Well. if you don't have proof of X and you treat X like a truth, what should I call it, besides faith in X? Operational certainty? Hopeful self-deceiving? A jump in the unknown?
Scientists normally know they are skating on thin ice everytime they produce a statement of how things are in this world ( if they are not , they should be ... how many scientific ideas have been proofed wrong after being believed that they were the truth for a while? ). About theologicians ...well, they are deductive creatures ,so their conclusions are as based as their axioms.
Well, the assumption that our senses are reliable ( even if to a point ) is a little bit shaky... at best we scientists use Occam razor and pretend that our senses are reliable until that proposition seems stupid. Same for the other assumptions ( and not all of them are even constant: I can point you a lot of scientific theories that assumed and assume that the nature is not uniform )
Notice a thing: I am not asking anything more of the proof of existance or not of deities than i ask of anything else. I'm just not trying to make a absolute truth out of a usage of the scientific method and of the ol'Occam razor ( and make no doubt, afirming the non-existance of gods is stating a absolute truth, a dogma in the original sense of the word, because, as you pointed above, you have no proof and you don't need one ). The only output than the scientific method would give in this situation is the Laplace one I quoted: i didn't needed that hypothesis of work until now ... but if I notice any phenomenon that does seem to need that hypothesis, I'll use it. Same as the hypothesis of work than all the cars in a certain track in a highway follow in the same direction: you can treat it as operational certain if you like ( and most of us do , thankfully ) , but that does not mean that you can't find a car driving in your direction.
Ok, let me explain why i said it: because of the usage of the Occam razor you tossed against my argument. You should know better that occam razor is a heuristic in science and not a philosophical necessary point ... and because using Occam razor like you tried to use agaist my argument is a well known sport of a lot of people vs theist arguments. If that was not your idea I apologize .
Who said that?

My point was that , up from the moment you state you have either faith or proof, the question of knowledge or not of the thing is out of the window, because either you already have it solved ( proof ) or because you have no need for it ( faith ). That was what I meant with the two being non-independent in this context, obviously in a not clear enough fashion.
For a example, look above to your own text: you say you have no proof and you don't need one . So the question of gnosis is out of the window: you can't make a case about if you know a thing or not when you state that you don't have proof and you don't need one, so a person that states that can't be a agnostic or even a weak atheist by your own definition ( not because they don't know or not, but because they don't even care to know ). That leaves the question of if you believe in the existance or in the non-existance of X.
@The Cosmic Kid
As I pointed in other post, there are two reasons that can make a thing unknown: your inability of solving it so far and the impossibility of getting a awnser. Both are operationally equal in a context where you can't produce a proof that you can't get a awnser ( and AFAIK that is the situation where we are ATM regarding this issue ), so in the end the strong agnosticism you describe ( I don't know because it can't be known ) is something else.... I'll not use the word faith to not flame things further though
And about the usage of agnosticism term like you described it... another Huxley ( the Aldous one

) made a nice text about the misusage of certain words and gramatical constructions in modern english. I guess it fits here quite right
On your sugestion ... well, maybe 3 prod from governemental buildings is a little offside, no? I would chose that civic 99,99% of the times I had acess to it just because of that
