Instigator / Pro
18
1485
rating
3
debates
33.33%
won
Topic
#3403

Atheism is simply "a lack of belief"

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
6
9
Better sources
4
8
Better legibility
4
3
Better conduct
4
4

After 4 votes and with 6 points ahead, the winner is...

PGA2.0
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
Two weeks
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
Two months
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
24
1487
rating
7
debates
35.71%
won
Description

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

I well be using the following as I prepare my vote.
How should one use the words disbelief and non-belief especially when it relates to the belief in god?
I tend to think of a disbeliever as someone who actively rejects a belief, often campaigning against it, while a non-believer is someone whose lack of belief is more passive, often as a result of never having been presented with the belief as an option. For me someone who was brought up as a Christian or Muslim but turned atheist would be a disbeliever while a member of a remote tribe who had never met a missionary would be a non-believer.

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@RationalMadman

I was surprised.

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@RationalMadman

Spot on!

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@RationalMadman

YOU: "I did not vote for a thank you itself but you are welcome. What did you think of my vote's reasoning?"

I think it was a good assessment. Thank you!

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@RationalMadman

YOU: "In actual fact, there could exist almost no better way for Con to drive this debate along the 'AoB =/= atheism' line than to pit agnostics (instead of Theists) against atheists."

That was something I should have considered more.

As for Richard Dawkin's admitting to agnosticism, he had written The God Delusion (2006) and other books ( The Blind Watchmaker - 1985) under the guise of atheism. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Dawkins_bibliography

It was not till 2012 that Dawkins admitted to being an agnostic and out of a scale of 7 he was 6 or 6.9 sure God did not exist.

"He said: 'On a scale of seven, where one means I know he exists, and seven I know he doesn't, I call myself a six.'

Professor Dawkins went on to say he believed was a '6.9', stating: 'That doesn't mean I'm absolutely confident, that I absolutely know, because I don't.'"
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2105834/Career-atheist-Richard-Dawkins-admits-fact-agnostic.html

"The philosopher Sir Anthony Kenny, who was chairing the debate asked Dawkins: "Why don't you call yourself an agnostic?" To which Dawkins replied that he did.

At this, Kenny protested: "You are described as the world's most famous atheist."

Prof Dawkins said that he was "6.9 out of seven" sure of his beliefs: "I think the probability of a supernatural creator existing is very, very low," he explained."
https://www.theweek.co.uk/religion/religion/45552/outspoken-atheist-dawkins-admits-he-agnostic

I think he had been pushed to the wall too many times and took the easy way out, which according to what Dawkins said in the Reddit article (a 6 or 6.9), he would qualify as a weak atheist instead.

Richard Dawkins, The Poverty of Agnosticism, p. 69-77, who offered a seven-point measure for religious belief, classified atheism as believing there is no God.
1. Strong theist = I know God exists.
2. Weak theist = strongly believes God exists.
3. Theistic agnostic = siding towards God.
4. Impartial agnostic = siding equally between God existing and not existing.
5. Atheistic agnostic = siding towards Atheism.
6. Weak atheist = assumes God does not exist.
7. Strong atheist = I know God does not exist.

So, Dawkin contradicts his own standard.

"For good reason, Dawkins gives one of his chapters the title "Why There Almost Certainly Is No God" (my emphasis). He later describes himself, on a scale of religious-to-atheistic conviction, as a "7-leaning 6," where 7 designates a "strong atheist" and 6 represents a "de facto atheist" who thinks "God is very improbable" (as Huxley did) and "live[s] my life on the assumption that he is not there," but nonetheless treats the issue as one of "very low probability."
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/side-effects/201202/why-does-richard-dawkins-take-issue-agnosticism

https://1library.net/article/poverty-agnosticism-god-delusion-richard-dawkins-pdf.z3xg458z

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@PGA2.0

I did not vote for a thank you itself but you are welcome. What did you think of my vote's reasoning?

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@RationalMadman

Thank you for your vote!

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@Mall

Your vote has been removed every time you have made it and you still haven't changed it (this is what, the 5th time?). What makes you think it will stay up this time?

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@PGA2.0

What is your opinion of my vote (I do see your 2 edu sources in round 2 but one of them tried to define agnostic inna way that kind of violated the debate description so I felt like it was not truly more reliable inherently than a dictionary like merriam webster that Pro relied on).

"There was nothing like this mentioned in the debate. All Con did was quote the 7 levels of belief. If he didn't argue it I have no responsibility to refute it. You are injecting your own case into the debate."

No, it was a central Tenet of Con's entire logic and got fleshed out harder in Round 2. If you properly read Con's framework, the AoB vs atheism angle was his entire angle summarised clear as day for you to attack and critique. That right there was Con's actual framework, what he did was avoid plagiarising by accrediting it to Dawkins, which you said was bad of him to do but really wasn't.

In fact, the AoB vs Atheism framework was precisley how he turned your practicality points against you, since he noticed that you were noticing that within atheism and within Theism there's stronger and weaker levels of it and the weakest atheism may seem like it isn't more than 'lack of belief' but isn't. What Con did was flip it around and point out how you'd conceded that a purely neutral person has no Theism in them in any genuine sense, the same would go for their lack of any active atheism.

It was up to you to prove passive atheism, not Con to prove it didn't exist (and he didn't even try to, his angle was not that it didn't exist which you didn't capitalise on either).

My bad, Oromagi.

lol. everybody does that. It's Oro+Magi as in Spanish for gold + Latin for Zoroastrian wizard/king (i.e. the three magi)

it was your burden to substantiate that only the broad definition of Atheism should apply"

No, it isn't.

First of all, just step back and think about what you're saying... Almost no one ever changes their mind after reading one debate.

That's why it's called a burden. If you don't think it's your job to convince me the voter that you're right, then I am unlikely to find your argument persuasive, am I? If we're just judging form than the majority of debates are roughly even. I don't have to be convinced to find your argument more persuasive but I do have to convinced you're trying to persuade.

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@oromagi

My bad, Oromagi.

I agree with the statement that dictionaries are reasonably objective sources for defining words. This debate wasn't about what the definition of atheism *is*, it was about how the word *should be* defined. Why do I need to keep going back to this?

And no, a resolution regarding a subjective nature does not change the responsibility of the voters. You are still obligated to vote based on how the arguments in the debate measure against each other, and how each side did in refuting the others argument.

There will always be some level of subjectivity in every vote, that is inevitable. But to claim that my failure to convince you to change your position on the topic means you are justified in voting for my opponent is just plain wrong.

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@Double_R

"No, it's not and if you think it is then we have identified why you lost this debate. Should does not indicate subjectivity. Should is used in conjunction with a predicate to indicate an instruction or policy recommendation. If you are adding correctly, 2 + 2 should always equal 4"

"Origami, I've read many of your posts and have come to respect you as a DART member, "

thanks! .... It's oromagi.

"this is the dumbest thing I've ever heard you say."

well then, not too many posts then.

"DEFINITIONS ARE NECESSARILY SUBJECTIVE. Why? Because every word ever uttered in human history was made up by a person, and definitions change over time based on how society chooses to use them. That's literally the definition of subjective.

SUBJECTIVE is
"Formed, as in opinions, based upon a person's feelings or intuition, not upon observation or reasoning; coming more from within the observer than from observations of the external environment."

To the extent that lexicographers earnestly strive to observe and accurately report semantic content and change over time, dictionaries are reasonably objective sources for defining commonplace understandings of words and terms. Certainly, Wiktionary is a more objective source than the atheist's handbook or whatever because Wiktionary is not striving to make a point about atheism. Dictionaries are of little help to people trying to get around the common understanding of words.

Let's note:
"A subjective claim, on the other hand, is not a factual matter; it is an expression of belief, opinion, or personal preference. A subjective claim cannot be proved right or wrong by any generally accepted criteria."

That is, once you have claimed that this debate is SUBJECTIVE, you have forsworn any objection to the basis for any vote.

DART Voting Policy:

For non-moderated debates, Winner Selection voting is strongly encouraged.
Examples of non-moderated debates include...
Subjective Competitions
Differentiated from normal debates, rap battles, poetry slams, talent shows, and the like, are too subjective to a different standard than what these rules are designed to enforce.

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@RationalMadman

"If you will notice, the AoB thing you ignored wasn't about the default as much as it was about how the stronger a Theist is, the stronger their belief in the existence of the relevant god(s) and deity/ies of their theological outlook and that conversely what atheism has is a weak-to-strong element as well with pure agnostics in the middle."

There was nothing like this mentioned in the debate. All Con did was quote the 7 levels of belief. If he didn't argue it I have no responsibility to refute it. You are injecting your own case into the debate.

"You did not offer an alternative default, instead you said in your Round 1 already that you admit there is a default that isn't atheist but you see no practical use in not pooling them together with the pure neutrals. - You actually conceded the debate in Round 1 under your practical usage stuff because you were saying you wanted to make it so that atheists and pure neutral people could be pooled together."

I never in any way, shape, or form argued that there is a default that "isn't atheist". The entire point of the practical use argument is to explain why it is useless to *seperate* these individuals into two separate camps, which is what the Con position entails. That is not anything remotely resembling a concession.

That point*combined* with the fact that the definition of logically incoherent was my case - that if a definition is incoherent and serves no purpose we should learn to think about what it's pointing to differently so that it gives us a coherent and useful understanding of the issue. Con did not even attempt to address this, he just ignored the entire idea. Based on your RFD, you did as well.

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@oromagi

"strict atheism is logically incoherent therefore atheism should be redefined to its broadest sense. (Where is the value that logically incoherent concepts must be removed from the lexicon?)

strict atheists are functionally indistinguishable from broad atheists therefore atheism should be redefined to its broadest sense. (Where is the value that performatively similar ideologies must be condensed under the same name?)"

3RU7AL already laid it out perfectly. I just want to point out that if this is the argument against my case I was more than prepared to go into detail on why it matters and how this affirms the resolution. CON NEVER ADDRESSED ANY OF THIS.

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@Double_R

It had no bearing, you also attacked it differently because 3RU7AL was using a different definition of it than is in the description.

If you will notice, the AoB thing you ignored wasn't about the default as much as it was about how the stronger a Theist is, the stronger their belief in the existence of the relevant god(s) and deity/ies of their theological outlook and that conversely what atheism has is a weak-to-strong element as well with pure agnostics in the middle.

You did not offer an alternative default, instead you said in your Round 1 already that you admit there is a default that isn't atheist but you see no practical use in not pooling them together with the pure neutrals.

You actually conceded the debate in Round 1 under your practical usage stuff because you were saying you wanted to make it so that atheists and pure neutral people could be pooled together.

Con addressed all the points you raised, the reason Con didn't address that particular element of practicality that you brought up is because it actually worked against you anyway.

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@RationalMadman

"Con did not ignore the arguments you made at all. It was you who ignored Con's arguments at a significant point where you wipe away one of Con's strongest angles with 'make your own arguments'."

Based on your RFD, the argument you are referring to was the wokeupbug point in AoB.

To say I ignored Con's argument there is ridiculous, he never made one. He provided a link to someone else making the argument, vaguely (and I mean vaguely) described what his point was, and then quoted his 7 levels of belief system.

That's not an argument. There is a character limit for a reason. If Con is not willing to use his space to quote the actual premises and logically connect them to the conclusion then I have no burden to address it.

"And what Con argued is that the default is agnostic, not atheist. My vote is justified." - "Thank you for your argument and input, Pro never said that though and therefore it cannot factor into my vote"

Yes, I absolutely did. I went through as agnosticism and why it's not a middle ground between theism and atheism in detail. Did you read it?

And even if you did and don't accept it, Con never refuted it so my argument would stand if you're actually judging fairly.

The command wasn't veiled.

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@oromagi

> opposed to belief in the existence of a god or gods
> "anti-theism is the philosophical position that theism should be opposed."

And an "active DISbelief" is "opposed" to (technically the opposite of) an "active Belief"

> Then make a forum thread so you can do your sophistry stuff there. I blocked you for a reason and you are only proving me right.

Thanks for the ad hominem attacks and the veiled commands.

Please try to stay on-topic.

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@oromagi

> strict atheism is logically incoherent therefore atheism should be redefined to its broadest sense. (Where is the value that logically incoherent concepts must be removed from the lexicon?)

(IFF) we can agree that language only exists to serve as a means of clear communication between humans with as little error and miscommunication as possible (THEN) we can agree that removing and or modifying the definitions of words to make them less logically incoherent serves the core function of language itself

There's your conditional statement.

> strict atheists are functionally indistinguishable from broad atheists therefore atheism should be redefined to its broadest sense. (Where is the value that performatively similar ideologies must be condensed under the same name?)

(IFF) the broad term "theism" is valid and useful to describe a large category of people who believe extremely different things, many of them mutually exclusive and even diametrically opposed (THEN) the broad term "atheism" should be able to accommodate BOTH "lack of belief" AND "active DISbelief" without any problem whatsoever, especially since "lack of belief" does not logically EXCLUDE "active DISbelief" and as such it should be considered the more inclusive (broader) definition and therefore PRIMARY

Feel free to point out any errors you may find.

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@3RU7AL

Then make a forum thread so you can do your sophistry stuff there. I blocked you for a reason and you are only proving me right.

Right now, you're derailing a discussion between Double R and Oromagi about their vote by spamming the Comments section with your 'hot take' on the topic. That's allowed in the rules, since this isn't a forum thread and your derailing is technically within the debate's topic but do not assume you are fighting me when you quote my vote.

My real stance on this topic is that it depends on the definition and I can actually understand both sides. I side towards Con's side because I do believe that the core difference between a strong and weak atheist is how much they doubt and deny god (not that they don't deny god even in the weaker end). This is perfectly reflected in weak vs strong Theistic belief, in fact it is more blatant there.

My personal stance was not used in my reason for voting, instead I came in with an open mind.

> That's a funny way to show it; quoting my vote's reasoning.

I'm discussing ideas (with you).

I never even considered your actual vote.

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@oromagi

>> An agnostic has absolutely no way of knowing "that all conceivable gods are UNKNOWABLE".

> When Thomas Huxley coined the term in 1869,

So, NOW you want to exclusively appeal to the authority of "author's intent" ?

I thought you were in love with dictionaries ?

agnostic

aɡˈnɒstɪk

noun

a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God.

Source: Oxford Languages

https://www.ecosia.org/search?q=agnostic&addon=opensearch

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@3RU7AL

That's a funny way to show it; quoting my vote's reasoning.

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@Double_R

Con did not ignore the arguments you made at all. It was you who ignored Con's arguments at a significant point where you wipe away one of Con's strongest angles with 'make your own arguments'.

> Are you arguing about my vote or about the debate's topic

I don't care about your vote in the slightest.

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@3RU7AL

"Perhaps you are unfamiliar with Hume's "IS (vs) OUGHT" problem (also known as "Hume's Guillotine")"

Hume would be the first to point out Double_R's is/ought'ing here.

strict atheism is logically incoherent therefore atheism should be redefined to its broadest sense. (Where is the value that logically incoherent concepts must be removed from the lexicon?)

strict atheists are functionally indistinguishable from broad atheists therefore atheism should be redefined to its broadest sense. (Where is the value that performatively similar ideologies must be condensed under the same name?)

If you really want a word to address an active belief in the non-existence of any dieties, there is already a term widely used for this: anti-theist.

Oops, You should re-read that definition for better comprehension.

opposed to belief in the existence of a god or gods
"anti-theism is the philosophical position that theism should be opposed."

"When [atheism is] defined narrowly as denying the existence of gods, the compatibility between atheism and anti-theism may appear more likely. If a person cares enough to deny that gods exist, then perhaps they care enough to attack belief in gods as well — but not always."

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@3RU7AL

An agnostic has absolutely no way of knowing "that all conceivable gods are UNKNOWABLE".

When Thomas Huxley coined the term in 1869, he made no claims about the unknowable, only the known. " It simply means that a man shall not say he knows or believes that which he has no scientific grounds for professing to know or believe. Consequently, agnosticism puts aside not only the greater part of popular theology, but also the greater part of anti-theology"

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@3RU7AL

Are you arguing about my vote or about the debate's topic

> The semantic angle that you are ignoring is that to 'disbelieve' is to believe in the falseness of something that you would otherwise believe in or be neutral on.

"Lack of belief" does not equal "DISbelieve".

"Lack of belief" is the neutral position.

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@3RU7AL

The semantic angle that you are ignoring is that to 'disbelieve' is to believe in the falseness of something that you would otherwise believe in or be neutral on.

Something Con could have further pointed out is that in law you are presumed innocent over guilty, the default isn't neutral there which would be a stronger counter to Pro's point, I do appreciate Con's rebuttal though which highlighted that cases left in doubt did involve investigation, considering and active doubt instead of passive doubt with regards to the guilt of the suspect(s).

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@3RU7AL

Thank you for your argument and input, Pro never said that though and therefore it cannot factor into my vote.

> And what Con argued is that the default is agnostic, not atheist. My vote is justified.

Obviously the default cannot be a BELIEF that "**nothing** is **known** or can be **known** of the existence or nature of God."

Obviously the default cannot be a BELIEF that "**nothing** is **known** or can be **known** of the existence or nature of God."

Obviously the default cannot be a BELIEF that "**nothing** is **known** or can be **known** of the existence or nature of God."

agnostic

aɡˈnɒstɪk

noun
a person who believes that **nothing** is **known** or can be **known** of the existence or nature of God.

Source: Oxford Languages

https://www.ecosia.org/search?q=agnostic&addon=opensearch

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@oromagi

"False. It was your job to convince me you are right. As the initiator of this debate, it was your burden to substantiate that only the broad definition of Atheism should apply"

No, it isn't.

First of all, just step back and think about what you're saying... Almost no one ever changes their mind after reading one debate. So if it's the job of the instigator to convince the voters of their position, then the winner will almost always be determined by who the voters began the debate agreeing with. That defeats the whole point of judging the debate, you might as well not bother reading it and just vote.

But to go deeper, the reason it can't be my burden to prove to you that I'm right it's because I'm not debating you. Every judge will have different concerns, I can't possibly know what they all are or address them all. I have limited space, so my only option is to address the arguments made by my opponent.

Con pretty much ignored every argument I made, and you acknowledged this. If he ignored them then how am I supposed to uphold them against your objections? I can't, because I had to spend my space working with what Con have me to work with. To hold that against me is absurd.

A debate is a contest between the *two* participants. The job of the judges is to determine which of the participants did better at upholding their side of the debate. In other words your judging or performance, not where you ended up at the end.

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@3RU7AL

And what Con argued is that the default is agnostic, not atheist. My vote is justified.

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@oromagi

"No, it's not and if you think it is then we have identified why you lost this debate. Should does not indicate subjectivity. Should is used in conjunction with a predicate to indicate an instruction or policy recommendation. If you are adding correctly, 2 + 2 should always equal 4"

Origami, I've read many of your posts and have come to respect you as a DART member, this is the dumbest thing I've ever heard you say.

If one is adding correctly 2+2... It's not that it should equal 4, it does equal 4. Objectively. Period. The word "should" has no place in this sentence.

In some cases, I can argue that "should" can *also* be used to express an objective statement, but the usage of the word is not tied to the objectivity of the statement, it's tied to the lack of confidence in the speaker. "354 x 21 should equal 7,434" doesn't mean sometimes it will and sometimes it won't. It means "I'm not 100% sure".

That is a completely different context from the resolution. We're not talking about math. We're talking about how a word should be defined. And DEFINITIONS ARE NECESSARILY SUBJECTIVE. Why? Because every word ever uttered in human history was made up by a person, and definitions change over time based on how society chooses to use them. That's literally the definition of subjective.

So to apply that usage towards the resolution is absurd. Drop this point.

Before someone is confronted with the "good news" of "the virgin birth and subsequent human sacrifice of our lord and savior jesus christ",

they presumably "lack any belief in jesus christ" (they are unconvinced).

If they remain UNCONVICED by the "good news" they have not (necessarily) "gained" a "disbelief".

They simply remain UNCONVINCED.

The funny thing here is that it is CHRISTIANS who actively and categorically "disbelieve" in any and all conceivable gods, EVEN gods they've never heard of (with of course one glaring exception).

Many people who call themselves "atheists" are simply (as of yet) UNCONVINCED (specifically of any gods they've currently considered, but not necessarily categorically rejecting all conceivable gods).

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@3RU7AL

Con used active (not passive) disbelief and denial from Dawkins to display consideration of God taking place while Dawkins concludes that God is malicious and unrealistic. Con furthermore showed several atheists on and off this website considering god(s) and actively denying the god(s).

I love it.

> Con negated with (paraphrasing) 'of course defining their stance that way logically incoherent, that's why they deny despite considering and then deny that they considered.'

So, CON argues that "strong disbelief" is logically incoherent because it is impossible to DISprove all god(s) (because they are presumably unfalsifiable).

AND, CON argues that "a lack of belief" is ALSO logically incoherent because it is impossible to "not consider".

Wow.

Further footnote regarding side-contentions like ignorance in court cases, I considered Con's rebuttals to Pro's Round 2 side-contentions as sufficient each time, thus not worth mentioning or venturing into. The angles were just repeats of the same concept that Con negated with (paraphrasing) 'of course defining their stance that way logically incoherent, that's why they deny despite considering and then deny that they considered.'

Footnote regarding tying sources: Con's many sources were mainly forum posts or .com type websites.

they weren't .edu, .org, .gov or such and were used casually.

I would have given Con the sources point if the Reddit blog post about Dawkins' scale of atheistic vs agnostic beliefs weren't undermined in Round 2 but Reddit as a source in a philosophy debate... Lol...

RFD part 1/2
Pro's argument is that it is logically untenable because... Well, I am kind of confused what he is saying and this confusion was excellently capitalised on by Con in the next Round. Since Con is taking a Theistic stance here, it allowed a comedic defense angle of essentially telling us that of course it's logically untenable to define atheism that way, since atheists themselves are logically incoherent and using untenable logic to deny God.

This got a small smile out of me and really entertained me to read, if entertainment were a factor in voting, I'd award the point to Con almost just for that alone.

For the remainder of the debate, Pro tries to dismiss everything that Con says by saying it's irrelevant but I don't agree as a reader that Con's points were irrelevant to the resolution. Instead, I see huge relevance in particular to the AoB vs atheism angle that Pro never once addressed other than to say 'on needs to make his own arguments, not link us to Wokeupbug. Without supporting argument his 7 levels of belief should be dismissed.' when Dawkins is one of the most renowned agnostics of this generation (well, he's previous generation but still alive and relevant so you get the point).

While Pro's use of essentially a single dictionary source is weak sourcing, Con undermining his already flimsy Reddit source by casting Dawkins as a strong atheist in the next Round despite trying to show that weak atheists and agnostics separate themselves from atheists in Round 1 make me leave sources tied. I appreciated the 'apology' to me though... Since, this debate became very semantic as predicted.

It was actually a shock to me who won this debate in my eyes. I expected Pro to push harder on semantics because other definitions of atheist and even capitalise harder on events such as Con's own error in Round 2 of highlighting that Dawkins says one thing and then acts another way with regards to Go. I saw very little engagement of Con's case by Pro and the problem is that the case was good. I don't have an issue with lazy debating where one allows weak points of the opponent to remain untouched but the untouched points by Con simply were not weak and were entirely relevant to the resolution.

I leave the semantics tied though because Con did indeed not properly address why the semantics and lexicality is actually correct, however this helped Con out since Pro didn't think to flesh out that point at all.

the 'practical uselessness' angle was not DIRECTLY addressed by Con but INDIRECTLY, Con did address it regularly such as in the AoB vs atheism angle so I do consider it rebutted.

RFD part 2/2

The Absence of belief (AoB) isn't atheism argument line was won by Con from the very moment he mentioned it. Pro's rebuttal is that Con ought to make his own arguments but that is toxic to say and misunderstands what Con presented. Con gave us proof that his take on atheism is actually backed by one of the most respected, high-esteem and renowned agnostic speakers, debaters, frontpeople etc of our era (namely, Richard Dawkins). If Pro genuinely wants to wave this away as simply 'Con ought to make his own arguments' that is like saying that the moment somebody tries to prove they aren't just talking baselessly on something, you then revert to saying 'but that's not your own argument' trapping them in a state of being unable to prove they aren't baselessly asserting an idea as accepted by a group, namely 'agnostics' in this case.

In actual fact, there could exist almost no better way for Con to drive this debate along the 'AoB =/= atheism' line than to pit agnostics (instead of Theists) against atheists.

The AoB point became a gaping hole in Pro's defense even though it actually was linking to a Redditor talking about Dawkins, which Pro barely touched on or pointed out. Furthermore, Pro didn't point out that Dawkins is agnostic and not atheist (though in reality he is a 'weak atheist' under his own definitions, he goes by agnostic). There was absolutely nothing from Pro to address this issue and that meant that when it came to establishing consensus, Con won hands down and brutally.

If Con has won the consensus aspect of the debate, the only path to victory left for Pro would be to prove that the consensus is wrong. Therefore, I agree with Pro and allow his defense towards Con that a dictionary defining a word a certain way doesn't inherently mean it SHOULD be defined that way but Con still has the initial advantage and holds his own there due to the definition favouring Con's side.

There was, however, a problem for Con. since Con uses Dawkins to back his AoB vs Atheism logic, it is extremely disconcerting that Con then tries to prove that Dawkins is actually a strongly denying atheist as opposed to weak atheist or agnostic in the Round following the AoB contention. It appears that Con undermined his own source there very hard as he is making clear that Dawkins (in Con's eyes) is actually an active atheist instead of an agnostic who has absence of belief in God. That being said, Pro does absolutely nothing to capitalise on this error at all, so I cannot truly score it actively against Con, it just lessens how seriously I take Con's AoB argument and definitely undermines an already sketchy sourcing of a Redditor posting about their own summary of what Dawkins preaches/teaches.

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@oromagi

> Should is used in conjunction with a predicate to indicate an instruction or policy recommendation.

Perhaps you are unfamiliar with Hume's "IS (vs) OUGHT" problem (also known as "Hume's Guillotine")

OUGHT and SHOULD are synonymous.

Also, not for nothing, a recommendation is intrinsically subjective.

Also, not for nothing, an instruction is also intrinsically subjective (relative to the presumed goal).

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@oromagi

If you really want a word to address an active belief in the non-existence of any dieties, there is already a term widely used for this: anti-theist.

anti-theist
antɪˈθiːɪst

adjective
opposed to belief in the existence of a god or gods.

noun
a person who is opposed to belief in the existence of a god or gods.

Source: Oxford Languages

https://www.ecosia.org/search?q=anti-theist&addon=opensearch

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@oromagi

> Agnosticism is the objective conclusion

No.

No it is not.

An agnostic has absolutely no way of knowing "that all conceivable gods are UNKNOWABLE".

The agnostic's claim is provably false.

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@PGA2.0

>> CON: atheists are illogical because you can't disprove all conceivable god(s) (because many of them are "unfalsifiable")

How would you personally re-phrase this claim ?