And lots of different types
of agnostics.
There are some agnostic theists, who are not sure about a god, but lean toward accepting one or another of them, but I think that the majority
of agnostics live without belief and conduct their daily lives atheistically.
It's likely that the majority of them fall into the agnostic category
of agnostic atheists, as identified in wikipedia.
I think we would be more
of an agnostic to other god (s).
I have a similar view of religion as Einstien and Ben Franklin — kind
of agnostic.
I would think you are more
of an agnostic.
The number
of agnostic theists are probably much greater than the number
of agnostic atheists.
The number
of agnostic theists are probably much greater than the number
of agnostic theists.
I think a lot
of agnostic / atheist people would be perfectly content to live their lives without making their personal convictions a crusade if the other side didn't make a crusade out of their religious beliefs.
The summarized version
of the agnostic prefix is «One who admits he doesn't have information to reach a reasonable decision either way».
Twenty years later, Einstein said this:» «My position concerning God is that
of an agnostic.
«My position concerning God is that
of an agnostic.
«The foundation
of your agnostic delusion is the same as my belief.
This is the position
of the agnostic who, according to the Oxford dictionary definition is «one who holds that nothing is known, or likely to be known of the existence of a God or of anything beyond material phenomena.»
The «disposition» highlighted by Mr Trower surely admits of support by carefully articulated evidence, just as it has admitted of massive suppression by the powerful misinformation
of our agnostic culture.
I'm more
of an agnostic than an atheist, but I know other atheists and none of them are as hateful and deplorable as this Perce fellow appears to be from the article.
I am a Christian... but an astounding number
of agnostics and pagans and atheists keep coming into my life, and I love them to bits.
If I'm more
of an agnostic Pagan.
Half
of all agnostics actually believe in God, at least in terms of a universal force or Primal Origin, perhaps «within.»
I'm more
of an agnostic than an atheist.
Why not try the middle ground
of Agnostic belief?
Yale Law Professor Arthur Leff expressed the bewilderment
of an agnostic culture that yearns for enduring values in a brilliant lecture delivered at Duke University in 1979, a few years before his untimely death from cancer.
The position
of the agnostic is the only true position.
Sorry I jumped all over you before — I just didn't care for the callous description
of an agnostic.
When I've run this by
some of my agnostic and atheist buddies — largely bright, ethical people — the materialist talking points never come up.
At the risk of seeming elitist, it would be interesting to know the average IQ
of the agnostics and atheists versus the average IQ of the others in the study.
Camie Ayash was raised in Brooklyn, the daughter
of an agnostic nurse and a New York City cop with a skeptic's approach to religion.
She was just one
of those agnostics.
Funny, but I've never heard of a group
of agnostics taking up arms against a group of atheists.
I guess you and others choose the less demonized term
of agnostic since you'd less likey to get your tires slashed or lose your job and friends or come to bodily harm.
Just 4.5 percent
of agnostics became Protestant or Catholic by 2014.
It's more
of an agnostic stance than a cop out.
Though I never read her blog, it sounds to me like she was more
of an agnostic.
Short
of the agnostics or a few of the reasonable eastern beliefs, everyone else believes that everyone else is wrong.
The most common position is that
of agnostic atheism.
I'm more
of an agnostic, mainly because I've experienced some freaky metaphysical - based things, but certainly not anything having to do with dogma in any way.
We can be thankful for this dedication even on the part
of agnostic colleagues who do not see it as a form of worshiping God with the mind.
After summarizing the excruciatingly weird life
of the agnostic novelist, Walther observes that the novel is remarkably affirmative of the metaphysical claims of medieval Catholicism.
Indeed, Hartshorne's catalogue of ills that afflict those who have lost faith in nature and God as friends is a frightful list: «men are likely to grow bitter, or depressed and fearful, or genially cynical and selfish, or mad with megalomaniac ambition, or slavishly worshipful of power or wealth — or just dull and apathetic and unimaginative, like a number
of agnostics I have known.
To be fair I also know a ton
of agnostics that won't shut up about how Christians are inferior to them.
I suspect she's not really an atheist but something more along the lines
of an agnostic or skeptic.
Meanwhile Archbishop Ravassi, Prefect for the Pontifical Council for Culture, had already announced that a «Court of the Gentiles» will be inaugurated in Paris next March, hoping «to create a network
of agnostic or atheistic people who accept dialogue».
Since you more or less admit to not knowing, and leaving the door open to the possibility [of no god], then you are more
of an agnostic.
Since you more or less admit to not knowing, and leaving the door open to the possibility, then you are more
of an agnostic.
In this, Romantic modernists did not so much discard the old myths as translate them into the conceptual framework
of an agnostic and intuitive humanism.
I feel comfortable making the claim that the majority of atheists are
of the agnostic atheist variety.
«Do you believe that being an atheist means you know there is no God or are you more
of an agnostic?»
Even many liberals for whom faith in activist government had earlier been the central doctrine of their political creed have recently felt twinges
of agnostic uncertainty.
Not only are the words «belief» and «knowledge» not universally defined, but the very idea
of an agnostic is silly if you really stick to the distinctions people will give you.
I love the cherry fabric, wonder if I could find something like it... Sarabeth Life
of an Agnostic Sunday School Teacher