braineclipse
Steve Sedgley
Has to be a quick reply to some of your points
1. Sorry but I do not accept the get out clause that athesism is the rejection of gods claims. Atheism is the belief there is no deity and therefore when discussing creation its the belief that a perfect storm of chance is responsible. I can accept your answer of don't know, now except mine that I don't know how a deity moulded creation.
2. I think you need to do either more reading on pantheism or on religion. Most religions have strong elements of pantheism within their core beliefs. I can give examples if you need.
3. Agnostics and atheists are not the same thing not even close. Agnostics are as close to theist as they are to atheists.
When I say athesism has created a hegonomy that they are more in tune with science then the theists that's exactly what I mean. hegonomy doesn't represent truth though, like I have stated repeatedly most scientific discoveries have are from people of faith.
If you wouldn't mind could you give me your definition or description of what you mean by atheism, theism, pantheism and agnosticism? I think that would be a useful part of a discussion at this point.
1. Ok, you accept my answer of "I don't know". Do you see how your answer implies a claim about the existence of a deity. That's a positive claim that needs defending, my answer of "I don't know" doesn't make a claim like that. I can obviously accept that you believe it, but I can't accept the claim as true without reason.
2. We were talking about pantheism as a description for Einstein's religious beliefs. Einstein didn't believe in a personal GHod, that seems fairly common amongst pantheists to me. This is different from the belief of most monotheists and by your words different from your beliefs. Thus you cannot use Einstein as your authority figure here. You can argue for the case of pantheism instead of your own beliefs for the sake of argument I suppose, but I don't really see the point at this time as the entire discussion so far has been about theism and atheism.
3. I haven't said they're the same thing! I've specifically said the two words describe different aspects. Atheist describes someone's (lack of) belief, agnosticism describes someone's claim to knowledge.
What I did say was that they aren't mutually exclusive, and that I identify with both terms. I'm both an agnostic and an atheist (and an anti-theist). I think you can be an agnostic and a theist too by the way. But here we're getting nowhere and fast without either common definitions for the words or an understanding of how our definitions vary.
I think this wiki article pretty much summarizes my views on this: http://wiki.ironchariots.org/index.php?title=Atheist_vs._agnostic
I will again, since I'm both stubborn and patient, ask you for a source if you disagree with this or the definitions used. I know that a fairly common use of the word agnostic is for someone somehow in between atheism and theism, someone that neither believes or disbelieves. I don't find this definition or use of the word particularly useful.
The people that make atheists seem more connected with science are generally religious people that reject (parts of) science. For example a significant part of various populations reject evolution, almost exclusively for religious reasons. By comparison atheists look strongly identified with science. I would be perfectly happy to see more religious people reject those parts of their religion that contradicts science and accept scientific consensus as a basis for understanding the world. Would be progress. But until that happens the people you should blame for atheists looking much firmer in the pro-science camp than theists would be other believers.