Moose
Self-Propelled Road Hazard
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2003
- Messages
- 418
jmercer said:1) White waves (also called freak waves)
Are these the same phenomenon as rogue waves?
jmercer said:1) White waves (also called freak waves)
I would not want it to be "a god thang"...rather, it is quite clearly "a human thang"--part of the way we process information, the way we learn, the way we are socialized.El_Spectre said:
It's even more frustrating because I canna argue against it. Ultimately I run up against the "It's a god thang, you wouldn't understand" defense. Argh.
El_Spectre said:Well said, if we're ever in the same town, I owe you a beer![]()
Actually, it is not my own claim.El_Spectre said:My father has a great T-Shirt... in HUGE letters it says "I Apologize", the in tiny letters: "I'm sorry I was right"
Mercutio said:It is not "a god thang". It is very much "a human thang." And it is in our best interest to understand that.
But by this everyone is a skeptic. After all everybody has a threshold. Someone might hand over large sums of money to Sylvia Browne for psychic reading but might not hand over their bank account details to a scam e-mailer.Moose said:This is the same reason I'm an atheist, BTW. The evidence simply doesn't meet my threshold. Should sufficient evidence come to light, however, (or fail to do so), I won't move the evidence bar to suit my expectations.
This is what it means to be a skeptic. [/B]
Hey, my last argument on this topic was with my best friend, who is religious.El_Spectre said:What I meant is this: Most everything is OK to think about and debate rationally, except religion. At some point religious people just say "Well, I believe..." and their opinion somehow is unimpeachable.
Well... no. Not when it affects others. Sorry. No one gets a get out of jail free card from me.
That said, compassion is important, and I'm not that much of a hardass... my best friend is christian, so go figure.
Moose said:Are these the same phenomenon as rogue waves?
Robin said:But by this everyone is a skeptic. After all everybody has a threshold. Someone might hand over large sums of money to Sylvia Browne for psychic reading but might not hand over their bank account details to a scam e-mailer.
jmercer said:"White" waves is the other name I've heard for them. Dunno why they call them that...

There is a world of difference between my student, who had never been properly exposed to the evidence for natural selection (but who, when given the chance, eagerly took in the information) and some un-named individual *cough*Iacchus*cough* who has been shown again and again where his ideas run counter to both logic and evidence, but who chooses to wear blinders and discard anything that does not conform to his fantasy. If the OP had specified the latter, I doubt this thread would have lasted 4 pages.Moose said:And then again, no, not everybody is a skeptic. I'd said before that what makes me a skeptic is that I will resist letting myself move the goalposts, my threshold of evidence, no matter how much I may dislike or desire where the evidence appears to be leading me.
We need only look at the Challenge archives to see plenty of examples of people desperately moving the goalposts; offering excuse after excuse in increasingly weak attempts to keep their pet fantasies alive and intact.
How often have we heard the words "and nothing you can say will convince me of that"? How often have people figuratively drowned clinging to their capsized leaky notions?
I agree with the others, good post. It ties in with a lot of what I have said in the "Is religion slowing us down".Pragmatist said:We are inundated by frauds, liars and stupidity from all quarters. Those are the people who need setting straight. What we don't need is to mould all skeptics into some dogmatic, fundamentalist idea of "truth" and "purity" - that is a very dangerous road to take.
Palimpsest said:Hang on. Isn't that a bit of a double standard? Why are you asking about testing for the presence of God, and then proving love, dreams or pain?
Since none of us are blessed with ESP, we can't know for sure what happens in somebody else's mind, but
(a) You, Beady, presumably feel love, have dreams, and experience pain. Since we are (presumably) of the same species, you can deduce that I have pretty similar experiences.
BS Investigator said:Any skeptic, for example, who believes in an afterlife, to me is no skeptic at all. That is the most extraordinary claim possible, and there is not one shred of evidence to support it. Can we all agree on that?
BS Investigator said:Pragmatist, good post. You should have made your own thread for all the hard work and thought you put into that.
I am no way saying that skeptics should not have spiritual feelings and experiences. I hope they do. I do. What I am saying is that you cannot believe that these major religions like Christianity, Judaism and Islam are "true" or "real" and still be a real skeptic.
Religious claims are the most important and extraordinary of all human claims. Therefore they should be subjected -- if you believe in skepticism, critical thinking and the scientific method -- to the most extraordinary standards of evidence.
Those "skeptics" who know that there is zero valid evidence for religion, but choose to turn off their brain for that one thing, those are the people I am talking about. People who should know better.
Any skeptic, for example, who believes in an afterlife, to me is no skeptic at all. That is the most extraordinary claim possible, and there is not one shred of evidence to support it. Can we all agree on that?