Essan:
Let me restate my definitions:
Athest1: "I know with 100% abselute certainty there is no God"
Atheist2: "I believe there is no God" in the sence of: "I believe the probability there is a God is very, very low"
You wrote: I can't accept your new definition for atheist until you have justified it, which you haven't as yet, IMO
Do i really need to justify a definition i make to describe what myself and many other think? Isnt it enough its well-defined and it describe many people? It allows you to claim that all those "atheists 1's" you'd like to disenfranchise aren't really saying what they are blatantly saying when they say it and mean it, Not at all! I make it very clear i believe the two statements are quite different, and i agree quite strongly with those who belong to the first category. If they really fit category 1, let them stay with that delusion for all i care! I want to add that I might be the only one in category 2, but i dont really think i have met anyone who is in category1 on this forum. and even to project that magic spell back in time so whenever an"Atheist" is quoted as saying "I believe there is no God" you can say, "Ah well, you see, he doesn't really mean it. It's scientific code."LOL. Again you seem to put words into my mouth. First off, i describe a common usage of a word which can be found in ordinary textbooks. You might want to reflect upon that before you call it "code" and "magic spell". Secondly, i do not try to put words into the mouths of other, i try to point out that you may be doing that by ignoring a second meaning of the word "believe". The most fair thing to do is to read what these people have written on the subject in contex, or simply ask them. For example, lets take Dawkins - the chapter where he describe his belief in "The God Delusion" has the title: "Why there is allmost certainly no God" - Look! He does not imply certainty! Personally, i havent met more hardline atheist than Dawkins, but he is far to softline to fall into the "atheist1" category. Do you agree that Dawkins, by making the statement above, would not fit the atheist1-category and seem to be an atheist2? Doublespeak. But I understand the concept, so I'll go with it. Very strong accusation. Please point out where i make doublespeak. I think i am doing all i can to make my definitions very clear. Now, i make the argument that "belive" can have the meaning in science that one think a statement is true with very high probability. You bring this up as an example:Something to note is that if such scientists ever said, as they frequently do, something like "I believe X to highly probable" then this pretty much destroys your theory, because it would be a tautology
You miss the point, saying: "I believe in X", "I believe X is highly probable", "I believe the probability that X is true is high" is pretty much the same statement repeated in different ways; perhaps there is a small nuance that the first statement implies more certainty.
I really fail to see how arguing "believe" can be used in different ways invalidate my argument "believe" can be used in different ways. A better way would be to look at the way believe is actually used by scientists, which is what i do.
Your conclusion does not seem to follow:
If it doesn't even consistently have that meaning in a scientific context then there is no possible way it can have that meaning when used by ordinary atheists.
What? If a word has two meanings when used by scientists, it cannot have two meanings when used by other people? Thats just silly!
You first seem to argue my usage is wrong. Then you seem to backtrack on that and say, "...and even if you are right, you are still wrong because other people would not use it like that!" But you are totally missing that scientists who are atheists, who might write books on atheism, might know both meanings. Can you come up with a scientist who happends to be an atheist who write books on atheism?
I think the backtracking is due to the fact you realize I can actually quote scientists who use the word like that. You write:
You are making a huge leap there. The fact that some scientists, sometimes, might use the word "believe" in the way you describe in scientific textbooks doesn't mean all "atheists", from all different backgrounds do, generally, in life do. You haven't proven that "atheists" use "believe" as part of a special scientific vocabulary - you haven't even proven that all Scientists do.
Look,
Saying i imply all atheists use it that way is a strawman; i never made that statement or anything to that effect. I say that most people who call themselves atheists - those i call atheist2 - generally mean something to that effect. And whats up with all scientists? I quote Janes - he is not an everyday idiot, he is pretty much the driving force behind introducing information theory into statistical mechanics - is he not good enough for you? If you want other references, just google "bayesian inference" and read.