fraggle rocker, why did you delete my insults, sir?
Personal insults are a violation of the SciForums rules. I could have given you a one-day ban for that violation, but that's not my style of moderation. The Moderators all have different styles and I know on some of the boards they would just sigh and let something like that go because they have worse things to deal with. But as one of the eldest Moderators (66) I take responsibility for teaching all of you youngsters how to conduct
civil discourse. Yes, I'm familiar with "trash talk" and I do my share of it, but I felt that was over the top.
how do you expect psychoticepisode to learn from his mistakes if i don't insult him for them?
You must be joking. Making people angry
NEVER results in learning. I hope you have no plans to become a teacher.
i would like an explanation, i didn't say anything over the top . . . .
My board, my interpretation of the rules. It was over the top. Don't do it again.
. . . . just enough to embarrass him in front of everybody.
This is a place of science and scholarship. Embarrassing people is not a technique of science and scholarship. Nonetheless it's not against the rules and I might have allowed it if you had managed to do it without resorting to personal insults, which is against the rules.
But embarrassment or any sort of hostile personal banter can easily stall, sidetrack or completely derail a discussion, and that constitutes trolling, which is also a violation.
I wouldn't disagree that the primary definition is similar to the one you provided (dictionary.com), but then the question is whether "to deny or to disbelieve X" is equal to "to state X is false" / "to believe not-X" etc, as you seem to suggest.
Given that the definitions (from dictionary.com) of "deny" and "disbelieve" are (bold within the definition is mine for emphasis):
Deny: –verb (used with object), -nied, -ny·ing.
1. to state that (something declared or believed to be true) is not true: to deny an accusation.
2. to refuse to agree or accede to: to deny a petition.
+ other definitions
Disbelieve:
–verb (used with object)
1. to have no belief in; refuse or reject belief in: to disbelieve reports of UFO sightings.
–verb (used without object)
2. to refuse or reject belief; have no belief.
+ other definitions
You'll note that the only one of these initial 4 definitions (the first definition of "deny") would support the "believe not-X" position as opposed to the broader "not believe in X" position.
The second definition of "deny" does not apply in this case since it's more about parliamentary procedure than religion.
The two definitions of "disbelieve" are identical except for the purely grammatical nuance of a transitive vs. an intransitive verb. In any case you've lost me by suggesting that saying "I do not believe that gods exist" is different from saying "I believe that gods don't exist." Existence is a binary condition.
People who assert that gods may or may not exist and they haven't got enough evidence to decide are agnostics, not atheists. And I suppose the person who says we can't rule out the existence of gods just because there is no evidence for them, since their existence has not been disproved, is not an atheist either, just a rigorously scientific agnostic.