My point, by the way, which I was too tired to make is...

In this country (and probably others), it's almost required for politicians to be Christian. For those that truly believe in religious tolerance, it's ok for politicians to be Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist or Hindi.

But atheists? Get out of town. Apparently having some belief is better than having no belief at all.

The problem is, atheism isn't a lack of belief. It is specifically disbelieving in God. And I don't think those are the same thing, not by a long shot. It isn't coming across two paths (or fifty paths) and simply choosing not to pick one. That's agnosticism. That's saying you don't know. Atheism is saying you do know, and you do believe...that God or Gods do not exist.

Date: 2007-03-03 01:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] branna.livejournal.com
I'm going to have to take exception to the "intellectually lazy" statement.

I'm not an agnostic because I'm lazy. I'm an agnostic _because_ I'm a scientist, and as such, I feel it is an abuse of the discipline to invoke it as Dawkin does. Talking about "science" or the "weight of scientific evidence" is only really relevant when the question at hand is tractable to the scientific method. That means any theory has to make falsifiable predictions.

I will cheerfully agree that literal biblical creationism can be constructed as a falsifiable scientific theory, because it makes specific predictions that can be and have been falsified. E.g. it predicts the earth is only a few thousand years old, which is at odds with radiocarbon dating and fossils and so forth. It's a failed scientific theory, but it can legitimately be constructed as one, and as such science has something relevant to say about it.

Likewise, if you have a very specific God you'd like to disprove, then maybe science has something to say about. If your particular God's existence forces the logical conclusion that the sky is green, or that the universe is steady state, or so forth, yeah, science can prove that particular God does not exist. If your God is fundamentally deterministic and Newtonian, well, science has something to say about that too.

But as far as the existence of the Numinous in all its possible aspects? Science, given our current observational and experimental abilities, just can't speak to that. You want to posit a Deist prime mover behind the big bang? Go right ahead, the theory's predictions won't change a whit one way or the other. And given the current theories, knowledge, etc. arguing that the values of the universal constants were selected by a supreme being is no sillier than the string theorists invoking the anthropic principle to explain why we exist in the particular universe we do.

Put another way, in scientific language, "I know" is an incredibly strong statement. "I know" equals "I have a successful theory." To say that "I know God does not exist," as a scientist, I have to say "I have a theory of God's non-existence which not only was constructed to fit available data, but also predicted new, not yet observed results. I went out and observed those results and validated the theory." Honestly, I'm not entirely sure how to construct such a theory. God is not required to explain current physical observations, but I don't need to require that God _not_ exist either.

From a scientific perspective, lack of evidence to support God's existence is grounds for doubt, and even for scientific opinion. I.e. "I think God does not exist." But only active evidence for God's non-existence is grounds for "I know."

Date: 2007-03-03 01:46 am (UTC)
evilmagnus: (Default)
From: [personal profile] evilmagnus
Well, to be fair, I was repeating Richard Dawkin's contention. Rather than try to argue the point with you I suggest you borrow/buy The God Delusion, wherein Dawkins goes through all this far better than I could hope to.

Date: 2007-03-04 08:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wildpaletz.livejournal.com
Yeah, I'm enjoying reading, and agree with, your arguments.

Chris sometimes laughs at me because I believe in God via a redefinition of God. He's said something like, "It's like saying that you believe pigs can fly, and by 'pigs can fly,' you mean "the sky looks blue to me'!" Which is, honestly, a fair critique of my beliefs.

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