Stellafane
Village Idiot.
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2006
- Messages
- 8,368
Three important stages
Event #1: When I was a kid, project Blue Book closed, announcing they didn't find anything that indicated UFOs were real. Suddenly there were way fewer UFOs being reported. Even I could see a connection: the less attention paid to them, the less people saw UFOs. It started me to thinking that just because something was widely believed, didn't mean it was true. But the real turning point came with...
Event #2: I briefly flirted with mysticism in my late teens -- so much so, that someone thought it was appropriate to buy me an astrology book for my birthday, one that predicted day-by-day what would happen to me. I looked though it, and sure enough, eveything the book foretold more or less came true. I actually got to the point where I'd read the book first thing in the morning and if it said it would be a good day to exercise (what day isn't?) I'd go for a walk. This went on for a couple of weeks or so, until I noticed the book was for the upcoming year! In a stroke I could see how easy it was to delude myself, and it had a profound impact on my thinking. The final crowning event that shaped my skepticism occurred with...
Event #3: The McMartin Preschool trial. I started out utterly convinced that these people were the worst scum of the Earth, and deserve the worst possible torture devised by humans. I eventually came to see the whole thing was a stupendous farce, and that the accused were in fact victims of an obscene matrix of credulity, ignorance, and evil. I saw how much damage woo thinking could cause, how prevelent it was, and how it must be fought at ever possible level. And it eventually led me to realize that there were a lot of other people like me out there, similarly outraged.
Event #1: When I was a kid, project Blue Book closed, announcing they didn't find anything that indicated UFOs were real. Suddenly there were way fewer UFOs being reported. Even I could see a connection: the less attention paid to them, the less people saw UFOs. It started me to thinking that just because something was widely believed, didn't mean it was true. But the real turning point came with...
Event #2: I briefly flirted with mysticism in my late teens -- so much so, that someone thought it was appropriate to buy me an astrology book for my birthday, one that predicted day-by-day what would happen to me. I looked though it, and sure enough, eveything the book foretold more or less came true. I actually got to the point where I'd read the book first thing in the morning and if it said it would be a good day to exercise (what day isn't?) I'd go for a walk. This went on for a couple of weeks or so, until I noticed the book was for the upcoming year! In a stroke I could see how easy it was to delude myself, and it had a profound impact on my thinking. The final crowning event that shaped my skepticism occurred with...
Event #3: The McMartin Preschool trial. I started out utterly convinced that these people were the worst scum of the Earth, and deserve the worst possible torture devised by humans. I eventually came to see the whole thing was a stupendous farce, and that the accused were in fact victims of an obscene matrix of credulity, ignorance, and evil. I saw how much damage woo thinking could cause, how prevelent it was, and how it must be fought at ever possible level. And it eventually led me to realize that there were a lot of other people like me out there, similarly outraged.
Pray to God seemed like a good idea at the moment, so I did that...