Is agnosticism a better position than atheism? I feel that religious beliefs are totally different types of beliefs to other beliefs in that it doesn't need rationalising, evidence or explanation. — Corvus
This is probably the trouble. Beliefs simply are - the way that they arise is the subject of study in a variety of fields. You seem to have reached a conclusion about how "religious beliefs" arise that is totally counterfactual, arrived at through no rationalizing, evidence, or explanation, but will now hold firm to your conviction. Is your feeling a religious belief?
One need only to look at the similarity of theistic expression to see that it is a cultural phenomenon constructed in individual interactions, explicit schooling, communal expression, etc. Indeed, someone's theistic commitments can be viewed as an interpretive lens through which to evaluate "evidence" and "explanation." For instance, if someone is narrowly missed by a car speeding past them, a theist might say, "What a wonderful example of God's providence" and add the experience to the otherwise overflowing pool of evidence of god's presence in the world, while a non-believe might say, "About time Musk got those damn Tesla's to stop driving in to people in crosswalks" and not even assign the experience to the "evidence for/against god" bucket. Same experience, different epistemic placement, and belief about god utterly unchanged.
Reasons are hardly any different and even in formal language, one evaluates the soundness of an argument by whether a false statement is the conclusion of true premises. Bearing in mind that argument has no relationship to truth (we can argue about theories of truth later), if someone's truth, i.e. "God does not exist" is denied as the conclusion of an argument, one can be relatively confidant that the person will deny the reasoning as being sound just as assuredly as they will attack the premises. Regardless, reason is often the tool used to convince other people to believe what we want, not the tool we let others use to change our beliefs.
The issue is not that theist lacks evidence of necessity, but that certain sorts of theists maintain beliefs in a god whose attributes do not lend themselves to typical epistemic evaluation. There are many non-religious beliefs that suffer the same trouble, e.g. that what is is reliable indication of what was or what will be. After I demonstrate to you that memory is constructed and human reasoning is flawed, you will still go on believing what you will even though there isn't a stitch of "evidence" that you could produce that would support your belief.
I couldn't imagine. Sorry. — Corvus
Certainty is hardly justified here. I'm sure you can imagine lots of things if you were willing to be a little less certain.