On 5/17/2014 10:35 AM, Bruno Marchal wrote:
Very generaly, we can say that a believer M is agnostic with respect to a proposition A
if M does not believe A *and* does not believe ~A.
If G is for God exists, someone agnostic obeys ~[]G and ~[]~G. He does not believe in
God and he does not believe in the inexistence of God. Either because he is not
interested in the question, or because he waits for more information, and better
precision, or he believes may be that it is in God nature than humans can't decide,
whatever.
There's also the category of "strong agnostic", one who denies that a question can
possibly be resolved. And I suppose there is a whole range of agnosticism depending on
what degree of resolution is meant.
Brent
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