Donn
Philosopher
Precisely, which is how I do it. For 1 dollar I can get several days worth of day dreams. For $30 I could get two hours of a mediocre movie and popcorn. Very few argue that the movie is a tax on the math-ignorant.
Besides everything that has been discussed in this many threads? And besides those like our participants here who are in it not for Bigfoot but for the manipulative thrill? I'll put on my armchair psychologist hat:
There are two main sets of people outside the liars and hoaxers. First are the true believers who have -- for various reasons -- never been exposed to actual evaluation of the purported evidence or never learned how to properly evaluate such. I'll set them aside.
The second set is the fun seeker. I didn't really believe in the Wendigo in Boy Scouts but when -- during my initial camp outing with my troop I was the target of the stories meant to make the night spooky and me enjoyably nervous, I played along. I don't believe in all the monsters and ghosties on Supernatural, but it is one of my favorite shows. Bigfootery for some is a willful suspension of disbelief in an attempt to become part of their own real life Supernatural. A very rough analogy may be drawn with the SCA in which no one really believes they are peasants or nobles or mercenaries or what have you; they are simply more open about the make believe aspect.
Okay. I get from this that there are few, if any, who take the chance that something might be so as a good enough reason to actually believe it. It's more like they use that excuse when arguing for what they already believe, which comes from other reasons like fun, culture, bias, many etceteras.
I'll keep that in mind, even as I seek an analogy that works for me to describe to someone why their small chance is feasibly impossible.
(I liked Dinwar's car in the garage, or not. However, it thins when you make the garage the size of the neighbourhood.)
I'm stubborn, in no small measure.
