JimC wrote:Seth wrote:
So, you're "agnostic," which is a belief.
Betraying your ignorance, here. It is possible to say that a strong form of atheism, which asserts that there is definitely no god, could be regarded as a form of belief, although of a very different kind than a belief in a supernatural being.
Indeed. And religion does not require belief in a supernatural being, that's my point.
However, the majority of posters here would simply assert that they have no belief that a god exists, without committing themselves to a definite assertion of its absence, mainly because it is not a provable contention.
What they "assert" when challenged and what their routine contributions on the subject of religion and theism are mostly two entirely different things. As I've said before, it is commonplace mendacity for Atheists to deny that they have beliefs on the subject of religion or theism. They do it because if they do not, their statements about being pious "no belief" atheists are easily refuted, as I routinely do even when they deny that they have very firm and highly predictable religious beliefs about the existence of god(s) and the subjects of theism and religion in general.
This position, which can be loosely called agnosticism, cannot be logically regarded as a belief in any sense of the word;
Yes, it can.
literally, it is the absence of a belief.
That's not what "agnosticism" means nor is it what "atheist" actually means in practice, as opposed to semantic exactitude.
It is compatible with living one's life on the working assumption that there is no god,
Which does not lead to the conclusion that one does not have beliefs about god(s) that one holds dear and follows devotedly as a matter of conscience or ethics.
certainly not one of the personal gods of most religions, but it is not a belief in anything.
In theory, no, but in practice it's a dodge used by people who have very firm and usually loudly announced positions and opinions (beliefs) on the subjects of god(s), theism and religion.
Not being a stamp collector is not an example of a hobby.
Not being a stamp collector because one believes that collecting stamps is a waste of time is, however, a belief. Practiced devotedly as a matter of ethics or conscience, it can also be a religion.
I think your problem stems with conflating "belief" with "adopting a philosophical stance". The two are not synonymous.

No, I'm pointing out that when one adopts a philosophical stance and then acts like it's a religious belief, it becomes a religion.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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