted this way, they state that they could not see a future with someone who does not value what they do about their religion. This is the problem that the pulpit lies to you about. Atheists are not, necessarily against your religion. Belief in the supernatural is irrelevant to finding value in the religion. That is why you probably have an atheist in your church right now. You don’t need to believe in the supernatural to respect and value the people, the culture, the political message, all the rest of it. Again, to be an atheist is to just not be convinced of the existence of the supernatural is part of reality. This can change in the future when the person is presented with enough data and reasons that changes their mind. Being an atheist is a tentative position, it is not an identity that we wrap our self worth around like people do with religion.
Atheist - Single position on a single question.
Question - “Are you convinced that the supernatural exists?”
Answer - “No, No I am not.”
The label “Atheist” is just that, someone who is not ,currently, convinced that the supernatural exists based on the bad reasons and bad evidence presented for why someone else does.
They are just unconvinced of your reasons for concluding this is true. It may actually be true, but they and you and everyone else, can not actually know this. But because you have been convinced this is true, does not mean those reasons that worked for you will work for someone else. You can’t get to a world view from not being convinced of something. There is no world view of I disbelieve X. You only have world views about what you do believe about reality, not what you don’t believe about reality.
Just like a jury member who is not convinced of the prosecution’s arguments for why the defendant is guilty.
Does the jury member have a world view now of “Not-Guilty-ism” because they were unconvinced? That does not exist. Same with the term “Atheism”. When jury member tells the prosecutor that they were not convinced of the arguments, can that prosecutor conclude anything about those jury member’s world view? politics? social clubs they attend? tenants? dogma? etc. that would guide their thought process to come to that conclusion? No, no they can not. That is why being an atheist does not have a world view of “atheism”, the same way “not guilty” does not have a world view of “not-guilty-ism”.
Why do I feel the need to point this out? - Many theist claim that they would not pursue someone who does not believe what they believe or if they found out later when dating them, that they would end all relationships with them. They would not date an atheist, they would work to destroy the relationship between their children and the atheist they are dating, etc. When pressed on why they would be bigoted this way, they state that they could not see a future with someone who does not value what they do about their religion. This is the problem that the pulpit lies to you about. Atheists are not, necessarily against your religion. Belief in the supernatural is irrelevant to finding value in the religion. That is why you probably have an atheist in your church right now. You don’t need to believe in the supernatural to respect and value the people, the culture, the political message, all the rest of it. Again, to be an atheist is to just not be convinced of the existence of the supernatural is part of reality. This can change in the future when the person is presented with enough data and reasons that changes their mind. Being an atheist is a tentative position, it is not an identity that we wrap our self worth around like people do with religion.
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