Porterboy
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2006
- Messages
- 446
So let me see if I've got this straight: are you actually suggesting that if enough people believe that something exists -- no matter how demonstrably ill-founded those beliefs are, and no matter how ignorant and superstitious the people are, and no matter how conclusively we can trace the origins of those beliefs back to a time when the entire human population was largely ignorant and superstitious and demonstrably wrong in most of their beliefs -- then despite all that, we should still not only hold open the possibility that said thing might be real, but even go so far as to make actual decisions that will tangibly effect how people and institutions go about their business, based on that possibility? Furthermore, are you seriously making this suggestion on a skeptic forum, with a straight face and no discernible hint of irony?
If the answer is yes, then what is the qualification for a belief to merit this consideration? On a planet of six billion people, how many do I have to convince (without any actual evidence, of course) that my pet talking pencil eraser is real, before it becomes "a part of folklore and mass consciousness," and therefore worthy of being treated as "having real potential existence"?
Actually forget I said it. To explain what I mean would be impossible. I couldn't put it into language that we could both understand.