You are assuming that I have to be an atheist in order to know what atheism is. I have studied philosophy of religion for the past 5 years and have read a mountain of articles both by theist and atheist philosophers so I believe I am very well informed to participate in this topic.
A: You still aren't listening to what people say they believe, which isn't useful at all.
B: Asserting that you are right doesn't help. Provide your reasoning.
You continue to misrepresent my actions here as I never tried to prevent people from describing their beliefs. Given how this is an open forum there is hardly anything I can do to prevent a person from making a post in which they express their views. I have every right, however, to express my own views on the words which they use to express their views when I deem that they're not doing justice to the way these views and these words are used as they are limiting the meaning of those words to their particular version of the views which those words describe and are going so far as to deny the existence of alternative meanings of said words.
People are expressing their views just fine. You're just not listening to them. This is why I'm questioning your angle here. What's the point? Why bother? If this ever came to a discussion about your beliefs concerning religion, I'd accept what you said and address that instead of saying "nuh uh, it's really like this". One method actually gets us somewhere. The other halts discussion of beliefs.
I have already described the relevance of quoting those scholars two times now and if you're still pressured to question said relevance I find myself waiting for your to offer an objection that would cast doubt on the reasons I provided for said relevance. So far all you're doing is asserting that you can find other authorities who would agree with your position, but the point I was trying to make wasn't that there were no authorities who agreed with your view of atheism but rather it was to show that there is no agreement on what Draper accurately describes as "a surprisingly contentious issue" and if you feel like the sources I provided, reputable as they are, do not present accurate information on the relevant topic you are invited to explain how and why that is the case.
So what if two people take this position? What does that accomplish? That's what I keep asking you. I don't care unless reasoning for a position is provided, and you haven't shown any based on these examples. I'm not a lemming. "Because someone said so" does nothing for me.
Also, contrary to your accusation, I have explained why I do not accept your attempt to have the default meaning of the word atheism be that of negative atheism and I refuse to repeat myself any further.
Again, I've been explaining my position on religious beliefs. Your rejection of my position does not change my position. All your rejection does is halt progress in communication about my position on religious beliefs.
You tried to make it look like that lack of agreement was a result of the theists' (it was theists in general, not just Christians, that was my mistake) inaccurate perception of atheism. The fact that prominent atheists disagree with your definition as well is sufficient to refute that assertion.
I'm not pointing fingers at theists. I'm addressing you in paticular.
If however your response wasn't to limit the cause of the disagreement to said perception then I find it hard to understand the significance of that response or the message that you were trying to convey. Further more, in the event that you didn't want to single out the theists but still refused to mention other causes and only focused on the theists, you've arguably given even more reasons for people to be concerned when it comes to how objectively you are approaching the subject and who "you have beef" with.
Again, my particular curiosity here is with your specific agenda here. What's the point? I still don't understand why you're making this argument. Do you care what people believe and why beyond your preconceptions of the labels they use?