An old issue has been cropping up in my thinking and reading just lately. Some years ago I had to correct a bad habit of conflating the beliefs (or non-beliefs) of people who identify as atheists and/or materialists and/or humanists and/or skeptics. I was told - usually by one of those who so identify - that an atheist is not necessarily a materialist and so forth. Additionally, my son insists that a humanist is not necessarily an atheist and says that I could call myself a humanist (or secular) because I don't accept religious teaching or traditions.
Fine, but this leaves me confused. When I go to humanist web sites I am in no doubt (nor are the people who express opinions there) that humanist is identical to atheist. None of them would be caught giving any credence to notions such as the afterlife or psychic phenomena. Likewise, I have never spoken or read anything by an atheist who claims to be anything other than a materialist (or some closely related ism like a physicalist or a naturalist).
As far as I know, the skeptics here and others I've come across on the Skeptiko forum, all identify as skeptics and also as atheists. An example of a "spiritual" atheist has been suggested several times: that being a buddhist because Buddhism has no theology; no God. I believe that Susan Blackmore claims to be such a buddhist. However, when I have listened to buddhists either in my personal life or in videos online, they all talk of spiritual realities. They believe in some form of afterlife and/or reincarnation cycle. I found a website specifically for "Secular Buddhists" such as Blackmore and this quote comes from their guidelines for newbies:
Amazing, the lengths these guys will go to to hang on to their materialist dogma. They claim to be buddhists yet reject the central core of the teaching of the Buddha himself. Contrast the above that to what an actual buddhist writes about rebirth.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth...birth.html
So, it seems to me that those who identify as materialists, humanists, secular or skeptics (at least the kind of skeptics we here are familiar with) are all atheists and are all proselytising that dogma. Otherwise, I would be happy to call myself a humanist if my views on the afterlife or parapsychology would be found perfectly acceptable by other so-called humanists but I doubt that, going by what they say on their UK website:
Fine, but this leaves me confused. When I go to humanist web sites I am in no doubt (nor are the people who express opinions there) that humanist is identical to atheist. None of them would be caught giving any credence to notions such as the afterlife or psychic phenomena. Likewise, I have never spoken or read anything by an atheist who claims to be anything other than a materialist (or some closely related ism like a physicalist or a naturalist).
As far as I know, the skeptics here and others I've come across on the Skeptiko forum, all identify as skeptics and also as atheists. An example of a "spiritual" atheist has been suggested several times: that being a buddhist because Buddhism has no theology; no God. I believe that Susan Blackmore claims to be such a buddhist. However, when I have listened to buddhists either in my personal life or in videos online, they all talk of spiritual realities. They believe in some form of afterlife and/or reincarnation cycle. I found a website specifically for "Secular Buddhists" such as Blackmore and this quote comes from their guidelines for newbies:
Quote:The most common topic people ask about is Rebirth. So, for the record . . . most secular Buddhist do not believe in literal rebirth after death. In fact, I don’t know of any secular Buddhists who believe in rebirth.
Secular Buddhists have a variety of ways of approaching teachings or text where they see mention of past lives, future lives, or reincarnation in general. Some just ignore the passages and move on. Some of us choose to look at the topic as a metaphor for the many ways the feeling of self and ego arise, the rebirth of greed, hatred, etc. And some feel that either these passages about literal rebirth were added to the Pali canon at a later time, or that the writers misunderstood or mistranslated the teachings, or that Buddha was victim to the times he was born in, or that he put a lot of weight in meditation experience. Some even feel rebirth is contradictory to the teachings.
Amazing, the lengths these guys will go to to hang on to their materialist dogma. They claim to be buddhists yet reject the central core of the teaching of the Buddha himself. Contrast the above that to what an actual buddhist writes about rebirth.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth...birth.html
Quote:Rebirth has always been a central teaching in the Buddhist tradition. The earliest records in the Pali Canon (MN 26; MN 36) indicate that the Buddha, prior to his awakening, searched for a happiness not subject to the vagaries of repeated birth, aging, illness, and death. One of the reasons he left his early teachers was because he recognized that their teachings led, not to the goal he sought, but to rebirth on a refined level. On the night of his awakening, two of the three knowledges leading to his release from suffering focused on the topic of rebirth. The first showed his own many previous lives; the second, depicting the general pattern of beings dying and being reborn throughout the cosmos, showed the connection between rebirth and karma, or action.
So, it seems to me that those who identify as materialists, humanists, secular or skeptics (at least the kind of skeptics we here are familiar with) are all atheists and are all proselytising that dogma. Otherwise, I would be happy to call myself a humanist if my views on the afterlife or parapsychology would be found perfectly acceptable by other so-called humanists but I doubt that, going by what they say on their UK website:
Quote:Here you can find resources about why many humanists believe it is the finite nature of our lives that makes our lives meaningful, and that humanists believe something of us does survive our death (our genes, works, and shared ideas and experiences).
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
Freeman Dyson