Hey, that post wasn't directed at you, it was directed at another poster who I was conversing with. Sorry for the confusion, I should have been clearer with who it was directed at.
Here is my response to your last post.
A non belief still falls into the realms of belief.
I dont agree that it does, although I do realize there is a subtle (but important!) distinction you are missing. I think you are confusing a non belief, which is the lack of a positive belief in a claim, with a belief in a negative claim.
It becomes easier to see this if you talk about beliefs as truth claims.
If you replace the term belief with claim that you get
I do not believe in x becoming I do not claim that x. This is not a truth claim, and is the equivalent of a non belief.
I claim that x is a positive truth claim.
I claim that x is not the case is a negative truth claim.
Lets put these into some sentences and see what we get (of course people dont really talk in this manner

)
I do not claim that there is a tiger in my car not a truth claim.
I claim that is there is no tiger in my car negative truth claim.
In everyday language usage, the statement would be more likely to something like I dont believe there is a tiger in my car for either case, but the distinction is lost without further context.
Notice the statement I do not claim that there is a tiger in my car does not deny that there is a tiger in the car, and is compatible with (although not equivalent to) I dont know whether there is a tiger in my car.
If this distinction did not exist, then it would not be possible to answer I dont know to anything. If I were to ask you Do you think that right at this second there are precisely 15 people at the top of the empire state building?, you have three possible answers. Yes, No and I dont know. Other answers, such as What a stupid question, are really opinions about the question rather than attempts to try and answer it.
Not claiming to know the answer is a legitimate standpoint, and shows a difference between belief (positive and negative) and non belief.
I make no truth claims about a deity, either positive or negative.
Opinions are obviously beliefs, using the definition Opinion: A belief or conclusion held with confidence but not substantiated by positive knowledge or proof
Of course you could ask me directly what is your opinion on whether a deity exists. My answer would be I dont know. Not knowing is a perfectly reasonable place to stand.
.who says faith must be interesting or impressive? I don't think that should change the fact at all.
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[FONT="]Thats a fair question. What Im really getting at here, and I could have explained this better, The reason I dont think this is a particularly interesting example of faith is that it is clearly a testable example. You can turn it from faith to knowledge simply by sitting down. Faith in things for which I think there is no evidence is more interesting to me personally.[/FONT][FONT="][/FONT]
but they are all part of the same thing..so no..there are no different definitions..just people that emphasis different aspects of faith more than the other aspects.
You can call them facets rather than definitions if you like. The important things that meaning of a word doesnt shift facets within discourse unless agreed upon. This is the equivocation I was talking about.