<DIV>Is deism in the category of atheism?</DIV>
<DIV>A tip: it works to respond to believers that you believe in your own personal God, which is basically the truth. If you're an attorney then respond you believe in the attorney God; if you're a real estate or insurance agent, then respond that you believe in the 6.5% commission God, or whatever you want.</DIV>
<DIV>If you're gay, say you believe in the gay God. Why waste your time with believers?<BR><BR> >The question is not, do you believe in God.<BR>>The question is, what, in your mind, is the probability that God exists?<BR>>Presumably, religious believers would give this a high value. Atheists<BR>>would give it a low value. And agnostics, perhaps, would be somewhere<BR>>in between.<BR><BR>But is this right? Is the only difference between atheists and agnostics<BR>the numerical estiamte they would give for the probability that God<BR>exists? Or is there something else about this difference, something<BR>qualitative which Bayesian probability reasoning doesn't capture?<BR><BR>This analysis brings up another point as well. If someone asks you,<BR>"What is the probability that God exists?" you may well answer, "Define<BR>God." There are many notions of God in the literature, and some are<BR>more probable than others. There may even be as many notions of God<BR>as there
are people; or even more, for our conceptions of God probably<BR>change from time to time. Until you know which concept of God they are<BR>asking about, you can't give a meaningful answer to the probability of<BR>his existence.<BR><BR>Hal<BR>_______________________________________________<BR>extropy-chat mailing list<BR>extropy-chat@lists.extropy.org<BR>http://lists.extropy.org/mailman/listinfo/extropy-chat<BR></DIV><p>
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<a href="http://birthday.yahoo.com/netrospective/">Yahoo! Netrospective: 100 Moments of the Web</a>