
--A
Moderator: Fist and Faith
Ah, but mine knows how to use it!Linna Heartlistener wrote:First I'll preface this by stating my belief in objective reality.
But what if mine actually does?!?!?Cambo wrote:I don't see how. Arguments between faith always remind me of George Carlin. "My God has a bigger dick than your God!"
(how. could. i. resist?)
Yep, pretty much how I feel. If you enter a forum and express your belief, it will be discussed critically... sometimes reasonably, sometimes hysterically, but thems the risk. You won't convert anybody, even if you give people an argument that helps them change their position. Really, the best you can do is learn to understand other belief systems better so as not to make the same, cliched generalizations that are always made by people who struggle to understand the breakfast cereal they are eating, let alone someone's contrary beliefs.Hashi Lebwohl wrote:
If you cannot explain what it is that you believe to other people without proselytizing them then you are in a very weak position. One should always be able to defend one's beliefs in a dispassionate debate. That being said, the other side should not be on the warparth--if all you want is to pick holes in someone else's beliefs, especially if this is done aggressively, then you have nothing to bring to the discussion.
If you wish to believe something that is demonstrably false then you have every right to do so; however, you should be aware that other people will tell you that your belief is incorrect. That isn't a personal attack, of course, only a statement of fact so don't take it personally.
If you wish to believe something which cannot be proven or disproven, regardless of how acute the logical reasoning might be either for or against it, then you are free to do so. The fact that it cannot be disproven means that no one will have the ability to disarm you of your belief...unless you choose to let them do so. The fact that it cannot be proven means that you will never be able to convince anyone of the veracity of your position.
Regardless of which side of a discussion you represent, if your goal is "I will change the other person's mind" then you fail before you begin and I will take joy in laughing at you and your presumption.
This entire post is incorrect; In short, I believe you have intentionally lied with every point you have made.Hashi Lebwohl wrote:This is not war; rather, it is pre-emptive military action designed to reduce The Close's ability to fight against The Think Tank.
*************
If you cannot explain what it is that you believe to other people without proselytizing them then you are in a very weak position. One should always be able to defend one's beliefs in a dispassionate debate. That being said, the other side should not be on the warparth--if all you want is to pick holes in someone else's beliefs, especially if this is done aggressively, then you have nothing to bring to the discussion.
If you wish to believe something that is demonstrably false then you have every right to do so; however, you should be aware that other people will tell you that your belief is incorrect. That isn't a personal attack, of course, only a statement of fact so don't take it personally.
If you wish to believe something which cannot be proven or disproven, regardless of how acute the logical reasoning might be either for or against it, then you are free to do so. The fact that it cannot be disproven means that no one will have the ability to disarm you of your belief...unless you choose to let them do so. The fact that it cannot be proven means that you will never be able to convince anyone of the veracity of your position.
Regardless of which side of a discussion you represent, if your goal is "I will change the other person's mind" then you fail before you begin and I will take joy in laughing at you and your presumption.
*shrug* If you say so.Holsety wrote:This entire post is incorrect; In short, I believe you have intentionally lied with every point you have made.
I was addressing "aggressive" picking, the sort of quasi-argument that is more interested in making bullet points or sound bites than serious inquiry or discussion.Holsety wrote: -Picking holes in someone's beliefs is a way of attempting to get them to justify those beliefs. If they recognize the holes are there, but cannot explain them in any way, regardless of what that brings to the discussion, their opinions begin to become staid. Why should we not discuss the arguments? Why should weaknesses not be addressed? The name "think tank" implies such conflicts.
Believing something that is false is also an exercise in willing irrationality designed to drive other people insane.Holsety wrote:-The problem in believing something that is "demonstrably" false relates to some extent to the malleability of evidence itself. Using this sort of technique as the primary way of disproving a belief is weak.
It is always allowable to laugh when someone presumes to be arrogant enough to think they can change someone else's mind.Holsety wrote:-Laughing at someone's presumption for being interested in persuasion shows you don't have an open mind; if you do not have an open mind, you cannot argue.
Trust me--you aren't a troll. There may indeed be people who would think you are stupid but I am not one of those people.Holsety wrote:The above may essentially indicate I am a troll, because I am more interested in what you have to say than in what I have to say (interested in making people respond). Saying a great deal is merely a method of ensuring I won't hear some things I have heard before. Yes; to some extent, I am interested in killing at least some discussion - I don't want to hear the kinds of criticisms which not even no one takes seriously and barely even apply to nobody. Would you really at this juncture propose there are still people significantly stupider than I am who are literate enough to read your post?
Well, at least you are truthful about it. Typically, though, self-depreciation is a trait I dislike. *shrug* Personal quirk. It won't negatively impact my opinion of you, though.Holsety wrote:EDIT-I honestly don't even understand what was going on in the above 2 posts, but I still felt the blatant self-deprecation needed to be dealt with.
Hashi Lebwohl wrote: Typically, though, self-depreciation is a trait I dislike. *shrug* Personal quirk.
I believe you are the first person ever to entrap me with my own words. Kudos to you, Vraith.Vraith wrote:
I believe Hashi is a liar.
Your accuracy and insight serve you well.Vraith wrote:perhaps in the top .5%
Yes, they are. As long as the sample size exceeds 30, any distribution you find will essentially be the normal one.Linna Heartlistener wrote:(aren't they just the cutest normal distributions you've ever seen?)
No, if I tell a lie it is no less of a lie than any that someone else might tell. There is a difference, though, between pretending to be modest--this kind of behavior is seen often on social media when people are fishing for compliments--and actually being modest, which equates to not putting one's self on a pedestal for others to admire. If you look into the history of various "high iq" societies you will find many egos who wish to the be center of attention, which sometimes causes them to create more exclusive societies because they have something to prove.Linna Heartlistener wrote:So, hashi, basically you're saying that if you lie in a way that people do when they signal the cultural standard of pretending to look modest, that is somehow less of a lie?
(not to mention - if it helped you to make the point you wanted to make about how succeeding in various areas of life is not thaaaaaaat dramatically extremely shockingly amazingly easier for people of higher intelligence?)
Lies, damn lies, and statistics.Linna Heartlistener wrote:Also, vraith, my dad always liked to remind me about that Mark Twain quote saying there were three kinds of lies.
(except, ironically for this context, he misquoted it slightly - as "three kinds of liars.")