I don't accept your implication/accusation that my poll is comparable to the gender poll you suggest. Before posting my poll I spent some time considering what options to offer and I believe the options offered reasonably cover all “what” types of theist and atheist options. If you disagree then provide a “what” theist or atheist type that can't be reasonably fitted to any of the options. Please don't provide a “why” type. Hint -Apathetic atheist isn't a “what” type it's a “why” type (because I'm apathetic). If an apathetic atheist has neither belief nor disbelief then they are an “Atheist type A – I neither believe nor disbelieve a god actually exists“.
Interesting that you "believe" your options "reasonably cover" all the real types of atheists...despite real atheists, who
can't be fitted into your options explaining themselves.
It certainly makes it seem more and more as if you have an agenda that did not unfold as you hoped.
Then you would have to provide category options from which they can choose. Why haven't you as I politely asked? Please do.
Why should you expect someone else to repair your poll, given the manner in which you have reacted to those who have suggested changes?
I did, in fact, offer an alternative approach--instead of setting up neat little pigeonholes that do no more than confirm your assumptions, and mocking those who resist your awkward taxonomy, why not just ask people to explain themselves?
A poll asks you to choose from options.
Options selected to fit the pollster's agenda; not necessarily options that reflect reality--especially the reality of a spectrum, or a matrix.
To add a feature that asks people to describe their beliefs, or lack there of, in their own words is providing an additional feature that's not part of the poll. You can ask them to do that without even having a poll.
Why is it that you seem to think it is more important to make people fit into your arbitrary categories, than to find out what they really think?
W\hat is the point of a poll where your pre-selected answers are the only "right" answers?
Please quote when and where I did what you accuse me of doing. You do understand that an option HAS to provide a list of options, and that someone HAS to compile that list?
Why does a poll HAVE to provide a list of arbitrary options? Again, what are you after?
Providing a list of options isn't telling people which option to pick or even that they have to pick an option. If and when you provide an option list alternative will that be “Your behavior in telling people what option they should have picked”. Like some other's I suspect you will avoid the issue by not providing “your” list of options. In other words, put up or shut up.
Again, you completely ignore (and appear to reject out of hand) the constructivist approach of allowing respondents to describe themselves, or to provide alternatives to your scheme.
Decide what you are really after, then craft your exploration to discover that--instead of complaining when people reasonably declined to dance to your piping and mourn at your dirge.
"Put up or shut up", indeed.