Okay that's pretty cool. I'd tend to label most people agnostic that you label atheist because there is a large difference between not believing in something and believing in something not. (incidentally nitpick here, atheists who say it's not a belief because 'if someone showed them proof they'd believe in a God and until then they won't' Yes that's good of you, but that's the same for everyone else. That's pretty much a definition of the word proof. If someone proved to me God didn't exist, I'd stop believing in him. But since I'm confident he exists, I'm confident you will never be able to come up with that proof. I suspect most atheists who make the statement don't believe proof will be presented or else they would be agnostic.Continuity said:[
Ah well when I say atheist I basically mean not Christian (other other minority faith). A secular person who hasn't really thought about it one way or the other I would classify as atheist. You dont have to do anything or believe anything to be an atheist, you just have to refrain from actively believing in God.
As for "militant atheists", well these people form a subset of convicted and vocal atheists, however I don't think you need to be in anyway convicted or vocal to be atheist.
* An addition to that is that, since ultimately all non-mathematical proof is ultimately subjective proving something to yourself is very different from proving it to someone else)
And I feel confident in those categories because my agnostic friends have a very different view point from my atheist friends. (And I tend to find it's much much cooler to talk religion with atheist friends because rivalry can be fun and the debate is stimultating whereas it can be harder to gell when someone dismisses something you hold central to your entire existence as something they can't really be bothered to think about)
And I'm guessing from the style of the OP and the thread that we're very much more talking about what I would classify as atheist. I suspect we're talking about all the cartoons and take that headlines and humour articles etc and people who respond to religious debates or enjoy calling religion outdated and so on than the people who just don't hold an opinion. At least most people here having been talking about vocal minorities and so on.
Incidentally I finally have something to contribute. As far as webcomics go, mocking God gets a good reaction and is a reflection of the fact that a lot of webcomic authors are pretty inciteful and good at looking at the world and breaking down what it means. They get used to seeing punchlines in things and it leads them to ask really good questions, but all the same it's hard to find the answers and so on it can leave an atheistic impression. It's really cool to see and the number of webcomics I've seen that have touched on issues so big that the big man himself devoted chapters to them, it's pretty inspiring. (Although my favourite one I'm afraid is a little less virtuous of me and it's when Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal decided to be edgy and shocking and said 'Real questions are like; Which one of your _dead_ wives will you sleep with in heaven' when 2000 years ago some people tried to trip Jesus up with the exact same question and he just replied 'Guys, do you really know nothing of heaven?')
Whereas I think a Christian webcomic wouldn't be so good. I think far from liking it, I might become a bit uncomfortable about a webcomic that openly mocks people, because it;s not so loving is it? And it would probably annoy the neutrals too, because it would feel like an attack on them in a way that attacking God doesn't. So that's why webcomics tend to be more atheist than christian