Mojo
Mostly harmless
The Word “Atheist“ Must Go
Also...
Also...
I'm not sure of the full history of the word, but I'm guessing that "skeptic" has a far older, and wider use history by crank contrarians than as the more modern brand of critical thinking that this forum hopes to embrace.
On one side, you have climate skeptics, vaccine skeptics, and all kinds of other woo repackaged as skepticism.
On the other side, you have the "facts and logic" reactionaries that dress of up their neo-chauvinism as rational debate. It doesn't help that so many of the "new atheists" have outed themselves as fash-curious over the years.
I agree, the skeptics "brand" is trash these days.
"Oh no! The word 'skeptic' has been co-opted by deniers and conspiracist loons on social media. We will have to use something else!"
5 minutes later...
"Oh no! The phrase 'critical thinking' has been co-opted by deniers and conspiracist loons on social media. We will have to use something else!"
1 minute later...
"Oh no! The deniers and conspiracist loons on social media have co-opted every word in the English language. We will have to shut up!"
The Word “Atheist“ Must Go
Also...
No, the dictionary was there for both to use. Have a look. It covers both.
In the Oxford, #1 is:
a person inclined to question or doubt accepted opinions.
use the word 'debunker' in its place.
No, the dictionary was there for both to use. Have a look. It covers both.
In the Oxford, #1 is:
a person inclined to question or doubt accepted opinions.
A skeptic is a person who doesn't believe something is true unless they see evidence. As a skeptic, you refuse to believe your sister saw a ghost — after all, she can't prove it.
Skeptics are doubters — they need to see proof before they will believe. If you're a skeptic, you're probably dubious about things like astrology and magic. Some skeptics feel the same way about religion, preferring facts that can be scientifically and historically proven. Coming from the Greek word skeptikos, which means "thoughtful or inquiring," it's no surprise that a skeptic is someone who asks a lot of questions — and isn't easily convinced.
It's the only one that matters.note that the USA is not the only country in the world.
Skepticism (American English and Canadian English) or scepticism (British English and Australian English) is generally a questioning attitude or doubt towards one or more putative instances of knowledge which are asserted to be mere belief or dogma...
More informally, skepticism as an expression of questioning or doubt can be applied to any topic, such as politics, religion, or pseudoscience.
Nonsense.Orphia Nay said:"Skeptic" is an American niche term with highly-charged negative connotations.
use the word 'debunker' in its place.
It's the only one that matters.
My link describes skepticism better than one line in a dictionary. And Wikipedia agrees:-
Nonsense.
Over 50% of Americans say that religion plays a very important role in their lives. So belief in God is the accepted norm in this country. But does being skeptical towards this accepted belief have 'highly-charged negative connotations'? In some circles perhaps, but doubting the existence of God doesn't generally have the negative connotations it once did. Around 20% of the population (rising to ~30% in young adults) identify as non-religious, so clearly there are a lot of skeptics in the US. If we include those who are skeptical of this government's abilities the figure rises to well over 50%.
The truth is, most people are skeptical of one thing or another - often with good cause. Being skeptical of unevidenced claims is generally seen as a positive thing in the US. We pride ourselves as independent thinkers who don't believe everything the authorities tell us or accept what the majority think just because there are more of them.
Some people who call themselves 'skeptics' are actually deniers or conspiracist loons, but the majority are true skeptics who just want to see the evidence before they accept what they are told. To 'take back' the word we merely need to use it.
People were "wrestling" with this when the forum first started.
Look, it's OK to admit it's awkward if calling yourself a skeptic.
I'd guess we've all been there.
Why persist in continuing?
May have been, but if so I'm sure Randi endorsed it. It was pretty dim.
ETA: Brights Movement at RationalWiki.
I was cleaning out old Christmas stuff and found my Randi "may your holiday season be bright" ornament last year. Dim indeed.
Are you skeptical of aliens, ESP, homeopathy, trickle-down economics? What about religion? There are a lot of commonly held beliefs to be skeptical of.
There's a distinct difference between skepticism and denial. Skeptics don't believe things without sufficient evidence. Deniers reject all evidence. But believers don't need any evidence. Only skeptics require facts and logic, rather than uncritically believing or reflexively denying what they are told.
We've been here before with 'science is just another religion' and claiming rational thinking could apply to anything a person claimed it applied to.
Just politely explain why said word either doesn't apply of has more than one meaning.
I recall a few angry replies when I've used the 'rational thinking' terminology. I don't care. They were wrong.
It doesn't matter which word you use, the irrational, anti-science folks will try to usurp the terminology because they have no other argument.
I disagree. Though the amount required to satisfy an individual person obviously varies, we can still say that it is 'sufficient' if it is enough to satisfy the needs of a reasonable person. This applies to many things that are subjective, and is generally implicit in the word 'sufficient'.That word “sufficient” is problematic because it’s entirely subjective.
Human nature is that we hold a different standard for things we already believe. In practice this means a skeptic actually accepting the evidence almost never happens. This means that the real distinction comes down to whether the original implicit rejection of the claim/position was correct in the first place
No, it doesn't. Real skeptics do their own research, and only demand that claims made by others be supported by it. If someone constantly demands more when sufficient evidence has already been provided then they are not a skeptic, they are a denier.The underlying problem with skepticism is that it demands someone else do all the work and present all the evidence.
If you are convinced that ghosts don't exist then you are not a skeptic. A skeptic is skeptical of the existence of ghosts, but willing to consider new evidence.Eg when a skeptic asks for evidence for the existence of ghosts they are not taking a neutral stance and giving the people a chance to support their claim. The skeptic is invariably starting from the (correct) position that ghosts do not exist, but doesn’t want to have to prove their own position is correct.