SonOfLaertes
Muse
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2005
- Messages
- 926
This is an issue that I have pondered a bit. In general, skeptics have a religious style belief that truth always matters. In fact, it often doesn't and vast numbers of people live happy successful lives that put a lower priority on the value of truth than most people who self identify as skeptics.
The difficulty here is that truth is very important sometimes and people who have low evidential requirements for opinion formation can struggle significantly because of the flawed decision making that results from that.
So does encouraging the application of critical thinking to things like Noah's ark assists people with the application of critical thinking on issues that are important to their lives or does it just provide an avenue for chest pounding by skeptics? I don't know the answer or have much of a well formed opinion about that. I see arguments for both sides.
What is the case, is that people, including skeptics, often form opinions based on what makes them happy (they allow their various biases to strongly affect the formation of an opinion). For a great number of people this is a process that apply somewhat selectively. For the part of their life where choosing the correct course of action is critical they can fight hard to make a decision based on the best facts that are available to them and reduce the influence of confounding biases. For the rest of their lives they allow various biases to play a more important role in their decision making process and still achieve a reasonably happy successful life.
So who deserves ridicule in all this? The skeptics for acting like it's important to establish the truth about Noah's ark or the believers for making a reasonable decision to place a low priority on truth about Noah's ark when believing in it makes the happy and that belief does not cause a practical problem with the rest of their lives?
Being a skeptic, I think I can guess many of the arguments that my fellow skeptics might make about the importance for truth with regard to Noah's ark but I'm just not sure that those arguments arise to sufficient justification for the ridicule of people who just don't think the truth about Noah's ark is a significant enough issue in their own lives to spend effort to overcome biases that might allow for the formation of a more truth based opinion.
The only people facing ridicule are the people actively pushing the Flood agenda. The people you describe as disinterested in the veracity of the Global Flood are likely not debating the topic, for the most part, and so are not facing any ridicule. But -
If you throw your hat into the ring, expect to join a fight. For those people, who may be more representative of the whole than you think -
Their belief does cause a practical problem with all our lives, even with the specific example of Noah's Ark. An uninformed congregation can easily be swayed into supporting the agenda of a radical leadership. Should we excuse ignorance which feeds a targeted attack on our education system? I have friends who are just as you described above - but they belong to and contribute money toward a congregation which seeks to deny Old-Earth geology, Evolution, genetics, ....
In the end, it's not truth that is at stake here. Truth is just a tool being twisted so that the "disinterested" will stay disinterested, and let those with an agenda, advance that agenda. Their leaders discourage them from seeking truth - it suits their goals to do so. Should we simply accept that reality, or push back against it?