Stating something and then restating it more vigorously is no explanation. It's the equivalent of stamping your feet and yelling "IT JUST IS, OKAY?!"
Your certainly familiar with that concept.
It's not either of those things.Quit dodging the question. Is it difficult for you to accept that people exist who do not believe in anything - even the belief that they do not believe in anything?
Yes or no?
Having answered it numerous times now, obviously, at this point, answering again would be an exercise in futility.
Since you do not recognize or accept any substantive rationale or known definitions.
Not to mention "belief" in "no belief" is a complete contradiction, and untenable from any rational observation.
Your previous answer was "no". Your responses since (including the above text-wall of irrelevance) have said "yes", indicating that answer to be false.
Hardly.
If I might draw your attention to #4.
World English Dictionary
accept (əkˈsɛpt)
— vb (sometimes foll by of )
1. to take or receive (something offered)
2. to give an affirmative reply to: to accept an invitation
3. to take on the responsibilities, duties, etc, of: he accepted office
4. to tolerate or accommodate oneself to
5. to consider as true or believe in (a philosophy, theory, etc): I cannot accept your argument
6. ( may take a clause as object ) to be willing to grant or believe: you must accept that he lied
7. to receive with approval or admit, as into a community, group, etc
8. commerce to agree to pay (a bill, draft, shipping document, etc), esp by signing
9. to receive as adequate, satisfactory, or valid
10. to receive, take, or hold (something applied, inserted, etc)
11. archaic to take or receive an offer, invitation, etc
[C14: from Latin acceptāre, from ad- to + capere to take]
ac'cepter
And here #1.
World English Dictionary
agree (əˈɡriː)
— vb , agrees , agreeing , agreed
1. ( often foll by with ) to be of the same opinion; concur
2. ( also tr; when intr, often foll by to; when tr, takes a clause as object or an infinitive ) to give assent; consent: she agreed to go home ; I'll agree to that
3. ( also tr; when intr, foll by on or about; when tr, may take a clause as object ) to come to terms (about); arrive at a settlement (on): they agreed a price ; they agreed on the main points
4. ( foll by with ) to be similar or consistent; harmonize; correspond
5. ( foll by with ) to be agreeable or suitable (to one's health, temperament, etc)
6. ( tr; takes a clause as object ) to concede or grant; admit: they agreed that the price they were asking was too high
7. ( tr ) to make consistent with: to agree the balance sheet with the records by making adjustments, writing off, etc
8. grammar to undergo agreement
[C14: from Old French agreer, from the phrase a gre at will or pleasure]
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 10th Edition
2009 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
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Possibly, you will take note of the distinct differences.
It's hardly an admission. It's pretty much the definition of belief - self-assuredness in an outcome regardless of evidence.
Imagine that.
Add in evidence and remove the self and it's no longer belief. Well boy howdy, aren't you excelling at missing the point?
Well, perhaps then, you can explain how you can "
legitimately" "remove self" from that equation?
Dying before you wake is one of myriad possibilities that must be considered and assigned a probability when setting an alarm clock. So is a power failure or spike resetting the alarm. So are interdimensional portals opening up and transporting you or your alarm clock to Tau Ceti, a curiously specific neutrino burst obliterating your clock, your ears spontaneously filling with wax and preventing you from hearing it or the entire street outside being filled with wildebeest. All are possible and all must be considered and assigned a probability.
Setting your alarm clock and it waking you in the morning is, on balance of probability, the most likely thing to happen. Expecting this to occur is just an analysis of evidence, weighting of probability and extrapolation of outcome.
And,....... and,.......and, that all concludes in what, do you think?
Believing it will wake you, no matter what, is self-assuredness in an outcome regardless of evidence.
And all from belief, just as I claimed.