Agnosticism: Agnostic
What is the Agnostic Church? Well, considering polls consistently show that roughly ten percent of everyone in the United States has an atheist or agnostic view of God, the few thousand of us who actually belong to atheist or agnostic organizations don't speak for more than a small percentage of our "fellow travelers." While the organized groups may be broadly characterized as the "Freethought Movement," those who tend to think along atheist or agnostic lines also tend to value personal choice, personal freedom, and so forth to such a degree that the vast majority of them refuse to join anything because they do not wish to be characterized by some label. This leaves them without any actual political means to defend their position in our society.
[http://www.agnostic.org/]
Agnosticism: Agnosticism.com
Welcome to agnosti.com, place for the discussion of religious and secular philosophy. I am an empirical agnostic, which means that, due to our limited intellectual capacity, we are limited in our ability to perceive the universe outside of observable phenomenon. My former sentiment was that "God is an excuse for what we don't understand.", but now I feel that "God is a reason for what we can't understand."
[http://www.geocities.com/]
Agnosticism: Infidels
The term 'agnosticism' was coined by Professor T.H. Huxley at a meeting of the Metaphysical Society in 1876. He defined an agnostic as someone who disclaimed both ("strong") atheism and theism, and who believed that the question of whether a higher power existed was unsolved and insoluble. Another way of putting it is that an agnostic is someone who believes that we do not and cannot know for sure whether God.
[http://www.infidels.org/]