Drewbot
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2007
- Messages
- 7,719
Ever wonder what 100 pages of photos of BIGFOOT, ALIEN, GHOSTS, and DINOSAUR believers looks like?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/believeit/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/believeit/
This - http://www.826boston.org/events/116 does make you wonder...Wait, no. This is not real. Is it?
[URL="http://i179.photobucket.com/albums/w310/william_parcher/c89d52fa.jpg"]http://i179.photobucket.com/albums/w310/william_parcher/c89d52fa.jpg[/URL]
Greater Boston Bigfoot Research Institute Research Fellows
Amanda McCorkle, Graphic Design
Ali Reid
Megan Dickerson
Max Greenberg
Peter Sherer
Dave Bickham
Fern Ritchie
James Wirth
Jennie Coates
Wanna Camcam
Brad Simpson
Geoff Hackett
John Racek
Mike Dacey
Chris O'Connor
Artex
Other City Builders
Harvard Museum of Natural History
Boston Children's Museum
Loren Coleman
A peculiar building in Egleston Square will open soon under an equally peculiar name: the Greater Boston Bigfoot Research Institute.
Flanked by ordinary shops, its futuristic front already stands out on Washington Street where Roxbury meets Jamaica Plain. When its tall glass doors open, the sights inside will be stranger still. Sales clerks will hawk paranormal paraphernalia such as unicorn tears, and people dressed as scientists will busy themselves in apparent research at the city's center of cryptozoology, the study of creatures that may not be real.
But things aren't always as they seem.
The "cryptozoologists" will be volunteers in character; the specimens in jars of murky liquids, props. The entire sci-fi scene at 3035 Washington St. will be a facade for an imaginative, hands-on writing center called 826 Boston.
Yes I know what the true definition of the word "Woo" means.
Now anyone walking through the woods on a regular basis looking for sasquatch is wooing the possibility of it, and is bound to find something that will fit what they are looking for.
But at the same time, anyone who claims not to believe in sasquatch yet writes everyday about it is also wooing a response from those they want to oppose. In fact, anyone who posts anything on a daily basis is zealously soliciting a response, wooing.
Now you're probably going to tell me some sort of made up definition for what you think it means based on seeing it thrown around as an insult to imply someone prone to appreciating fantasy more than reality, but even then someone who daily makes numerous posts on an internet forum, even arguing against paranormal subjects, is appreciating fantasy more than reality. This is an INTERNET FORUM, not real life, not the real world. It doesn't feed you, it doesn't shelter you, it doesn't give you warmth. It's communication abilities, though quick, are limited in that you aren't truly interacting with a human but their best, or worst, representative expressed with characters on a screen. The arguments in this subject are a complete waste of time, not because of their evidence contents but because they are personal stands in a realm where nobody is really standing. A fantasy.
Woo-woo (or just plain woo) refers to ideas considered irrational or based on extremely flimsy evidence or that appeal to mysterious occult forces or powers.
Here's a dictionary definition of woo-woo:
adj. concerned with emotions, mysticism, or spiritualism; other than rational or scientific; mysterious; new agey. Also n., a person who has mystical or new age beliefs.
When used by skeptics, woo-woo is a derogatory and dismissive term used to refer to beliefs one considers nonsense or to a person who holds such beliefs.
Sometimes woo-woo is used by skeptics as a synonym for pseudoscience, true-believer, or quackery. But mostly the term is used for its emotive content and is an emotive synonym for such terms as nonsense, irrational, nutter, nut, or crazy....
So the truck roof is about 6'7". The hairy runner was 6-12" taller than that while in a leaned position. The creature was 7'1"-7'7" tall while leaned. This puts its upright standing height at something like 7'6"-8' tall.
Would it have been something like this Bigfoot shown here messing with a VW Beetle?
QUOTE]
Again I stress that it is hard to say for sure, but yes it appeared as though while running leaned forward that what we saw was approximately 6 inches to a foot taller than the truck. Obviously you would have to give or take some, but that's what it looked like to me.
oh, and cute picture, but again what we saw was shaped like a normal man not overly muscular. Take the physique of a large but not fat man, give him some hair all over and a very short neck. that is how what I saw appeared at least as best as I could see.
Holy cow, do I disagree with that. That would be basically saying that I am a woo since I talk about Bigfoot stuff a lot but do not believe Bigfoot exists. I'm sure you didn't mean that as a personal dig.
I certainly wouldn't call you a woo simply because you entertain the existence of Bigfoot. That would be unfair and dismissive. Tell me you believe in Bigfoot, aliens, and ghosts, and that will be a different story.
William Parcher said:I'm not so sure that Randi's definition of woo can be found in those dictionaries. It apparently began as "woo woo" which is a satirical stereotype of the vocal expression used by someone who believes paranormal or fantastic things. Knights' scoftic can't be found in the dictionary either.
I disagree about the "nobody is really standing" in the Bigfoot argument. Skeptics remain standing and have never sat down. Bigfooters sit and wait for a discovery or head out and try to create one.
William Parcher said:The two sides are not entirely opposite mirror images of each other. Bigfoot skeptics cannot prove that Bigfoot does not exist. Nobody can. Proof of non-existence cannot even be on their agenda. The Bigfooters can prove that Bigfoot exists. Almost anyone could regardless of their belief in Bigfoot. It's something that a person could do and it does appear to be high on the Bigfooter agenda.
Kitakaze said:If I spend a lot of my time discussing psychic mediums, dowsing, Bigfoot, or whatever, it doesn't in any way make me a woo. It makes me interested in those topics. There's no irrational belief system in play. I'm surprised you said that. Was it something I said?
So basically it's a word that was made up to serve as an insult to dissenting views and add security to a fantasy internet community.
You stand when you type on your computer?
What else could we be doing right now? I know every time I have ever posted immediately after I realize I could have been doing something much more productive that would actually have some sort of material result. Money, food, clothing, shelter, warmth, a letter to a loved one, instead of endlessly debating a subject that is silly to begin with, yet here we are.
Not really. Woos are generally not dissenters per se. They make an original claim to something not supported by the evidence or scientific inquiry. Claiming you were abducted by aliens isn't exactly dissent. The term could be insulting and I do use it sparingly. I tend to use Bigfooter or Bigfoot believer.
C'mon now. You used standing as a figure of speech. Can't I?
I think BF skeptics who spend time (1 minute+/year) thinking and writing about Bigfoot are crazy. Please don't anyone report me for that because it is attacking the arguer not the argument.