That's just changing the language to say the same thing again.
I'm not aiming to express diverse viewpoints in every post. I was explaining my already-expressed viewpoints in terms of kellyb's post and Darat's question, both addressed to me.
So now we're graciously allowed to be "Strong Atheist" as long as you agree about the specific God we're atheistic about.
In effect, and shorn of the dramatics, yes.
But you mustn't berate me for doing this. If you must apportion blame, then blame reason, blame rationality. It is rationality that dictates this, not me.
Also: nothing stops you from being a hard atheist as long as you're clear, along with the theist, that your POV is personal and subjective.
Further, nothing stops you from holding irrational views either. You're free to do that. Except if you do that, sometimes people might take the trouble to point that out to you.
If there's no chair in the room you aren't different levels of "achairist" about different hypothetical chairs that aren't in the room.
There's no invisible dragon in my garage. I don't have different levels of doubt about 3 toed or 4 toed invisible garage dragons nor do I have a different level of doubt about invisible garage dragons who's believers have not yet assigned a number of toes to.
We've had this discussion already. Some issues end up getting more attention, as well as more precision, than others. Nor is this apparent double standard necessarily unreasonable.
This whole idea that God becomes more likely the less defined and non-vague he is baffles me. That's argumentative trickery, nothing else.
I am not making that argument at all. "Likelihood" isn't part of what I have discussed thus far in this thread.
It's like the old "How many legs does a dog have if you call a tail a leg?" Four. It still has four. You calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg.
If we walk into the room with no chair and I say "There's no chair" but you point at a lamp and go "It does because I'm calling that a chair!"... there's still no chair.
And this goes even further than that. We've walked into the room with no chair and you're arguing that maybe there is a chair because "Maybe at some point somebody somewhere did or could call one of the objects in this room a chair."
Words mean things.
You do realize that the diverse God ideas I've mentioned -- and others that I've hinted at and not actually discussed -- aren't things I've made up myself, don't you? They're actual God-ideas, that actual people actually believe and actually venerate.
As for words meaning things, sure. Some words have more meanings than you appear to have been familiar with thus far. There's a big difference between learning new words as well as hitherto unfamiliar meanings of some word, and making up words or making up meanings for words.