Freemason contemplating philosophical questions in a symbolic lodge setting
Philosophy & Ethics

Agnosticism as a Way of Life: The Questioning Freemason

Agnosticism is often mistaken for indifference or an inability to make up one’s mind, but nothing could be further from the truth. It is a deliberate philosophical stance — one that acknowledges certain questions may never be definitively answered. For the Freemason, who is constantly rearranging the building blocks of his inner life, this attitude offers remarkably fertile ground. The answer is not what matters most; what matters is the courage to keep asking the question. The Origins of Agnosticism The term “agnostic” was coined in the nineteenth century by British scientist Thomas Henry Huxley, who sought to express the idea that certain metaphysical truths lie beyond the reach of human knowledge. The Greek prefix “a” means “without,” and “gnosis” means “knowledge” — literally, without knowledge. But this bare translation fails to capture the richness of the concept. Agnosticism is not intellectual laziness; it is a sincere recognition of the limits of human understanding. Throughout the centuries, countless thinkers have wrestled with the question of what we can truly know about the transcendent, about the origins of existence, about what lies behind the veil of observable reality. The agnostic position refuses to answer these questions with certainties that cannot be […]