Ponuh wrote:
I agree with most of what he says but there are a few points of contention. The ones that pop into my mind are his views against agnosticism. He says that they are "fence sitters" and entirely indecisive. I would call myself an atheist but agnosticism is really the product of what his personal beliefs prescribe. Skepticism and reliance on evidence, and since no evidence has come or will come to disprove God, one must remain agnostic. So to attack that seems odd to me. He does make the distinction that there should be a jumping off point where enough evidence accounts for natural based theories can allow one to safely label themselves as atheists without betraying skepticism.
Still, there's just too much dark matter for a lot of people out there to completely rule God out.
edit: also I think the "Brights" movement (movement to give atheists a slang name similar to "Gays" as "Brights") the only problem is that these nicknames are rarely self given and "Brights" implies some sort of intellectual superiority.
Whisp wrote:
the thing about agnosticism is based on how one uses the word. i consider myself an agnostic atheist. because i don't believe in a god (atheist) and i don't claim to know the truth (agnostic). according to my understanding, agnostic just refers to, basically, whether or not you admit that you may be wrong. with that in mind, agnosticism itself is only a description that can be attached to a belief, i.e. agnostic Christian, agnostic atheist, etc. If someone were asked their religion or set of beliefs, and they answered "agnostic," it wouldn't really answer what they think. And what Dawkins is unnerved about is that people will say their religion is "Agnostic" in order to avoid commitment to an opinion either because they are afraid to say what they think or because they really just don't give a crap about the big questions of existence. Like, I'd say, "I'm agnostic, but I believe nothing spiritual exists." If someone were to say, "I'm agnostic, but I don't have a freakin clue and I honestly don't give a damn," which is the group Dawkins is referring to, it begs the question, "You're agnostic about WHAT?"
Ponuh wrote:
Agnosticism about religion seems to be pretty well defined. I think it's true that it's probably catching the "i'm too lazy to make up my mind" but really what I see agnostics saying is "There is evidence against the existence of God, there is almost non-existent evidence for the existence of God, but it can't be disproven so I cannot say He doesn't exist". For Dawkins to attack that is to betray his belief that people should follow the evidence because there is not yet (ever will be) sufficient evidence to disprove God.
"I cannot say God exists" still doesn't answer
what they believe