| Agnostic
or Atheist?
by Mano Singham
I am
sure that some of you have noticed that you get a more negative
response to saying you are an atheist than to saying that you
are an agnostic. For example, a reader spoke about
finding it "weird
that atheism is so counter-culture. Looking back at my youth,
announcing your non-belief in God was
a surefire shock tactic." But while I have noticed that
people are shocked when someone says that he/she is an atheist,
they are a lot more comfortable with you saying that you are
an agnostic. As a result some people might call themselves agnostics
just to avoid the raised eyebrows that come with being seen as
an atheist, lending support to the snide comment that "an
agnostic is a cowardly atheist."
I have often wondered why
agnosticism produces such a milder reaction. Partly the answer
is public perceptions. Atheism, at
least in the US, is associated with people who very visibly
and publicly challenge the role of god in the public sphere. When
Michael Newdow challenged the legality of the inclusion of "under
God" in the Pledge of Allegiance that his daughter had
to say in school, the media focused on his atheism as the driving
force, though there are religious people who also do not like
this kind of encroachment of religion into the public sphere.
In
former times, atheism was identified with the flamboyant
and abrasive Madalyn
Murray O'Hair whose legal action led
in 1963
to the US Supreme Court voting 8-1 to ban "'coercive'
public prayer and Bible-reading at public schools." (In
1964 Life magazine referred to her as the most hated woman
in America.)
I discussed earlier that the current so-called intelligent
design (ID) movement in its "Wedge" document sees
this action as the beginning of the moral decline of America
and is trying
to reverse that course by using ID as a wedge to infiltrate
god back into the public schools. Since O'Hair also founded
the organization
American Atheists, some people speculate that the negative
views that Americans have of atheism is because of the movement's
close
identification with her.
I think that it may also be that
religious people view atheism as a direct challenge to
their beliefs, since they think
atheism means that you believe that there definitely is
no god and
that hence they must be wrong. Whereas they think agnostics
keep an
open mind about the possible existence of god, so you are
accepting that they might be right.
The distinction between
atheism and agnosticism is a bit ambiguous. For example, if we
go to the Oxford English
Dictionary, the
words are defined as follows:
Atheist: One who denies
or disbelieves the existence of a God.
Agnostic: One who holds
that the existence of anything beyond and behind material phenomena
is unknown and
(so far as can
be judged) unknowable, and especially that a First
Cause and an
unseen world are subjects of which we know nothing.
The
definition of atheism seems to me to be too hard and creates
some problems. Denying the existence
of god seems
to me to
be unsustainable. I do not know how anyone can
reasonably claim that there definitely is no god, simply because
of the logical
difficulty of proving a negative. It is like claiming
that there
is no such thing as an extra-terrestrial being.
How
can one know such a thing for sure?
The definition
of agnosticism, on the other hand, seems to me to be too soft,
as if it grants the existence
of god in
some
form, but says we cannot know anything about she/he/it.
To
me the statement that makes a good starting point is the phrase
attributed to the scientist-mathematician
Laplace
in a possibly
apocryphal story. When he presented his book
called the System
of the World, Napoleon is said to have noted
that god did not appear in it, to which Laplace is supposed
to have
replied that "I
have no need for that hypothesis."
If you
hold an expanded Laplacian view that you have
no need for a god to provide meaning or
explanations and that
the
existence of god is so implausible as to be
not worth
considering as
a possibility, what label can be put on you,
assuming that a label
is necessary? It seems like this position puts
people somewhere between the Oxford Dictionary
definitions
of atheist and
agnostic. But until we have a new word, I think
that the word atheist
is closer than agnostic and we will have to
live with the surprise and dismay that it provokes.
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