StanBearclaw
Muse
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2009
- Messages
- 967
I'm not sure what you mean. You're saying it's contradictory? How so?
No, I think you're getting some things wrong. Derren Brown does surround his magic in a vague mystery, but he excludes the possibility of woo! He doesn't believe in woo and has come out openly and said that.I've come to see no fundamental difference between Geller and Brown as well. And yes, I was initially fooled into thinking he was a skeptic - shame on me, I guess.
I'm sorry for feeling the way I do, but I feel there's a difference between a magician who refuses an explanation, or makes some curt and obviously tongue-in-cheek quip about unspecified skills learned from mental masters of the Orient, or surrounds his magic with vague mystery. and a person who blatantly declares that his magic is the result of a specific set of woo. Brown and Geller both do that. I don't care if he "only does it on stage"; the fact is, that's where everyone sees him. And he's clearly filled his earlier shows - while "on stage" - with enough skeptical lip-service to lead people to believe that he is honest and trustworthy while on stage. It does not matter if he is "not an educator, but just an entertainer"; he has deliberately drawn around himself the veneer of the former, so he cannot escape down that little side-alley, and neither can his apologists.
And finally, I consider the attitude that "well, if some people just aren't clever enough to have figured out that his skeptic shtick is just shtick, that's their problem"[/i] to be reprehensible and counter to the mission of an organization such as the one whose message board we use. We ridicule the common woo plea that "I am/was a skeptic, but...". Darren Brown doesn't get off the hook simply because he dresses the phrase up with a few more words.
I disagree. He was of his day and that day has gone, but he was by no means crap.![]()
I'm not sure what you mean. You're saying it's contradictory? How so?
Anyway, my point is this: Yes, there are some people who will think that DB is a freak of nature that channels spirits,
Other than ban magicians. Should we ban magicians?
Truth for truth's sake is one of my core ideals.
No, I think you're getting some things wrong. Derren Brown does surround his magic in a vague mystery, but he excludes the possibility of woo! He doesn't believe in woo and has come out openly and said that.
Saying "I believe in truth for truth's sake," is no more absolutist than saying, "I believe in freedom of speech." Every ethic you hold is conditional and incremental, and is in frequent conflict with your other ethics. Even something as seemingly absolute as, "Causing bodily harm to another human is wrong," has dozens of possible exemptions. Like you said, the devil is in the details.I don't think they're contradictory, just that there's a huge middle ground that's crucial. "Truth for truth's sake" sounds like an absolutist position -- Brown is no different from Gellar who is no different from creationists who are no different from a BBC historical drama that massages some facts to make for a more entertaining story.
If you truly believe in truth for truth's sake then your "down with Brown" crusade seems quite arbitrary considering the massive number of untruths floating around in the world. On the other hand, if you accept that "some untruths are of greater consequence than others" then we're back to the thrust of this debate: what is the harm done when Brown perpetuates falsehoods for the sake of entertainment?
You can't suddenly retreat from that debate and say "well maybe Brown's lies aren't harmful but it's all about truth for truth's sake, innit?".
Checkmite, I suspect you haven't read DB's book Tricks Of The Mind. Am I correct?
Your suspicion is correct.
Now I suspect you're about to tell me that a snip from this book manages to completely absolve all of Brown's (just on stage!) peddling and promotion of NLP to the public. Am I correct?
I've never seen Brown "peddle and promote NLP to the public" - I admit I haven't watched all of his stuff as I'm not an avid fan so he may have done, but if he has it's escaped me so far.
Anchoring
Anchoring is the process by which a particular state or response is associated (anchored) with a unique anchor. An anchor is most often a gesture, voice tone or touch but could be any unique visual, auditory, kinesthetic, olfactory or gustatory stimulus. It is claimed that by recalling past resourceful states one can anchor those states to make them available in new situations. A psychotherapist might anchor positive states like calmness and relaxation, or confidence in the treatment of phobias and anxiety, such as in public speaking.[67] Proponents state that anchors are capable of being formed and reinforced by repeated stimuli, and thus are analogous to classical conditioning.
I have watched all of his stuff (apart from the last of The Events), and never ever heard/read him even whisper towards NLP as being nothing but a load of outlandish claims with no evidence to back it up.
Saying "I believe in truth for truth's sake," is no more absolutist than saying, "I believe in freedom of speech."
1. He seems to have caused people to, at the very least, be confused of where the truth lies concerning the science of psychology.
3. There is a lot of potential damage to be done, because the ever-growing force known as NLP is inextricably linked with the message he presents.
4. Obviously Brown isn't as important as the anti-vax fight, but think of the venue we're in. We're almost all skeptics, toeing nearly the same line. If I was bitching about Jenny Mccarthy, I'd be the 8000th one to do so, and I'd just be preaching to the choir. Instead, I'm going to focus where there is actually some controversy.