When I saw this panel discussion in the TAM4 flyer, it put the nail in the coffin on whether I'd attend or not. After things I had seen and heard at TAM 2 and 3 (from speakers and attendees), I didn't want listen to the same crap again. I don't know if I'm as atheist as they come, but one does not use "UnrepentantSinnerAtheist" as a Yahoo chat ID (and PalTalk) unless one isn't afraid of making a statement. But I get really sick of atheist skeptics bashing religious people who aren't woo woos. Hell even some of the woo woos are just misguided. That said...
Can someone believe in ghosts or believe in ESP or believe in UFOs or believe in reincarnation or believe in God...and still be a skeptic?
Yes, as long that person can admit that it is an irrational belief in the face of the evidence available.
I agree with you, and in fact after one of the previous TAMs came up with a fairly succinct way of explaining my take. If I and someone else agree on 29 of 30 positions regarding issues warrenting skeptical inquiry (say homeopathy, cryptozoology, UFOlogy, etc.) but we disagree on the 30th (that being religion), I would still consider them a skeptic.
Now if this person agreed with me on a lot of issues (spam scams, AltMed, etc.) but was a Christian YECist, then I couldn't still call them a skeptic since YECism involves so many credulous approaches to so many diverse subjects. There's the (in)famous "skeptical Arab street," which is more of a bizarroskepticism that's cynical towards anything positive, but believes anything they're told negative about Jews, so an Islamic skeptic would need to hop over the "29 of 30" bar (with Holocaust denial being a deal breaker). And to be more specific, I would never consider a Scientologist a skeptic.
But what about an agnostic who had the 29, but thought there was something to cryptozoology. Well, as long as he or she didn't tell me Bigfoot, Nessie and Mkele Mbembe
did in fact exist, and only saw them as still being worthy of investigation, I would still consider this person a skeptic.
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One thing tangental to Xin's quote, but germane to the OP is that religion has a cultural component that most other skeptical subjects don't. Obviously Astrology and some AltMed have cultural roots in Asia and Europe, but cryptozoology, UFOlogy, scam avoidance, Ponzi schemes, PSI, telekinesis and a whole host of other subjects atheists and the religious can agree on don't have the cultural impact, and indeed impact on self-identity that religion does.
If someone thinks they have telekineses or have inveted a ZPE device, and they decide to investigate it skeptically (or along with a skeptic), it might break their heart to find out they were wrong, but they'd get over it. If someone investigates their religion skeptically, how damaging can that be to their "self," or worse yet, to family relations? There's a lot more emotional investment in a religious believer than just "feeling good."