Atheism is simply "a lack of belief"
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 4 votes and with 6 points ahead, the winner is...
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Full Resolution: The definition of atheism should be accepted as merely "a lack of belief in a god"
The definition contrasts with Con's position that the definition of atheism entails a belief in the non-existence of any gods. The purpose of the debate is to determine which of these two definitions should be considered the most reasonable to accept and utilize.
Definitions:
Definitions: Worldview --> a comprehensive conception or apprehension of the world especially from a specific standpoint. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/worldview
Ism --> noun: a belief (or system of beliefs) accepted as authoritative by some group or school Synonyms doctrine philosophical system philosophy school of thought https://www.freethesaurus.com/ism
archaic : godlessness especially in conduct : UNGODLINESS, WICKEDNESS https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/atheism
Agnosticism: n. 1. The doctrine that certainty about first principles or absolute truth is unattainable and that only perceptual phenomena are objects of exact knowledge.
Disbelief: The refusal to believe that something is true (Cambridge International Dictionary of English-1995). Disbelief: Refusal or reluctance to believe (American Heritage Dictionary of English Language-1996).
Etymology n. 1. The origin and historical development of a linguistic form as shown by determining its basic elements, earliest known use, and changes in form and meaning, tracing its transmission from one language to another,
Naturalism --> 3. Philosophy The system of thought holding that all phenomena can be explained in terms of natural causes and laws. 4. Theology The doctrine that all religious truths are derived from nature and natural causes and not from revelation.
Secularism: n 1. (Philosophy) philosophy a doctrine that rejects religion, esp in ethics 2. the attitude that religion should have no place in civil affairs
umanism (ˈhjuːməˌnɪzəm) n Humanism: 1. (Philosophy) the denial of any power or moral value superior to that of humanity; the rejection of religion in favour of a belief in the advancement of humanity by its own efforts
- Because the dictionary says so
- Because grammar and syntax says so
- Because scholars say so
- Because atheists act like they believe no gods exist
RFD in comments https://www.debateart.com/debates/3403/comment-links/42552
As initiator and maker of extraordinary claims, PRO has the BURDEN of PROOF here.
PRO offers us three fairly different standards to apply:
1) Atheism is simply "a lack of belief"
2) The definition of atheism should be accepted as merely "a lack of belief in a god"
3) [A lack of belief] should be considered the most reasonable to accept and utilize.
PRO clearly states that #2 is the Full Resolution and so #2 will be used to establish PRO's burden. That is, this VOTER won't apply the much lower standard of "lack of belief is one simple definition for atheism" or the much lower standard of "most reasonable." #2 does appear to be PRO's intent. PRO must prove that atheism has only one acceptable definition. Given that PRO is contradicting the body of Western scholarship regarding this definition, PRO has set himself a nearly impossible task. PRO defines all kinds of terms except for the one relevant term, ATHEISM.
PRO argues that dictionaries should do away with the most strict , precise definition of atheism and only use the more broad definition mostly overlapping with agnosticism.
Logical Incoherence
PRO argues that strict atheism is incoherent because there are too many concepts of god to actively disbelieve them all. Where the rule that prohibits categorical denial came from, PRO does not say. To me, merely refusing to accept any supernatural explanation is sufficient denial of the possibility of all gods, by definition. To say, "strictly atheist until proof of GOD" seems perfectly rational and strictly atheist without need to consult each and every god conception.
Nevertheless, PRO fails to explain why a logically incoherent concept does not merit its own word. Just because the fear of spiders is irrational doesn't imply that the word arachnophobia ought not to be defined.
Practical Uselessness
PRO uses weak analogy to argue that because agnosticism and atheism are alike performatively in terms of non-worship, they must also be identical in terms of theory. That is, there is no practical distinction between the roommate who does not go to church because he does not believe there could ever be a god and the roommate who does not go to church because he does not pretend to know whether god is real. A scientist is the same thing as a skeptic, in essence.
PRO does explain what word we would use to replace atheism if strict atheism were re-defined to only mean the same thing as agnosticism.
CON fails to address either idea directly but does a fine job of establishing the strict usage of atheism is a popular and commonplace understanding and correctly challenges PRO authority to presume redefinition without even basic reliance on precedence in literature or religious thought. CON's reliance on sources here ultimately makes CON's affirmative the strongest, even as CON neglected his duties to negate PRO. CON's strongest argument is that absence of belief is more agnostic than atheistic. CON also argues that ATHEISM in its strictest sense is correct usage.
PRO never really argued against the utility of using the broad, duplicative definition of atheism although PRO clearly expected as much.
In R2-
1) Etymology of Atheism- PRO invents an entirely fictional etymology for the word atheism without reliance on even one work of reference.
2) PRO drops the evidence for the ordinary usage of atheism in the strictest sense saying its cherry picked.
3) PRO drops the evidence for the commonplace definition by saying its cherry picked and then tries to refute by using a MW definition of atheist, not ATHEISM and that MW definition relies on a definition of ATHEISM that falsifies PRO's thesis
"a strong disbelief in the existence of a god or any gods"
4 & 5 PRO's strongest counters are that worldview and propositional position are not necessary to the categorization of ATHEISM.
6) PRO rejects CON's sources without explanation
7) PRO asserts his authority is based in reason but PRO has given no rational argument against the regular usage of an ordinary word, on a rational argument against strict atheism ideologically.
(cont in COMMENTS)
The entire discussion revolves around the resolution and the proper usage ("should") and interpretation of the word "atheist" itself.
CON argues that because the word itself has been used in some cases and by some people to mean "belief in the impossibility of any and all god(s)" that means that the word itself ALWAYS means that and only that.
This is obviously inaccurate.
CON is making an argumentum ad populum AND an argumentum ad verecundiam (with their reliance on famous quotes).
PRO confirms the resolution by comparing the word "apolitical" to the word "atheist" which elegantly illustrates that simply adding an "a" prefix to another word DOES NOT necessarily mean that you are "anti" or "the opposite" of that word.
RFD in comments
Here is another opinion piece that has a lot to be desired by American Atheists:
https://www.atheists.org/activism/resources/ethics-without-gods/
I would love to dissect this, bit by bit, to show his flawed reasoning.
YOU: "From American Atheists: Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods. Atheism is too often defined incorrectly as a belief system. To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods."
Again, the source tells me everything.
A rejection of the assertion that there are gods is a denial. The person is choosing to disbelieve in God. A lack of belief holds no views about God or gods. American Atheists demonstrate it has all kinds of beliefs and opinions about God, and they do deny God. And, IMO, they have a political agenda to destroy religion, not protect it as they say. The opening picture speaks volumes about their denial of God or gods while masquerading as the voice of reason.
"Christian Nationalism on the Rise," "march to keep religious bans off our body," "Atheism is not a belief system nor is it a religion." [It is both, yet they want you to believe otherwise]
"only that our sincerely held (lack of) beliefs are protected in the same way as the religious beliefs of others." What is being protected here? No beliefs? How can you protect nothing?
"Religious beliefs should not be used as the primary justification for any policy."
Instead, they push their philosophical ideology and BELIEFS that are counter to God and God-based religion as if their voice is the voice of reason rather than a manipulation tool feining in the name of tolerance and moral goodness. The question people should be asking is how do they determine the moral good? Do they make it up and call it good? They want to dictate what should be without an objective universal moral reference point.
https://www.atheists.org/
Their 'Aims and Purposes' speak volumes about their plan and what they are trying to do.
https://www.atheists.org/about/our-vision/
Thank you both for your input! I agree with both of your comments.
I think this is well said:
"I think "a lack of belief" is more similar to agnosticism than to atheism. The atheist believes that there is no god. Believing this claim of the nonexistence of deities is a belief, not a lack of belief."
"I feel like atheism is by definition the belief no god exists whereas agnosticism is a lack of belief."
Precisely!
That was a point I made in the debate, yet not so eloquently.
From American Atheists: Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods. Atheism is too often defined incorrectly as a belief system. To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
I feel like atheisim is by definition the belief no god exists where as agnosticism is a lack of beleif.
Addressed that in the debate. Curious to know if you read it.
Just asking, input should wait till the last argument is posted.
I think this debate is not about the subject of the title but about what is a "belief in nothing".
I think "a lack of belief" is more similar to agnosticism than to atheism. The atheist believes that there is no god. Believing this claim of the nonexistence of deities is a belief, not a lack of belief.
wow this debate is long
So can atheism be defined as such. See, it's not the "belief" part to put so much emphasis on. It's the subject, the "what", the thing that the belief/disbelief is circled around.
It's literally defined as a belief.
Theism is simply a lack of belief.
I don't know what happens, but I transferred R2 from Word to this format and it screwed up my content by making everything run together. So, no, it was not enjoyable. I had things to do today so I stayed up until 6 am to get it done. After running a spelling and grammar check in Word I thought all was well but that was not the case. (^8
Ain't no way you guys are enjoying this debate.
Ugh. Words ran together in my R2 when I copies it from Word. Sorry.
Words have a specific meaning.
And the dictionary battle ensues
My link [13] failed. It can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85J86NhK33M&t=2148s
Yes. (^8
Taking it to the last minute?
Okay, thanks!
I am a simple man in debate comments.
I say what I mean.
YOU: "Con is actually correct but Pro has more dictionary backing."
Do you really believe Pro (Double_R) has more dictionary backing?
It’s really not, but I look forward to hearing more about your criticisms of the resolution after the debate.
The only difference between saying you believe gods do not exist and that you disbelieve they exist is playing around with words.
Con is actually correct but Pro has more dictionary backing.
Why criticize the debate as semantic when no argument has even been made?
Maybe so, but I'm tired of atheists claiming atheism is nothing but a "lack of belief" and trying to redefine the word to avoid a burden of proof on anything they don't want to touch on, as Bones did in my debate with him.
You will find that your gripe will end up entirely lexical/semantic. Give it time.
And why do you think that defining terms will lead to "A dull semantic debate masked as a juice philosophical one?"
I have an opinion about the debate via its topic, yes
I can see you already have an opinion without even reading one round of the debate.
A dull semantic debate masked as a juice philosophical one.
Could have been much better if this was worded differently and either about theism or atheism's approach itself (which both sides pre-agreed on defining).