epepke
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2003
- Messages
- 9,264
Interesting Ian said:I rather think that they are correct. So called "Skeptics" are not inhuman. They tend to be as emotional as anyone else. Really, you seriously expect people to believe there is no emotional dimension to so called "skeptics" beliefs?? Come now. Please be sensible. You're an intelligent guy in my opinion. PLease use your intelligence constructively and try to be a bit more objective and impartial.
Please reread what I wrote. I never stated that skeptics are devoid of emotional investment in their beliefs, only that the kind of beliefs that they have emotional investments in aren't the ones that are challenged by believers who come to skeptic fora.
Let me try a specific. If I, say, were to go to a ghost forum and challenge the idea that ghosts exist, I would directly be challenging the core belief of the forum.
However, if a believer in ghosts came to a skeptic's forum and asserted that ghosts existed, they would not be challenging any of my beliefs. I do not have any emotional investment in the idea that ghosts do not exist.
Even here, I don't get angry at the things you say, because I don't see any reason to do so. There's nothing your actions or statements deprive me of. I think you're wrong, but that's as maybe. It doesn't threaten me in any way.
I'm happy to deal with whatever happens to be. If someone did something tomorrow that completely turned upside-down everything I have come up with about how the universe works, my first thought would be "Cool!" Then I'd try to relate it to everything else.
The only way to deprive me of emotional solace would seem, prima facie, to attack my core beliefs. This happens sometimes, albeit rarely, usually from the postmodern contingent.
In that case, there are many possible outcomes. Either it doesn't persuade me, in which case I'm happy. Or it does persuade me, in which case I'm just as happy. Or it's somewhere in-between, in which case I'm even happier, because I get to think about more stuff, which I enjoy doing.
There simply is no unhappy outcome, in terms of my emotions. However, if I challenge the idea of ghosts on a ghost forum, I risk making someone unhappy because they had solace over the death of their mother or something. Which is why I don't spend time doing it, but I digress. The point is that there really is nothing that a believer can do as a believer in a skeptics' forum that is going to deprive me of emotional attachment.
As for the deleted question of how many people here are really skeptics, beats the hell out of me. I sometimes complain about lack of skepticism here. But since the forum per se is not about being non-skeptical, the culture is such that there's going to be more skepticism compared to a believers' forum, which is in and of itself enough to form a hypothesis about the comparative reactions.