I'm not interested in third parties or public debate. You and I only do this in public, because that's the nature of the Watch, and you will not discuss it privately. But I don't care if anyone else is swayed by either of us; I'm just seeing if any legitimate ideas out there contradict what I currently understand about life, reality, etc.rusmeister wrote:On the second, this is surely proven to your satisfaction but unproven in public debate. It's just like when you refuse to expound on why Chesterton is wrong and insist on only debating me in my own words. Your assertion is no evidence for third parties.
I posted this at Into the Wardrobe. I was told I should read various other books first, so that I'd be able to understand it. That didn't really help with the problem. That's always the answer. You have given me that same answer about books you've recommended by both Lewis and Chesterton. You say "Read X." When I say X is wrong, you don't address the particular problem*, you say "Read Y, then you'll get X." It wasn't that I didn't get X, I just think it's wrong. Now, I could reread up to that part in Miracles, in order to refresh my memory on what I didn't agree with. Do you think it will help? Do you think you'll answer it in a way that changes my mind? We did go back and forth a few times about Mere Christianity, and I still disagree with the basic premise of the book. Your arguments don't work for me, because their starting points are conclusions.rusmeister wrote:My opinion is that a refusal to directly confront the original authors in 'direct combat' is much more easily explained by an inability to defeat the ideas of those authors than by simply accepting a person's word that the writer is wrong. It is the refusal that is the strange thing and suspicious to the honest inquirer, who should always be ready to tackle the ideas of anyone, and not to discriminate against someone's ideas merely because they have died.
So OK, for everyone else except you Lewis's work would offer interesting thought - even if it were only thought they disagreed with, they wouldn't be able to say that the thought and consideration was unintelligent.
*Yes, I know, you'll now say, "You refuse to tell me the problems with TEM, so how can I address them?" And the non-Chesterton issues I bring up will be forgotten.