gcomeau wrote:
You have presented no "problem" with Huxley's definition. The word describes a specific belief, that isn't a problem that's just what the word means.In the literal sense, we are all ignorant of the Truth, whether that Truth is God or His absence. We are persuaded to believe one way or the other by evidence each of us finds compelling. So, Huxley's definition is useful to describe one sort of agnostic. The sort that believe no evidence can be compelling enough.
The agnostic isn't the ignorant. We are all ignorant in the literal sense. The agnostic is the un-persuaded.
Un-persuaded of *what*?
Of whether God exists? Wrong. I know agnostics who are un-persuaded and agnostics who are persuaded.
Here is an appropriate quote from this critical thinker:
Huxley states, "Agnosticism, in fact, is not a creed, but a method, the essence of which lies in the rigorous [sic] application of a single principle... the fundamental axiom of modern science... In matters of the intellect, follow your reason as far as it will take you, without regard to any other consideration... In matters of the intellect, do not pretend that conclusions are certain which are not demonstrated or demonstrable."
The bolded text is incompatible with the assertion that anything is unknowable. Since the limit of what can or cannot be proven is unknown, asserting it as unknowable is an act of faith or in Huxley's words a creed. If God's existence or absence is indeed proven to be unknowable, then agnostics would use no faith. They simply remain persuaded by whatever evidence theists or atheists present.
creed [ krēd ]
NOUN
a system of Christian or other religious belief; a faith:
The definition you used is a problem because Huxley's use of agnostic was an attempt to eschew the use of faith in reasoning. How can you avoid the use when the definition embraces it? I find this contradiction a problem.
Agnostics are persuaded by any evidence pointing to the belief that God either exists or does not exist. Theists and atheists have been persuaded one way or the other to believe in what has not been proved.