EdThomas wrote:I hope this doesn't offend anyone. The problem with both sides here is that both
believe unknowable things. God does. god doesn't. Discussions like this are really pointless because both sides are correct and wrong, maybe
I describe my self as an agnostic cuz I don't know
You have stumbled upon my single greatest pet peeve... the extremely widespread misuse of the term "agnostic". (And "atheist" and "theist" for that matter). Apologies in advance for the number of words I'm about to spend on this...
Theism is simply the belief a deity exists. Note that there is
no attendant claim to knowledge involved. That is not to say any given theist may not claim to *know* God exists, but only the belief part is required to make a person a theist. Their claim to knowledge is extraneous to that point. So your comment about it being an unknowable thing is irrelevant to the determination of whether a person can legitimately be a theist.
Conversely, atheism is the lack of possession of that belief. Again,
no claim to knowledge is involved. (And again, individual atheists may still claim to *know* God doesn't exist but what makes them atheists is simply that they do not believe God does. Any claim to knowledge is a separate consideration.)
Note that those two terms describe a binary solution set. You do, or you do not, have the belief a deity exists resident in your brain. There isn't a third option.
Agnosticism however is the most persistently and egregiously misused term among the three as throngs of people across the internet constantly try to redefine the term to declare it is in fact that non-existent third option. First they either implicitly or explicitly modify the meanings of theism and atheism to include claims to knowledge in order to manufacture a condition in which they can then declare that "I don't know" is a third alternative. You went the implicit route by declaring that "I don't know" was the alternative to atheism and theism.
Agnosticism does not mean "I don't know". The term for that is ignorance. Ignorance is not a philosophical position one stakes out and assigns an "ism" to. (Note that I am not using the term ignorance in a derogatory manner)
Agnosticism means, in very simple terms, the belief that NOBODY CAN know. That as a consequence of the manner in which deity is defined the properties of that entity would make it literally impossible to ever acquire certain knowledge about whether or not it exists. This is where your mention of unknowable things becomes relevant, as that is indeed the exact reason a person would actually be an agnostic.
If you want the complete original definition straight from the guy who invented the term in the first place:
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=agnostic"one who professes that the existence of a First Cause and the essential nature of things are not and cannot be known"Here's the thing though.
This is not, in any way, a distinct position from theism or atheism. I am an atheist (I have no belief that a God exists). I am ALSO an agnostic (I recognize that due to the various claimed supernatural attributes of this supposed entity it is impossible to test the proposition that it exists).
I know many many theist agnostics as well. Believe God exists, recognize this can never be known for sure.
What there are not are agnostics as an alternative to both theism and atheism existing in their own distinct space separate from either, no matter how hard so very many people try to claim there are.
(Please resist the urge to cite me a dictionary definition of agnosticism that includes among the possible definitions the formulation I have just explained is wrong as a means of attempted rebuttal. The dictionary is supposed to list all usages of a word which are common. Huge numbers of people mean this wrong thing when they use the word. As a result the dictionary will quite properly list it as a definition. That does not change that theism and atheism define a binary condition and this third ground the people using the term in that manner are attempting to claim they occupy is non-existent.)