So, you admit you can't know for sure that there is a god, but you believe in something or other that makes you call yourself theist.Notvacka wrote: Having agreed that knowledge regarding God is impossible, it seems to follow that any further proposition regarding God can only be based upon belief, which would make both theism and atheism beliefs. (But I won't press the matter.)
Some like to call agnostics "soft atheists" and I guess that, by that same standard, I would be a "soft theist". That is what happens when you try to make agnosticism a subset of atheism, it becomes a subset of theism too. Which I think makes less sense than to look at it the other way around.
That's clear, at least.
I can't know for absolute certain either (and I don't think there is any such thing as absolute certain knowledge) but I just don't believe in any gods, so I call myself an atheist.
Your position seems intelligible to me. My position seems intelligible too. (Obviously if my own position didn't seem intelligible I'd have to change it.) I'm going with the suggestion that the whole debate is silly. You are a theist. I am an atheist. We are neither of us agnostic except in the very broadest sense of admitting that neither of us is personally a Supreme Being, therefore neither of us in in possession of infallibity, meaning that neither of us can know absolutely for total certain, anything at all.