Whoah! I don't think that I ever said that we need a creator at the the beginning of things, and yes there is no satisfying answer to what happened at the beginning. I don't believe in a creator, pretty much a definitional part of agnosticism. I just don't pretend I know things that I do not know, which seems to be something you are comfortable doing.Perhaps the only real difference in our positions is that I don't feel a need to assign a creator to the beginnings of things
Fair enough, I misspoke. I should have said "a need to assign the possibility of a creator to the beginning of things". As an agnostic, you don't necessarily believe in a creator, but you do want to preserve the possibility of a creator, in spite of there being no evidence for it (by saying "I don't know"). That's the difference between agnosticism and atheism in a nutshell, in my opinion. My entire point here is that you want that possibility for a creator, but you don't seem to require it for other, similar phenomena. For example, many people report seeing and talking to people who have died, in their dreams. This is (slim) evidence for ghosts, or at least life after death; and of a kind with all evidence for god. So why agnostic about only god? What is different about that idea? And you have provided some of your feelings in this regard already - "the system is a little too perfect".
Well I think in earlier comments I said that I wasn't only agnostic about god. I think I clearly allowed that my perception of the world as I know it could also be an illusion (the brain in the box or dream of a demon). Why don't you now list every pseudoscience, myth, and superstition and get it out of your system, please. Tell me what you know that I don't about the world beyond the big bang? Tell me about your certain knowledge of where the universe comes from? You have none, but choose to apply a belief based on the truth that the universe is observable, measurable and understandable that those things that aren't yet or possibly every observable, measurable or understandable. I will say that the perfection of the system of matter is pretty much the most mind blowing thing I know of. That three elementary bits can from a system of such flexibility and complexity makes me feel a bit queasy. I will say it even supports my feelings of agnosticism, there is really no evidence of a god, but fuck all that shit is crazy enough that who the fuck knows (none of us actually know).
There's no need for the attitude. You most certainly have not said anything about being agnostic about anything else; at least not to me. I'm done here.
Maybe this is why I have "attitude" as you pull out ghosts, unicorns and homeopathy the exact behaviour I described as the atheist line of argument against me not knowing something I can't know.
And now back to the question you dodged when my "attitude" became to much for you. Tell me about your certain knowledge of where the universe comes from? I'll take your being done here as you have no certain knowledge and you are operating on your own sense of faith.With the possible exception that I could be the dream of a demon or a brain in a box undergoing a science experiment, which would nullify any belief I hold in anything
I would say doubting the very existence of reality and admitting that it's something I can't know is pretty agnostic. But that's cool I know from experience that all that really matters to your average work a day atheist is to try and get me to admit that I now know there is no god. And so yes I most certainly have.I don't know why this position bothers atheist so much, but it seems to. They like to argue against my position like I'm a true believer and I usually say "you're right none of that shit makes any sense at all, that's why I don't believe it." Then construct grand arguments about why the idea of believing in a god is absurd and I tell em, "cool bro, I don't believe in a god either." They try again, belittling more shit I absolutely don't believe in and I try to push the conversation toward some other subject. They think I'm on the brink of taking up the torch and if they only pushed a little harder I would join the ranks of people who vehemently oppose the religious narrative against the possibility of a higher power. I'm already a soldier against dogmatic bullshit and what they are arguing makes no difference to my outlook or willingness to oppose said bullshit. I am just not willing to say that there is no chance that the world wasn't created by a higher power.
You attacked with the god of the gaps, a bit different from the position I stated above but still in the persuade you from points you already agree with position.
Ok, I said I'm done, but I will answer your direct question - with my own question. Where did I claim any certain knowlege? You have accused me at least twice of claiming things I don't know - show me where I did that.
I have no reason to believe any higher power exists; I have exactly as much faith in Yahweh as I do in Thor, or Santa. I'd be very surprised to learn that any of those are real. I'd be a bit less surprised to learn that some kind of god-like thing had created the universe - but I still have no reason to think that is so. I hope you don't think I'm trying to avoid the question; just trying to be clear. I suspect you have assumed I am a gnostic atheist (i.e. one who knows that god does not exist). I am an agnostic atheist, as are the majority of atheists, I would guess. I claim no direct knowledge of the existance (or not) of any gods at all.