91 wrote:
Positive and negative atheism are not universally recognized terms, even among atheists.
They are not, but some philosophical works use them as terms to distinguish active and passive belief; this says nothing about the belief itself being good ("positive") or bad ("negative").
91 wrote:
As to your idea that someone is an atheist towards the gods they do not believe in; I tend to think that this idea is absurd. It is kind of like arguing that due to the fact I do not eat lamb (I just don't enjoy the texture) that I am a vegitarian in relation to lamb.
Well, the word
vegetarian obviously implies vegetables; the term
atheist means
a- (not, without)
theist (god-belief); the term does not necessarily have to imply
all gods although this is the more common definition, certainly. Anyway, again, this is not an idea I personally originated.
91 wrote:
I also dislike your tacit contention that bringing up a child within a religious belief system is child abuse, I find this concept quite totalitarian.
I never implied raising a child within a religious framework is automatically child abuse, and I don't know what might have caused you to read that.