I conclude that there are no gods based on the fact that all such entities appear to be fanciful creations indistinguishable from delusion and imagination. There may be gods, demons, intangible gay rape rugby teams, etc, they are all "logically possible" without a shred of objective evidence backing them up.Noble Ire wrote:Recently, a conversation I had with one of my relatives has caused me to reconsider my self-described religious affiliation, or lack thereof. For the last several years, I have considered myself an atheist, and my views are still quite atheistic: I do not believe in any organized religion, nor do I believe in any god or any sort of abstract spirituality. However, I have realized that this lack of belief is not total.
Deists believe in a God that set the universe in motion, intentionally or not, with no direct intervention or apparent care for the universe. Their god is "possible" but like all the others, it has no objective foundation.I believe that there is a possibility that, at the very beginning of this universe, however it began, there was something beyond the bounds of what we consider to be "real" that may have triggered our existence; in other words, a god of some sort. However, I have no reason to believe that this thing has any impact on the world in which we live, or ever has, and indeed, I in no way think that a spiritual explanation is the only possible one.
Here's a question for your deistic leanings: Why would you think intent was involved at all? Couldn't the universe as we know it merely be an unthinking natural occurance?
Sure, and that's what I suspect is the case, what with knowing that things like intelligence, intent and all the rest of it require physical mediums (brains) that we have no reason to assume would exist prior to the modern universe, especially not without an explanation themselves. I mean, how exactly would intelligence come about prior to a universe? Why would any atemporal entity with universe creating powers even be aware of anything? How is it going to observe things and use intelligence for anything?
Agnosticism, by and large just says "I can't conclude whether that exists or not because I think it is unknowable. Also, if you conclude anything, you must be doing it on faith." It's appealling to anyone that hasn't really thought about knowledge or justifiable conclusions. It's not by faith people dismiss magical men that make tea hot that just so happen to look like heat from the gas stove. The fact is, the overwhelming majority of all knowledge is tentative and potentially updatable with new information, the idea that all statements must be as throughly evident as "existence exists" is pretty damn silly. We can conclude that the Earth is round, though it's logically possible that it's some sort of mass delusion and we'll turn out to be wrong at some point in the future.Now, as I understand it, such a mindset falls under the umbrella of agnosticism.
There's nothing wrong with admitting that you're not totally certain, so long as you admit it and say that it doesn't affect your totally reasonable atheistic conclusions. You can't be totally certain about many things in life aside from things like "existence exists" and "I exist" and such.
How many gods do you actually believe in? If it's zero, you are an atheist. If you don't believe but you don't think anyone can reasonably conclude that gods are made up or actually exist, you are an atheistic agnostic. Likewise, there are theistic agnostics, they don't feel they "know" the truth but believe anyway.However, I am reluctant to identify myself a such; in my admittedly limited experience, I have found that some people interpreting such an "affiliation" as meaning that a person is simply between religion, and thus is open to lobbying from theological factions. I am not, and although I respect the right of others to believe, I have no personal interest in any world view that revolves around spirituality.
Now, we come back to my question: Is it most appropriate to call this view agnostic? Atheistic? Some other name entirely?