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Overview

atheism

Subject: Religion

The theory or belief that God does not exist. The word comes (in the late 16th century, via French) from Greek atheos, from a- ‘without’ + theos ‘god’.

atheism

atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
284 words

...). Sometimes referred to as negative atheism or non-theism ( 1 ) , or less commonly weak or soft atheism . 2. Belief that there is no God or gods. Arguably the most popular current usage, atheism here signifies disbelief in the existence of a God or gods, and is distinguished from both theism and agnosticism. In common speech, the term is often understood to imply a degree of conviction or certainty ( see also anti-theism ). Sometimes referred to as positive atheism , or less commonly strong or hard atheism . 3. Belief in the falsity of a specific...

positive atheism

positive atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
158 words

...atheism The belief that there is no such thing as a God or gods, as opposed to a broader absence of a belief that there is ( see negative atheism ). Positive atheism is thus used to distinguish non-belief from other species of atheism , such as agnosticism and certain forms of indifference . It is pointed out that positive atheism is, in fact, a special category of negative atheism (since all those who believe there is no God are ipso facto without a belief that there is). Synonyms include hard atheism (versus soft atheism ), strong atheism...

negative atheism

negative atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
156 words

...include soft atheism (versus hard atheism ) and weak atheism (versus strong atheism). Negative atheism, like its equivalents, is almost exclusively encountered in technical writings on the definition of atheism . It is worth noting, however, that positive and negative are the preferred nomenclature in recent major reference works, such as The Cambridge Companion to Atheism and The Oxford Handbook of Atheism...

State Atheism

State Atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
121 words

...State Atheism State Atheism is the name given to the incorporation of positive atheism or non-theism into political regimes, particularly associated with Soviet systems ( see scientific atheism ). State Atheisms have tended to be as much anti-clerical and anti-religious as they are anti-theist , and typically place heavy restrictions on acts of religious organization and the practice of religion. State Atheist regimes are sometimes seen as examples of political secularism because they entail a nonreligious form of government; these regimes are even...

Atheism Plus

Atheism Plus   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
102 words

...Atheism Plus A broad (primarily online) movement of non-theists and others ‘dedicated to promoting social justice and countering misogyny, racism, homo/bi/transphobia, ableism and other such bigotry inside and outside of the atheist community’. The name is often used interchangeably with Atheism+ (which is itself sometimes abbreviated to A+). While the movement emerged explicitly in 2012—based on a suggestion by blogger Jen McCreight—it arguably crystallized a growing dissatisfaction in some quarters with mainstream non-theist culture (including the New...

New Atheism

New Atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
186 words

...New Atheism Coined by the US journalist Gary Wolf in 2006 , New Atheism is a term used to identify a cultural movement generally united by a strongly anti-theist outlook based on non-theist , rationalist claims (concerning the incompatibility of theism and reason) and/or moral objections to religious institutions (concerning their perceived illiberalism, including gender inequality and repression of members). New Atheism is also associated with the veneration of Western science, and most New Atheists are identifiable as humanists . New Atheism was...

scientific atheism

scientific atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
297 words

...scientific atheism [Russian: nauchny ateizm .] 1. Distinctive social, cultural, and ideological pro-atheist project within the Soviet Union (and elsewhere within its sphere of influence). At the theoretical level, as the official worldview of the Soviet Union, scientific atheism packaged together positive atheism with, among other things, an explicit anti-religious message (justified on the basis of historical and social-scientific studies of religion), and a commitment to the tenets of Marxism–Leninism. Its practical applications varied over...

methodological atheism

methodological atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
188 words

...methodological atheism A device used by empirical researchers, especially in sociology and other human sciences, to bracket metaphysical questions for the purposes of research and focus exclusive on naturalist explanations for religious phenomena. The approach focuses on claims about the existence and action of God(s) but is also applied to any supernatural aspects of religious phenomena, so that atheism is here a proxy for materialism . Introduced by the sociologist Peter Berger in 1967 , methodological atheism aims to be neutral towards metaphysical...

militant atheism

militant atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
144 words

...militant atheism A frequent, heavily contested term mainly associated with popular debate of the twenty-first century, and pointing to the significance of anti-theist and anti-religious strands in contemporary non-theistic movements, especially associated with New Atheism . The term also connotes proselytizing or evangelical dimensions to these movements. Nonreligious actors frequently question the extent to which ‘militancy’ can be correctly or fairly applied to activity that does not typically involve physical violence, though this critique does...

practical atheism

practical atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
163 words

...practical atheism 1. Sometimes used to describe a type of nominal, or otherwise deficient, form of (normally Christian) religious believing and practice. The French Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain, for example, described practical atheists as those ‘who believe that they believe in God (and who perhaps believe in Him in their brains) but who in reality deny His existence by each one of their deeds’ ( 1947 ). The phrase itself was popular among some leading twentieth-century theologians (e.g. Karl Barth, Karl Rahner, Henri de Lubac), although the general...

atheism

atheism   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Philosophy (3 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Philosophy
Length:
66 words

... Either the lack of belief that there exists a god, or the belief that there exists none. Sometimes thought itself to be more dogmatic than mere agnosticism, although atheists retort that everyone is an atheist about most gods, so they merely advance one step further. http://www.pluralism.org/resources/tradition/atheism_links.php A list of internet resources on atheism http://www.philosophytalk.org/shows/existence-god-0 An audio discussion of the arguments for and against God’s...

atheism

atheism   Reference library

The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2010
Subject:
Philosophy
Length:
2,181 words

...seem to have contributed to a general decline in orthodox Christian belief and practice. Bibliography Baggini, Julian , Atheism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 2003). Budd, Susan , Varieties of Unbelief: Atheists and Agnostics in English Society 1850–1960 (1977). Smart, J.J. C and J.J. Haldane , Atheism and Theism (Oxford, 1996). Thrower, James , A History of Atheism in Britain: From Hobbes to Russell (1988). ——, Western Atheism: A Short History (New York, 2000). Wilson, A. N. , God's Funeral (1999). Stephen Watt See also God, Existence of ; ...

Positive Atheism magazine

Positive Atheism magazine   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
70 words

...Positive Atheism magazine Pioneering US-based online magazine and community (incorporating an email list and discussion forum), founded in 1995 by Cliff Walker, who maintained the website until his death in 2013 . Positive Atheism (or PAM) was one of the first online hubs for atheism/non-theism. Beginning in 2000 , the website published deconversion stories from readers. Through this and other initiatives, Positive Atheism was an early and influential proponent of Atheist Pride...

atheism and agnosticism

atheism and agnosticism   Reference library

George I. Mavrodes

The Oxford Companion to Philosophy (2 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2005
Subject:
Philosophy
Length:
201 words

... and agnosticism . Atheism is ostensibly the doctrine that there is no God. Some atheists support this claim by arguments. But these arguments are usually directed against the Christian concept of God, and are largely irrelevant to other possible gods. Thus much Western atheism may be better understood as the doctrine that the Christian God does not exist. Agnosticism may be strictly personal and confessional—‘I have no firm belief about God’—or it may be the more ambitious claim that no one ought to have a positive belief for or against the divine...

neo-atheistic

neo-atheistic   Quick reference

A Dictionary of Atheism

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2016
Subject:
Religion, Philosophy
Length:
7 words

...neo-atheistic Of or pertaining to New Atheism...

William Hammon

William Hammon  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Philosophy
(probably a pseudonym: fl. 1782)William Hammon was one of the two putative writers of the first English work of open, avowed atheism, An Answer to Dr. Priestley's Letters to ...
Daniel Scargill

Daniel Scargill  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Philosophy
(fl. 1669)We know little of Daniel Scargill's life. According to Venn, he was a native of Cambridgeshire, who was admitted sizar at Corpus Christi, Cambridge in 1661, matriculating in ...
Paul Rée

Paul Rée  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Philosophy
(1849–1901).German philosopher, noted for his radical empiricism and uncompromising rejection of metaphysics and religion. The son of a wealthy Prussian landowner, Rée fought in the Franco-Prussian ...
Anthony Florian Madinger Willich

Anthony Florian Madinger Willich  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Philosophy
(d. 1804)Anthony Willich was born at Rössel, Ermland, in East Prussia (now Retzel, Poland) and died in February 1804 at Kharkov in the Ukraine. He was a doctor who ...
Tinkler Ducket

Tinkler Ducket  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Philosophy
(c.1711–c.1774)Tinkler Ducket was admitted to Caius College, Cambridge as a sizar in 1727 at the age of 16. He was the son of Henry Ducket, a farmer of Spixworth ...

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