Showing posts with label agnostic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label agnostic. Show all posts

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Agnostics

The Ones Who Don’t Know
            After atheists, the next most well-known segment of unbelievers and other godless folks is the agnostics. “An agnostic is a doubter,” said Clarence Darrow, possibly the most famous trial lawyer of the past hundred years -- and an agnostic. “The word is generally applied to those who doubt the verity of accepted religious creeds.”[1]
            Agnostic literally means without knowing, and it’s the viewpoint for people who aren’t completely certain what’s out there in the great cosmic void. Agnostics range from people who have no opinion at all to people who are pretty sure of their views but don’t want to shut other possibilities out. “I like being agnostic,” says a teenager who calls herself CassieCasey. “I think it gives me the freedom to be a little bit more open-minded about other religions.”[2]
            The agnostic viewpoint is sometimes more complicated than atheism. “While I have the belief that it’s possible the Bible is true (although a lot of it would have to be symbolism), it is more likely that there is no God or at least that the God that there is is not interested in this earth,” says a teenage agnostic who uses the screen name Saltandvinegarchips. But, she adds, “I still consider the possibility of a God.”[3]



[1] Clarence Darrow, “Why I Am an Agnostic,” from Short Works of Clarence Darrow (BiblioBazaar, 2008), http://books.google.com
[2] CassieCasey, untitled essay, Teenage Writers website, December 17, 2006, http://teenagewriters.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-7197.html
[3] Saltandvinegarchips, “I’m a Teenage Agnostic. Ask Me Anything,” Experience Project website (March 14, 2010), http://www.experienceproject.com/uw.php?e=880974

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Welcome


            Welcome to a book. This blog will spool out several chapters of And What If I’m an Atheist?, a guide for teenage atheists, agnostics, and other unbelievers.

            My name’s David Seidman, and I’ve written quite a few books for kids, teenagers, young adults and regular old adults -- everything from biographies of Adam Sandler and Jimmy Carter (now, that’s a pairing you don’t see every day) to movie and TV tie-ins to books about careers in fields as diverse as journalism and the United States Secret Service. I embarked on And What If I’m an Atheist? after I noticed that there are plenty of books for religious teenagers and plenty of books for adult unbelievers but nothing much for teenagers of the non-theist stripe.

            The book will include:
            • Profiles of famous non-believers
            • Explanations of deep spiritual questions
            • Practical tips on handling objections to atheism
            • Answers about celebrating Christmas
            • And everything else that the young and the curious want to know.

            “What If I’m an atheist?” is a big question. …And What If I’m an Atheist? will have answers.

            So let’s begin with the Introduction.