Hi NS – sorry for the delay.
Not sure why you switched from a comment on belief systems to belief types,
I didn’t. I was trying to bring it back from where you tried to take it.
Certainly if we define a belief type as a belief that is held as certainly true, and one that isn't then they are different. But the thing the belief is about is not the determinant factor here, it's what the persn holding the belief thinks. So the issue you have with certainty is with people who act as if they are certain about things, not what the belief is.
That’s backwards. Some beliefs have inherent in them that they are inerrantly, certainly true – “God is” is a typical example. Others on the other hand do not – scientific theories for example. It’s not that a belief is “held as” certainly true/not true but rather that some beliefs themselves
are certain in their character.
Further the people who are not certain and allow for the possibility of being wrong can also talk about faith and if you accept that then your faith = dogmatism idea falls unless you go down the NTS route. And that's why I mentioned that, it wasn't saying that you have used it, but unless you were to use it, you would have to move from your position on faith.
No. If someone accepts, say, the belief “God is is certainly true” then they cannot allow for the possibility of that claim being wrong. They buy it wholesale or they reject it wholesale. “God might be real” is a fundamentally different claim to “God certainly is”.
As to equality the vegan has a different definition and the Archbish may do too - I would suggest we all do to an extent and that in day to day conversations the differences aren't important but in the rather more complex cases, what is meant by equality
No doubt, but not relevant to the point – “all people should be treated equally” stands or falls on its merits. Either the Archbish agrees with it or he doesn’t. “Animals should therefore be afforded equal rights to people” doesn’t change that.
Disageeing with a comparison as being valid isn't derailing.
It is when why it’s a derail is explained.
At base your position seems to be that if someone were to say I am certain that Marmite is great, that is skin crawling.
Nope. At base I’m saying that if someone says, “Marmite is objectively great” that is “skin crawling” for want of a better term. A better analogy though would be something like, “unicorns are objectively real” as taste is necessarily subjective so is unlikely to be the subject of a claim of objective certainty.
Further since there are lots of people who state that they have faith but would express doubt as to whether something is true, then the whole point you are making is based on a caricature
That’s a
non sequitur. That there may well be lots of people who have doubts about the objective truth of their faith beliefs does not mean that there aren’t lots of people who have no doubts at all. Quite a few of the theists who post here for example are like that – several times I’ve been told that, no matter what evidence or argument there might be, nothing could ever shake their certainty in the fact of “God”.