agnostic
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website/src/content/blog/2026/03/04/agnostic.md
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title: What is an agnostic?
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description: >-
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pubDate: 2026-03-04
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---
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I learned today that the first agnostic was 'Darwin's Bulldog', Thomas Henry
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Huxley. He attended the Metaphysical Society, an extremely broad selection of
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England's foremost thinkers who gathered in London nine times a year throughout
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the 1870s to discuss the ultimate questions. He tried all the usual
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appellations: atheist, theist, pantheist, materialist, idealist, Christian. He
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found all of them wanting. All the various '-ists', he felt, 'were quite sure
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they had attained a certain "gnosis,"-had, more or less successfully, solved the
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problem of existence; while I was quite sure I had not, and had a pretty strong
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conviction that the problem was insolube.' Thus, negating the term 'gnostic', he
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coined 'agnostic'.
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Thus for Huxley, as with all the first agnostics, the term did not intend the
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metaphysical neutrality it's often taken to mean today. For Huxley, it's a
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positive epistemological assertion: sure, I don't know, but neither do you: the
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matter is in principle unknowable. 'Agnostic' is not a way for Huxley to
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diplomatically sidestep metaphysical debates without having to take a side, it's
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a confrontational view which contradicts the theist, the atheist, and all the
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rest.
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I wonder what people in my life think of this, who have described themselves as
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'agnostic'. Did they mean what Huxley meant, or did they mean something more
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irenic? Does Huxley's approach challenge them? Is neutrality really an adequate
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stance?
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