• This can be used to make anything into a belief system, then

    Yes, it can and does. I don’t think any single belief defines a person’s belief system, but each individual belief is a contribution to it.

    Your belief that there are no invisible unicorns (or at least none that are with you right now) doesn’t simultaneously require you to also believe that people who do believe in them are bad, though I wouldn’t say the same about believing that they’re wrong (unless we’re truly applying the “in the room with you right now” qualifier and they’re in a different room than you are or time has progressed).

    • Acute_Engles [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      7
      ·
      1 day ago

      I can’t fundamentally agree that non-belief is the same as belief.

      I don’t think “i do not believe in invisible unicorns” is making a positive claim even if you change the grammar around. If someone had evidence that supported the idea of invisible unicorns and i discounted that evidence, that would be an assertion on my part.

      • I don’t think I’m saying that belief and non-belief in a given thing are the same - fundamentally they are opposites, but both are things that someone arrives at through a collection of beliefs that form their belief system.