I didn't understood what you want. I hope this is useful:
1) All we have are beliefs, in the sense of "knowledge open to improvements" instead of "real" knowledge (the whole and only truth, the last word, absolute knowledge, whatever you like to call it).
2) Beliefs are based on theoretical frameworks (world views, cosmo-visions, cognitive stances). You can't have a clear belief unless its based on one. Lets draw a mini picture of two theoretical frameworks (note that they are just an oversimplified models); a) materialists believe that everything in the universe is material, nothing immaterial exists. b) spiritualists believe that what animates a body is a immaterial soul, that lives independently of the organism (a material body).
3) Our theoretical frameworks are always unfinished. they are like vast nets with holes on it (we might be unaware of some). When confronted by something that can't be explained by it we first try to repair it, as it is difficult to change it (its changing ourself, in a way).
4) Beliefs can (and should) be contrasted with facts. What constitutes "a fact" depends on the theoretical frame of reference, but still it can be defined as "that what is beyond opinions" (oversimplification again, I have noted that some of the posters like to take sentences by the letter, unable to understand contexts).
5) Contrasting, correlating beliefs with facts its how we get confidence in our theoretical framework (or makes us doubt it and think in changing it). And its a difficult, often slow process.
________________________
Now, lets see this in more detail.
a) All we have are beliefs (both skeptics or woos)
b) Still... Not every belief weights the same
c) We can differentiate among them because of their relative fidelity to facts, or by their being better correlated with facts (Newton's vs Einsteins for example) (another example would be souls as the center of personality or brains serving the same purpose)
d) Skeptics and woo are equivalent IN THE SENSE THAT we all share beliefs, NOT IN THE SENSE THAT what they believe have the same relative weight (or correctness)
e) Now the tricky part (one that was implied in my previous posts but not openly said) Some beliefs are based on world-views that explain a lot more stuff than others, their validity resides on that. Let's think on world-views as concentric circles. A small one can explain just a few of the facts around, a bigger circle catches more facts, and so on.
Currently, the wider circle we have is based on the knowledge (beliefs) that we can get using scientific methods. We can explain a lot of stuff if we assume certain world-view. To my knowledge, some forms of physicalism (not to be confused with naive materialism*) have accommodated a great amount of facts under the same explicative rules, still, there are still lots of stuff outside its explicative power, so, the best we can do is remain skeptics and not embrace any world-view as final and definitive.
* For me, "matter" is a way to describe things, not a "thing in itself". Not a thing that its there, as we see it, when we are not seeing it.