qwints
Muse
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2008
- Messages
- 697
Agreed. But then this is counter to skepticism and critical thinking. It is the very basis of religion. Congrats, A+ has essentially become a religion with dogma.
Have you heard about this crazy new religion called math? I hear they use theories by mere reference rather then prove them every time they use them. I even hear they use postulates!
It is true that the atheistforum does not prioritize constantly justifying its beliefs about reality. I agree that it does not provide a tabula rosa environment for discussing the validity of various facts and theories about society.
In other words I'm saying that it is consistent to both "apply skepticism and critical thinking to everything" and not provide a space for debating the validity of well-established facts. The forum provides links to a great deal of material explaining the reasoning and evidence behind various conclusions that are used as short hand. It is true that people who start arguing against those conclusions without addressing those justifications tend to get short shrift and quickly be labeled trolls. It's probably true that there have been false positives as the result of the high frequency of new members explicitly claiming they were trolling us either on the atheismplus forum or another forum.
Isn't 'reality' open to debate? If it isn't, then I gotta agree, it's just an echo chamber and doesn't do a whole lot of good for the skeptic community. They can't say they're critical thinkers and willy-nilly cut off debate at the same time.
This sounds a little bit like the "teach both sides" fallacy. The theory of evolution by natural selection is falsifiable and should be tested, but that doesn't mean that everyone who wants to assert an alternative explanation has to be given a platform to explain why it was done by gods or aliens. Some kinds of oft-refuted arguments can be excluded from some spaces without turning those spaces into echo chambers.
For example, if people are talking about the racial disparity of New York City's "Stop and Frisk" policy and someone decides to start asserting that racial minorities have a higher tendency to commit crimes, then I think excluding that person from the discussion improves the discussion without compromising the critical thinking of that discussion.
The fact is, the A+ forums bans anyone who questions in civil terms the established belief system, and welcomes anyone who defends in uncivil terms the established belief system.
Sure. I think the "established belief system" is justified, and I think that someone arguing in good faith that it was not would not be banned. I just think that "in good faith" is independent of civility.
@dasmiller -
You're still considering civility in teleological terms. The point of not enforcing civility is not because it results in more persuasive arguments. The point is arguing civilly does not come as easily to some people as others. Some restrictions that appear neutral on their face can have a disproportionate impact.