Chief Walkin Eagle
Well-Known Member
wtf is a foxhole? lol
You can call yourself agnostic if you want, no need to feel defensive. We're just pointing out that, unless we are privy to whats in your head, hearing that your agnostic doesn't tell us much.i am agnostic , i am not convinced this how i describe myself get over it , i will be a theist if there is proof , or i will be a atheist if it is proven , i am not convinced therefore i am agnostic
How were you able to determine that all agnostics don't believe?Agnosticism is just a cop out for people that don't believe in God but are too scared to denounce it
the prefix also means "lack of", "without", or "absence of" such as amoral does not literally mean 'not moral' which in my mind can be interpreted as immoral, but lack of morality in general much like atheism is 'without any theistic belief.'The prefix 'a' meaning not, anything that is not belief in a higher power, is not-theism, undecided or not.
That's not the truth at all. Prove it.All I know is there ain't no atheists in a foxhole and thats the truth.
Oh you guys are gunna LOVE who wrote this lol
Atheists are of three kinds.
- The mere stupid man. (Often he is very clever, as Bolingbroke, Bradlaugh and Foote were clever). He has found out one of the minor arcana, and hugs it and despises those who see more than himself, or who regard things from a different standpoint. Hence he is usually a bigot, intolerant even of tolerance.
- The despairing wretch, who, having sought God everywhere, and failed to find Him, thinks everyone else is as blind as he is, and that if he has failedhe, the seeker after truth!it is because there is no goal. In his cry there is pain, as with the stupid kind of atheist there is smugness and self-satisfaction. Both are diseased Egos.
- The philosophical adept, who, knowing God, says There is No God, meaning, God is Zero, as qabalistically He is. He holds atheism as a philosophical speculation as good as any other, and perhaps less likely to mislead mankind and do other practical damage as any other. Him you may know by his equanimity, enthusiasm, and devotion. I again refer to Liber 418 for an explanation of this mystery. The nine religions are crowned by the ring of adepts whose password is There is No God, so inflected that even the Magister when received among them had not wisdom to interpret it.
There is a fourth kind of atheist, not really an atheist at all. He is but a traveller in the Land of No God, and knows that it is but a stage on his journeyand a stage, moreover, not far from the goal. Daath is not on the Tree of Life; and in Daath there is no God as there is in the Sephiroth, for Daath cannot understand unity at all. If he thinks of it, it is only to hate it, as the one thing which he is most certainly not (see Liber 418, 10th Æthyr. I may remark in passing that this book is the best known to me on Advanced Qabalah, and of course it is only intelligibile to Advanced Students).This atheist, not in-being but in-passing, is a very apt subject for initiation. He has done with the illusions of dogma. From a Knight of the Royal Mystery he has risen to understand with the members of the Sovereign Sanctuary that all is symbolic; all, if you will, the Jugglery of the Magician. He is tired of theories and systems of theology and all such toys; and being weary and anhungered and athirst seeks a seat at the Table of Adepts, and a portion of the Bread of Spiritual Experience, and a draught of the wine of Ecstasy.
(My words) I'd like to think atheists of today are a combination of these... I think one and two are the most frequent mixes.
You know I used to be a hardcore athiest the one thing that has always stuck with me was an argument someone brought up too me one time, I believe the "Kalam argument?"The foxhole line was an old argument, meaning when you face death, like soldiers in the heat of the war, you will pray that god will help you. It's a little insulting because it assumes that a person has to believe in their god no matter what.
I've faced death before a lot of times. Close calls with drugs, nearly falling off a cliff, countless times almost getting hit in a car, and the most recent was when I was drunk and driving 130+ on the freeway, when I spun out and crashed into a wall. Not sure how I survived, but everything was in slow motion. Point being, none of those experiences made me look to God. I never had that foxhole moment. I always think, shit I hope I this isn't the end, then I freeze, and my mind goes silent.
A person's belief is a product of upbringing. If you take a Buddhist monk and put a gun to their head, do you honestly think they're going to suddenly believe in jesus? No! Of course not. And no reasonable person would think otherwise.
I personally know of two types of atheists. Strong and soft atheists. A strong atheist is a person who cannot fathom a deity as real. It's like trying to convince a Christian to believe in Thor. It's just not going to happen without some crazy brain washing. A soft atheist is a person who looks at their life, questions god or becomes angry towards god and decides they don't want to believe anymore. This is more common. Lots of people, even christians will go through this phase at least once in their life. A women who has an abortion, a father who loses their child, a person who lives through genocide or terrorism could easily be lead to question their faith. However it's usually short lived. Eventually the person will stop being mad at god and start to believe again. A fence sitter, I mean an agnostic, is a person who refuses to take a position. They either use arguments like it's impossible to know or they simply don't care either way. However in the end, eventually the agnostic leans more one way or the other. Kind of like how some people are bi-sexual. I don't care if you eat pussy, if you suck dick your still gay. Same thing with agnostic. If you don't accept a god as real or logical, to me your an atheist.
I am a strong atheist. I've tried for years to believe because I like the idea of heaven and god, but I'm a very logical thinker. Its difficult for me to accept. I've come to conclude that I just have a different belief and it's at my very core that it's not going to change unless something very dramatic, like jesus himself appearing before me, will change. I don't hate god, I'm not angry towards any religion. It's just not my belief. My moral compass comes not from the bible, but common sense. When I need extra guidance as to what is right I turn to the philosophy of ethics, such as what Emmanuel Kant teaches. However, I accept even these systems are flawed. Kant (and christians) have a hard time with the holocoaust dilemma.
Imagine for a moment you're a German during WWII. Your best friend and their family, that you've know all your life come knocking at your door. They are jews and plead for help. They ask you to hide them because the Nazis are coming. Your inner moral compass says the right thing to do is to hide them, but then the Nazis come and ask if they are there. Telling a lie is wrong, but somehow in this case, it seems right. Yet the Bible, Kant, and countless other systems of ethics have a hard time with this. When does one wrong cancel out another? Only you can decide this.
That's not the truth at all. Prove it.
Although I do understand what you're saying, you may be overstating it a bit. Most of the universe will not support life of any kind. The earth itself was very hostile to life for a very long time, and much of it still is today. If the goal was human life, it sure seems like a really inefficient plan. I am not sure we can assign the universe one single purpose, and certainly that purpose can't be human existence.I agree why couldn't it just happen by chance, but then I think dude are we really that lucky? Do humans really deserve this 1 in a 999,999,999,999,999,999,999,999,999,999(it's much bigger number)chance that everything would fall into place so perfectly in the universe to support human life.