Moderated Is the Telekinesis Real?

But Jay...

It's pretty amusing how you can't seem to make an argument for psychokinesis that doesn't involve constantly tearing personally into people.

But Jay is different, none of his interpretations of mathematical statistics make any sense to me.

That's because you don't know statistics.

You might disagree with me, but I suggest you ask him why he didn't present any reference to a material that supports his point of view.

Or you could just address the answer I already gave to that point.

He could have laid this matter to the rest by responding to my multiple requests to provide any book or article giving some credibility to his assertions, but he steadfastly refused to do so.

To be more accurate, I refused to allow you to script my side of the debate or foist your straw man. Since you didn't pay attention to any of the times I pointed out that your own sources contradicted you, and you ignore external citations provided by others, I conclude that you don't read either my posts or your any cited sources and that therefore your request that I argue that way is not sincere.

As I said, I can demonstrate understanding. You cannot.

You might still trust his mathematical judgment, but I do not think that majority of the audience agrees with you, although they might still like him

The audience has already spoken. No, you do not have a vast army of lurkers supporting you, so it's time for you to quit trying to poison the well.
 
You keep stubbornly saying that a double-slit setup lead to a normal distribution, despite the pictures that I provided, there is nothing I can do about that....

You never understood it's not a matter of pictures. You were never able to understand that the physical process is one thing and the variable tested is a quite different one. That's why you keep casting spells, calling names and referring to the images you provided.

I don't recall you replying to my post where I pointed out your stupid use of a Fraunhoffer diffraction in any way, or replying to any other post from anyone with something different than the demonstrably false assertion "I (""""Buddha"""") understand, you NN don't!" inflated with a lot of words like a balloon.

So, let's save the "audience" from your poor understanding of basic Statistics and science in general.
 
There are different kinds of experiment design to prove that telekinesis exists, some of them are based on statistical interpretation of empirical data...

And that was where you first decided to go, claiming up front that you were competent to evaluate the statistical analysis and that all PEAR's critics were incompetent. You've spent several pages trying to pretend you are an expert in statistics, and failing quite noticeably to do so. Now you're trying various tactics to backpedal out of that portion of the debate without losing face. Sorry, but you don't get to spend page after page calling everyone else stupid and then try to change the subject without facing the music.

That Hasted drew conclusions without employing statistics does not mean that statistics were irrelevant to his study. But I'm not ready to move on to Hasted just yet. We need to reach some closure on Jeffers, Jahn, and your fundamental misunderstanding of what they did in their studies.

You keep stubbornly saying that a double-slit setup lead to a normal distribution...

No. No one is claiming that. You're the one who doesn't understand that the raw output of the machine is not the dependent variable in these experiments. Yes, there was a normally-distributed dependent variable in the Jeffers study. No, it was not the interference pattern produced by the double-slit apparatus.

Let me warn you that if you continue walking down the road of complete denial, you will severely damage your reputation as an objective board member.

You seem obsessed with questions of reputation. I thought this thread was about psychokinesis.

You see, I always appeal to the audience because they are the ultimate judge of our arguments, it is left to them, but not to you and I, to decide who is right.

No, correctness is not determined by audience appeal. Correctness is determined by a logically sound interpretation of observations. This is ostensibly a thread about science and the methods we use to conduct scientific inquiry. You're quite obviously thinking of it as a popularity contest that you think you're winning.
 
In this case being authority is not required because I was stating that Palmer didn't interpret the result of his statistical analysis

And it has been repeatedly demonstrated that you lack the understanding of statistics to make that statement with any authority.

If you consider my posts insulting, you should take a look at his posts with the insults aimed at me.

Pointing out you have no clue what you are talking about is not an insult. It is a statement of fact. There is no shame in lacking a working knowledge of statistics. Your shame is in lying and pretending you know more than you do.

Nobody cares that your feelings are hurt by JayUtah and others repeatedly proving you to be a liar and a fraud. If you want empathy for your hurt feelz, stop lying.
 
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You might still trust his mathematical judgment, but I do not think that majority of the audience agrees with you, although they might still like him

Still trying to hide the sun behind your thumb?



http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=331998

I suspect he'll cook up a convoluted and hilariously ignorant statistics based explanation for why the votes are not going in his favor.

As an FYI for anyone who hasn't seen it yet, there is a forum poll all about Buddha's claim that he has silent supporters. The votes are anonymous. You can vote for more than one forum member. If you are a supporter of Buddha's please go to the Who is winning the "Is the Telekinesis Real?" Thread? survey and vote for him.
 
And it has been repeatedly demonstrated that you lack the understanding of statistics to make that statement with any authority.

Palmer notes that Hasted did no statistics in his studies -- although he should have in order to support the conclusions he states. So if Palmer doesn't offer much of a statistical analysis of Hasted, it's not Palmer's fault. There's simply nothing to analyze. As usual, Buddha is trying to lay at Palmer's feet all the errors that Palmer notices in the studies he reviews.

Pointing out you have no clue what you are talking about is not an insult. It is a statement of fact.

It's a conclusion drawn on evidence. In this case, expertise sufficient to support judgment is a premise to the argument. Buddha clearly stated up front and several times thereafter that he himself was competent on his own to criticize the statistical arguments of the various authors. And it is almost entirely according to his personal knowledge -- such as it may be -- that he has made his argument. That argument is generally that in his "expert" opinion, Palmer and Jeffers and others critical of psychokinesis have performed their statistical analysis incorrectly, whether in their own research or in commenting upon the research of others.

Any argument of that form requires first laying a foundation to support the premise of expertise. Buddha has spectacularly failed to do that. Noting that failure is not an insult. Showing a failure to lay a foundation is, in fact, the only suitable rebuttal to questions predicated on a premise of expert judgment. In showing that the judgment is uninformed, there has also been an appropriately dispassionate discussion of the principles of statistics themselves. Showing that the facts are against one's claims is not an insult. Concluding that the claimant is not the expert he said he was is not an insult.

There is no shame in lacking a working knowledge of statistics. Your shame is in lying and pretending you know more than you do.

That's really where it is. Others in this thread have happily admitted that they don't understand the statistics, and have certainly received no criticism on that from me. Buddha merits that particular criticism only because he has claimed expertise he clearly does not have. Being caught doing that is supposed to hurt. Public shame is the incentive reasonable people adopt not to do shameful things. But yes, I am rather amused by Buddha's complaints that he's being unfairly treated for not being allowed to continue lying with impunity. He's desperately trying to shame his opponents away from making their most effective criticism. Most of Buddha's posts are just such ham-fisted attempts at social engineering.
 
… Pointing out you have no clue what you are talking about is not an insult. It is a statement of fact. There is no shame in lacking a working knowledge of statistics. Your shame is in lying and pretending you know more than you do.

Nobody cares that your feelings are hurt by JayUtah and others repeatedly proving you to be a liar and a fraud. If you want empathy for your hurt feelz, stop lying.

Very well said. Sound advice.
 
OK then. Let's dismantle this ball of crap.

If you consider my posts insulting, you should take a look at his posts with the insults aimed at me.
Wrong. Jay has not insulted you at all. Jay has demonstrated the paucity of your argument, such as it is.
Basically, he started this insult thing, I was just responding in kind.
Nope. Without doubt, you started it the moment your crank argument was remotely criticised on it's merits. And you did not restrict yourself to Jay. You lashed out at EVERYONE.

It seems that you prefer to see my unkind comments only, without paying attention to his.
Nope. Jay focuses on the arguments at hand. You focus on some persecution complex all your own. You toss out any semblance of rational argument in favour of some imagined persecution.

But I am a big boy now, so I do not complain about his tactics.
Do you need a second guess? Frankly, you do not lodge a formal complaint because you know full well that any such complaint would be without merit.

If you read one of my posts,
Read all of them. They did not improve with time.

you saw that I correctly guessed that Jay is a prominent figure here, you just confirmed that.
False. I stated that Jay was known to me from various venues including this one. The suggestion of some level of celebrity was entirely a figment of your imagination.

Judging by the posts of some other members, they do have provenance here.
And you have none. And you are not going to get any with these absurd accusations.

Although I disagree with their point of view, I never accused them of pretending being expert in a field without actually being one.
I think you will find that you made that exact accusation.

Foe example, one of them is a staunch defender of the Popper doctrine (I think you know my opinion about Popper), but I have no doubt that he is an experienced engineer, as he stated.
Really? We all are familiar with your strange Popper obsession. And Jay is most certainly credentialed. This is all just you attempting (and failing) to poison the well.
You might be also an expert in your field. at least I haven't seen any of your posts that go against common sense.
Common sense usually isn't. And I posted on this very site my credentials and the means to verify them.

Sure, I have an alphabet soup of letters after my name. It is because of those that I know for a fact that Jay is correct and you are not.

But Jay is different, none of his interpretations of mathematical statistics make any sense to me.
Sure, because you have not the foggiest clue about any of it. This is obvious to all the other participants in the thread bar YOU. Why?

You might disagree with me, but I suggest you ask him why he didn't present any reference to a material that supports his point of view.
You are wrong. Of course I disagree with you.

He could have laid this matter to the rest by responding to my multiple requests to provide any book or article giving some credibility to his assertions, but he steadfastly refused to do so.
Nobody in this thread requires external citations. Most here are sufficiently educated so that we need no external reference to identify that your idea is flat out wrong.

To give an analogy, you are claiming that 2 + 2 = a sausage.

What citations do you need to toss such a claim in the garbage?
You might still trust his mathematical judgment, but I do not think that majority of the audience agrees with you, although they might still like him
As demonstrated by the poll thread, you are wrong about that too. Colour me surprised.
 
Unless of course telekinesis is real but rare and feeble.

Telekinesis being real would certainly explain why the last time I went to Vegas the roulette wheel enabled me to leave the city with exactly $40 less than I arrived with. I was betting on either red or black not a specific number. Influencing that with psychic powers would certainly be easier than forcing a particular number.

Another item about real telekinesis when it is applied to gambling, is that the gamblers using their telekinesis powers actually do not win any more money than those gamblers who are not using any telekinesis powers.
 
Buddha, just an observation from the peanut gallery.

Yes, JayUtah is a prominent poster on this forum, but this is important: he has earned it. He takes time in fleshing out his comments, keeping them at a level where someone unfamiliar with the material can follow the argument, even though readers like myself have to do a little research to keep up.

JayUtah does not bluff. Claims and argumentative techniques are dissected and analyzed, eloquently so. The veracity of his posts are subject to any poster who fact checks them, and around these here parts, claims get checked.

Please drop the Pied Piper silliness, and address the arguments squarely. Debate and discussion are welcome. Bluffing is subject to ridicule.
 
Nope. Jay focuses on the arguments at hand.

I try very hard to, but we've all learned from long experience that we sometimes have to either follow the discussion where it meanders or remain silent. It is distasteful to indulge a particular claimant in his personal grudges against his critics, skeptics in general, or the world. And when the discussion devolves -- as has this one -- to personal contests, it becomes less informative and enjoyable.

Earlier Buddha wrote that I shouldn't have to resort to attacking his claims to expertise because I could show my own expertise by defending Palmer on the merits. Well, that's what I did in the lengthy posts he dismissed as "irrelevant." He wants to continue to script my side of the debate, ostensibly to require me to do things he suspects I can't or won't do so that he can accuse me of dereliction. But the premise to his argument is not cured by his request. If he says, "I'm an expert, and in my expert opinion these other people have erred," then my expertise or yours is not part of that equation. The question in that line of reasoning is always whether he is the expert, regardless of who else might or might not be. His claim fails because his claim to expertise is false. This is the same pitfall everyone falls into when their presence at the forum is probably more about narcissism than about the question at hand.

Frankly, you do not lodge a formal complaint because you know full well that any such complaint would be without merit.

Correct. This is a well-worn tactic. Claimants backed into a corner inevitably try to shame their opponents away from making the most effective criticism by suggesting it's inappropriately ad hominem, but never want that suggestion adjudicated by a third party. It's pure rhetoric. Buddha is the one who decided to base his argument on his own claims to expertise. If those claims fail to be supported by the facts, then that's all there is. Saying, "No, you're ignorant of statistics," is not a value judgment on him as a person. It's a statement regarding the validity of his argument -- nothing more.

I think you will find that you made that exact accusation.

I have made only roundabout claims to expertise. I generally prefer to demonstrate expertise and let others judge for themselves the degree to which they want to accept it as such or factor it into their evaluation of my line of reasoning. As others have said, they go back and look things up if they are suspicious of anything I've said.

But in contrast, you are correct. The cornerstone of Buddha's argument is that his critics -- you and I included -- are not competent in statistics, that we are insinuating expertise he says we do not have, and that on the basis of that purported deficiency our comments on his claims can be disregarded as uninformed. And additionally we should apparently be ashamed of ourselves for questioning his competence. He has made similar claims regarding Palmer, Jeffers, and Alcock. He has specifically said that because they and we lack the appropriate credentials (or so he believes), we cannot possibly be correct in our criticism.

Pure gaslighting. He seems to think we cannot read the thread for ourselves and see the arguments he has made. He lately needs to distance himself from discussing correct statistics, so he needs to rescind all the accusations he made previously on the position he's trying now to surreptitiously abandon. You'll recall yesterday or the day before when he tried to negotiate a settlement. He tried to shift his position from one of him being the expert and all his critics being pretentious novices to a softer one of all this disagreement over statistics being no more than a reasonable difference opinion.

If he wants to withdraw his accusations and apologize for them, that would be acceptable. But pretending never to have made them is dishonest. It doesn't take responsibility. He's frankly admitted that he's making some arguments that are just poking fun "at [his] opponents' expense." When one states that as a motive, one doesn't generally get to sneak away when the fun-poking backfires. Comeuppance isn't strictly a part of the argument on its merits, but it should be allowed to happen naturally when someone chooses a kind of approach that risks it. It's the incentive not to make such puerile arguments in future.

Nobody in this thread requires external citations. Most here are sufficiently educated so that we need no external reference to identify that your idea is flat out wrong.

First, it's a straw man. "You must make only the kind of argument I tell you to make." We reject that on principle.

Second, it's a ruse. Buddha has a long history of ignoring cited references, even his own. He seems to regard them not as documentation of authority or as invocations of formally codified information, but as no more than some kind of artillery in a battle. In his mind he's firing more rounds, so in accordance with the first rule of artillery, he must be winning. His only reason to ask for them is so that he can read nefarious intent or illusions of victory into their absence.

Third, sometimes in this thread, and many threads, it's important to document fact from external sources. The facts that the t-test for significance uses the t-distribution as its basis and that the basis is not normally distributed are certainly well known among statisticians, but a reference even to something as simplistic as Wikipedia is the proper rebuttal when someone denies those facts.

On those specific points I specifically avoided references to the literature because I was hoping Buddha would go do his own research from his own previously cited sources (e.g., the Navy statistics manual) and arrive on his own at the same conclusions I drew. That source, for example, explicitly refuted Buddha's claim that you can't take baseline data at the same time you take experimental data. And I used that particular oversight to flush out the fact that Buddha doesn't read his own sources. That leads to yesterday's incredibly embarrassing gaffe where Buddha announces triumphantly that, according to his sources, the t-distribution isn't at all the same thing as the normal distribution. Well, yes, and that's been my point all along, against his objections. Buddha seems to think he won the day when all he did was finally confirm my statements from his own sources. Think how much less entertaining that would have been had I spoon-fed him his errors at every turn.

But as you note, the other side of that issue is that the correcting of errors is often made according to a gestalt understanding of the field, not by any concise sound bite from it. There's no quote from Sternstsein that says, "You're not using the right quantity here as your dependent variable." That's something you know, regarding some specific model or problem, because you studied and practiced how to derive appropriate variables and distributions from whatever the data looks like natively. And that encompasses a variety of experiences, printed sources, and conversations. And you then apply that knowledge to the specific problem. One can Google for facts, but one cannot Google for knowledge and understanding.

Consequently (fourth), the premise behind Buddha's demand poorly expects that the literature will be or contain specific proscriptions. That is, if someone proposes a specific thing, you can't expect the relevant literature to supply a specific admonition for or against it. There is no passage in any textbook that says, "You can use a double-slit apparatus as a random process." Asking for one -- and claiming you're right to reject the proposal for lack of it -- is a straw man. The number of ways someone can wrongly answer 2+2=? is functionally infinite. It's ridiculous to expect arithmetic textbooks to specifically preclude "sausage" as an answer. But sausage is the wrong answer, and we can know this confidently. We teach people sciences as abstractions and principles so that they can correctly reason through whatever ad hoc problems arise. We don't teach them sciences as a rote list of dos and don'ts.
 
That argument is generally that in his "expert" opinion, Palmer and Jeffers and others critical of psychokinesis have performed their statistical analysis incorrectly, whether in their own research or in commenting upon the research of others.

Don't forget the persecutional attitude shown now and then about Palmer and Jeffers being ill-intended (the same way "he" does with evolutionists in the anti-evolutionist self-published booklet he claimed to have written) always insincerely tempered in ways like "I could not imagine why Palmer would do that if..."

Any argument of that form requires first laying a foundation to support the premise of expertise. Buddha has spectacularly failed to do that. Noting that failure is not an insult. Showing a failure to lay a foundation is, in fact, the only suitable rebuttal to questions predicated on a premise of expert judgment. In showing that the judgment is uninformed, there has also been an appropriately dispassionate discussion of the principles of statistics themselves. Showing that the facts are against one's claims is not an insult. Concluding that the claimant is not the expert he said he was is not an insult.

Nor it is an insult to remind the readers other things he has said and done here, like his final arbitrage deciding that Jesus was who he claimed to be but not God and adi-Buddha (his humble user name in the religious forum) being God the Father; or a supposed incarceration consequence of he belonging to Scientology. Or reminding the good hype of anecdotal information he brought up in that thread about reincarnation he started, where he talked enthusiastically and repetitively and commented on the results he got from others' past lives using the successful method he had learnt to retrieve them, the same method that could be used with oneself. Contextual information aren't insults either.

Also things he had suggested he'd do and failed aren't insults, as well as being reminded several times about posts he failed to reply to.

What would be verging the insult category is suggesting whom he might believe to be the reincarnation only based in his apparent total lack of interest about his own past lives.

Public shame is the incentive reasonable people adopt not to do shameful things. But yes, I am rather amused by Buddha's complaints that he's being unfairly treated for not being allowed to continue lying with impunity. He's desperately trying to shame his opponents away from making their most effective criticism. Most of Buddha's posts are just such ham-fisted attempts at social engineering.

He's now basically presenting himself like the wolf of the tale which, bitterly crying, approached the shepherd and started complaining about "those evil sheep who want to hurt me"
 
I suspect he'll cook up a convoluted and hilariously ignorant statistics based explanation for why the votes are not going in his favor.


Or the psychiatry inspired "the lurkers support me in email". So good (thanks again, Dave!).

Reproduced with express permission of its author.

(To the tune of “My Bonny Lies Over the Ocean”)

The lurkers support me in email
They all think I’m great don’t you know.
You posters just don’t understand me
But soon you will reap what you sow.

Lurkers, lurkers, lurkers support me, you’ll see, you’ll see
off in e-mail the lurkers support me, you’ll see.

Oh it’s true, and you know they support me.
There’s thousands of lurkers out there!
They all understand my intentions
you posters are not being fair!

Lurkers, lurkers, lurkers support me, you’ll see, you’ll see
off in e-mail the lurkers support me, you’ll see

The lurkers support me in email
“So why don’t they post?” you all cry
They’re scared of your hostile intentions
they’re not as courageous as I.

Lurkers, lurkers, lurkers support me, you’ll see, you’ll see
off in e-mail the lurkers support me, you’ll see

One day I’ll round up all my lurkers
we’ll have a newsgroup of our own
without all this flak from you morons
my lurkers will post round my throne.

Lurkers, lurkers, lurkers support me, you’ll see, you’ll see
off in e-mail the lurkers support me, you’ll see.

Jo Walton, 16th May 1998
 
The cornerstone of Buddha's argument is that his critics -- you and I included -- are not competent in statistics, that we are insinuating expertise he says we do not have, and that on the basis of that purported deficiency our comments on his claims can be disregarded as uninformed. And additionally we should apparently be ashamed of ourselves for questioning his competence. He has made similar claims regarding Palmer, Jeffers, and Alcock.

His modus operandi can be summed up as:

  1. Deny every author's or poster's expertises unless they abide by """"Buddha"""" 's sayings.
  2. Replace the so dislodged expertises with whatever fake expertise """"Buddha"""" needs to claim at the moment to sustain his claim of the day.
  3. Repeat per secula seculorum. Reincarnate to do so, if necessary.
or the Deny-Replace-EnergizerBunny pattern, so unoriginal.
 
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Telekinesis being real would certainly explain why the last time I went to Vegas the roulette wheel enabled me to leave the city with exactly $40 less than I arrived with.

I'm sure you see your error. Roulette wheels are round. They are clearly not a bell-shaped curve and therefore roulette is not a random process. :D

You never understood it's not a matter of pictures. You were never able to understand that the physical process is one thing and the variable tested is a quite different one.

Exactly; the abstraction skills required for statistical modeling are substantially absent here.

Every middle-school student goes through a trial by fire called "story problems." For many this is the hardest part of introductory algebra because it is the first time abstraction and modeling become part of the process of mathematical reasoning. We know from developmental psychology that the ability of the human brain to do this generally doesn't emerge until right around puberty, so we don't try to teach it earlier. Consequently some algebra students get story problems right away, and some struggle.

Story problems are hard for students because it's math "in the wild." It's the way problems will be presented to them later in life, where those problems are best solved mathematically. The problem has to be modeled using the vocabulary of algebraic operations, and the quantities have to be abstracted or derived from what's said in the prose. Not all information will be relevant. The pattern of the best model may not immediately leap to mind. Gradually most people reach a functional level of competence in abstraction and modeling. If one wants to follow certain professions, one must master it.

Statistics simply offers new vocabulary in the grammar of quantitative expression. The beginning algebra student knows that if a train leaves the station headed for a town a certain distance away, he's probably going to have to deal with time or velocity or other Newtonian bothers, and gradually develops the skill to look for observations in the problem statement that he can use to derive missing quantities. He knows the same elementary principles extend to camels walking or spaceships flying. Commensurately the beginning statistics student learns ways in which seemingly different or inapplicable kinds of observations can lend themselves to expression as random variables. That's when he becomes a competent statistical reasoner.

There's one level of knowledge in being able to solve a Pythagorean theorem formula or the quadratic formula or a definite integral. There's another level of knowledge in knowing that the Pythagorean theorem can help you square up the deck you're building, that quadratic equations can find the price points of commodities, and that definite integrals can help you estimate when to replace your ailing automobile. Similarly there's one level of knowledge in being able to compute the sample standard deviation or the posterior probability. There's another level of knowledge in being able to formulate a random variable from some given process or optimize the search for a missing child.

The latter version of each of those is what Buddha cannot demonstrate here. It's what we refer to as abstraction, the ability to visualize problems in the vocabulary of some formalism.

The telltale is when Buddha makes claims along the lines, "You can't do that because it would take infinite trials to determine." Statistics is all about not having to do that. Among other things, it's about being able to do N trials and knowing what's the farthest you can have departed from theory. (Or, per Jeffers and baselines, how much you must be off.) It's about realizing that for some given alpha, a certain amount of normal variance is expected, and that this bias for a set of runs will be normally distributed no matter how the underlying process works.

The beginning arithmetic student is astounded to see what can be done with algebra. The algebra student is astounded to see what can be done with calculus. Thence on to differential equations, eigenvalues, and math that has seemingly miraculous properties compared to the vocabularies of the plateaus that preceded it. Similarly with statistics, Buddha is marveling that such things can be done, not because they can't but because his statistical thinking is still too concrete. He may understand the rote mechanics of how to set up a Z-test or a correlation coefficient given a table of data. But he can't demonstrate how to employ the vocabulary of statistics to model problems the way the scientists he's criticizing have done. He can't duplicate their process of going from the "story problem" of the experiment design to the abstract statistical model. He's attempting the equivalent of grading a calculus test using only the rules of elementary algebra, and saying "Hey, you can't do that! There's no rule in algebra that says you can do that!"
 
His modus operandi can be summed up as:

  • Deny every author's or poster's expertises unless they abide by """"Buddha"""" 's sayings.

Early in this thread Buddha insisted that I dumb things down for him. The corollary to this rule is that no one is allowed to have any more expertise than he.

  • Repeat per secula seculorum.

It's generally rendered in secula seculorum, but yeah.

Reincarnate to do so, if necessary.

I saw what you did there.
 
You toss out any semblance of rational argument in favour of some imagined persecution.

What's amusing is that aleCcowaN and halleyscomet, it could be argued, are openly mocking him. This doesn't seem to bother him much. Despite Buddha's oft-stated promise that he is agnostic to criticism, it seems that only the person who deserves to be called out for alleged insults happens to be the same person making the most substantial rebuttals of his arguments. Somehow only that person raises Buddha's otherwise quiescent ire -- but only to the extent of making a rhetoric out of it, not to the extent of reporting it. Buddha's skin precisely thick enough not to stoop to that, but not quite thick enough to let it slide as he does with the open mockery.
 
6tTmGZN.jpg


"""""""Buddha""""""" has things to consider...
 
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What's amusing is that aleCcowaN and halleyscomet, it could be argued, are openly mocking him. This doesn't seem to bother him much. Despite Buddha's oft-stated promise that he is agnostic to criticism, it seems that only the person who deserves to be called out for alleged insults happens to be the same person making the most substantial rebuttals of his arguments. Somehow only that person raises Buddha's otherwise quiescent ire -- but only to the extent of making a rhetoric out of it, not to the extent of reporting it. Buddha's skin precisely thick enough not to stoop to that, but not quite thick enough to let it slide as he does with the open mockery.

Meh. I tend to keep a lower profile than your good self because I simply lack your patience. Were I to let fly, I would quickly buy a ban.
 

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