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Have we reach peak LGBT nonsense?

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    Just a query on your probability-think smacl.

    You seem to be working from the view that the more candidates standing for election, the reduction in the probability of any one candidate being elected. In bald speak this is true.

    However, if one candidate's starting position sees him with a reasonable expectation of obtaining 80% of the vote, the entry into the fray of a candidate from the Monster Raving Flying Teapot party will affect the probability of the formers victory not one jot.

    In other words, the availability of all the various gods (both 'established' and of the fairy at the bottom of the garden variety) affect not one wit, the probability of God existing. He either does or doesn't is all you can say.

    If you don't believe me, try getting a job with Paddy Power as a probability calculator ☺


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    robindch wrote: »
    Come up with what?
    ...come up with the ideas vaguely specified by the English words which you are posting here in the A+A forum here and on boards.ie.

    Are these ideas yours? Or are they somebody else’s?

    Please let me know if you find this yes/no question unclear.

    You weren't clear on which of the two topics in my post you were referencing. Don't shoot the messenger huh?

    The ideas expressed in both areas are my own.

    You can deal with either (although I'd be particularily interested to see whether you can see and raise on smacl's effort.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    What isn't clear is whose being intolerant. And who is the 'we' doing the adjudicating on what is intolerant.

    The homophobe is being intollerant.
    The "we" is society.
    A judgement is being made on the veracity of Folaus belief (namely, that it isn't true). Not exactly tolerant.

    It's now intolerant to come to the conclusion that someones beliefs are not true? When I point out the Paradox of Tolerance, I didn't expect you to dig deeper.
    And the judgement isn't really based on ther veractity of the belief, it's based on it's intolerance. He is a homophobe regardless of whether he is right.
    Which brings us back to Popper. His paradox rests on the assumption his philosophical groundings are true / more valid.

    I.e. his conclusion is based on his premises. Slow clap. Any chance you would like to refute his argument, linked and quoted to you a few times in this thread, rather than point out the ludicrously obvious? We might actually get somewhere.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Simple enough questions might help illuminate the problem here.

    1. Can God (say God of the Bible) exist? Assuming you would say yes (after the usual dancing around on the head of a probability pin) then..

    2) Would you agree that in the event he exists, the mechanisms whereby we 'know' (and conclude we know) are God-designed and defined? If so..

    3) In the event he exists, can God enable some people to know of a spiritual realm, via another mechanism of his design?

    4) Assuming yes, what possible problem for me, just because what I would know thus doesn't fit the mechanisms of knowing available to you?

    Ah, this old goat. I'm sure we've entire threads about this. Lets skip all the semantic back and forth and get to the logical crux of your flawed reasoning:

    You claim to have some special sauce knowledge. Another poster appears, lets call them uncleskeptic, claims to have some special sauce knowledge that contradicts yours. And lets say, for arguments sake, that one of you is 100% right, their special sauce exists and is accurate.
    1) How does a completely impartial onlooker, with no special sauce knowledge of any kind, tell which of you actually has any knowledge?
    2) How do you tell?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,903 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Take step 1 and answer yes or no. If only because it's a yes/no question.

    That's a resounding 'No' to question one for me then.

    It's a bit like the emails that I get every day saying I've won the Dutch lottery, an aunt I've never heard of has died and left me millions, or the Finance minister of Ghana would like to transfer a huge amount of money into my bank account. They're scams, plain and simple, so while there is technically an infinitesimal probability of one actually being true, we all know that in fact none of them are true. They play to my greed. They want me to want them to be true, and I guess they sucker some fools in on that basis. I can categorically tell you each and every one is a scam.

    Now lets look at religion. The carrot here is much bigger, immortality no less. And there's a stick thrown in for good measure in the shape of hell that Folau seems so keen on promoting. People naturally fear death, and if young children are told that if they worship such and such a deity they can live forever, it is an attractive proposition. Make sure that the person telling these things is someone they love and trust and the fish is hooked. What also helps is if the person in question is impoverished to the extent that this life is miserable and they're not made aware of alternative notions about life and death. Religion thrives in an environment with poverty and poor education for a good reason.

    I see no reason to believe your God might exist and plenty of reasons to believe your religion is a scam, so your little thought exercise is stalled before it begins.


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  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,903 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    You seem to be working from the view that the more candidates standing for election, the reduction in the probability of any one candidate being elected. In bald speak this is true.

    However, if one candidate's starting position sees him with a reasonable expectation of obtaining 80% of the vote, the entry into the fray of a candidate from the Monster Raving Flying Teapot party will affect the probability of the formers victory not one jot.

    In other words, the availability of all the various gods (both 'established' and of the fairy at the bottom of the garden variety) affect not one wit, the probability of God existing. He either does or doesn't is all you can say.

    If you don't believe me, try getting a job with Paddy Power as a probability calculator ☺

    I hadn't realised that we'd started electing our preferred choice of deity through democratic process. Are you saying that your God exists primarily on the basis of a large number of people wanting him to exist? FWIW, I think Allah has stolen the popular vote at this point, I'd rather vote for the teapot than a God that would see gays suffer for all eternity, and it looks like atari jaguar will take the seat in this particular constituency.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    smacl wrote: »
    I hadn't realised that we'd started electing our preferred choice of deity through democratic process. Are you saying that your God exists primarily on the basis of a large number of people wanting him to exist? FWIW, I think Allah has stolen the popular vote at this point, I'd rather vote for the teapot than a God that would see gays suffer for all eternity, and it looks like atari jaguar will take the seat in this particular constituency.

    I'm saying that the view which holds that the fact of a multiplicity of gods reduces the probability of any one god actually existing .. is faulty thinking.

    The common-to-this-forum practice of citing a multiplicity of gods, both established and comical-device, as a means to diminish the possibility of any gods existence (or diminish the rational for believing in God's existence) is that same faulty thinking at work.

    There is no probability calculation possible on God's existence or not. Especially not when there is no probability calculation possible for the truth of the claims off the various philosophical faith systems used to attempt such a calculation.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    smacl wrote: »
    That's a resounding 'No' to question one for me then.

    It's a bit like the emails that I get every day saying I've won the Dutch lottery, an aunt I've never heard of has died and left me millions, or the Finance minister of Ghana would like to transfer a huge amount of money into my bank account. They're scams, plain and simple, so while there is technically an infinitesimal probability of one actually being true, we all know that in fact none of them are true. They play to my greed. They want me to want them to be true, and I guess they sucker some fools in on that basis. I can categorically tell you each and every one is a scam.

    Yet people do receive genuine letters saying an unknown great aunt has died and left them an enormous sum. You are incorrect to say that none of them are true.

    Does the existence of a large number of scam letters diminish the probability of someone receiving a genuine letter? Would that particular probability be affected were there twice as many scam letters? Not one bit. The probability being looked at is receiving a genuine one, not receiving scam ones.

    Your faulty probability understanding at work again. Now that that's been corrected and it turns out you don't know that they are all scams (since they aren't all scams), we can move on.

    God, you accept, can exist. You don't actually know the probability at all. You haven't a clue in fact.


    Question 2 awaits





    Now lets look at religion. The carrot here is much bigger, immortality no less. And there's a stick thrown in for good measure in the shape of hell that Folau seems so keen on promoting. People naturally fear death, and if young children are told that if they worship such and such a deity they can live forever, it is an attractive proposition. Make sure that the person telling these things is someone they love and trust and the fish is hooked. What also helps is if the person in question is impoverished to the extent that this life is miserable and they're not made aware of alternative notions about life and death. Religion thrives in an environment with poverty and poor education for a good reason.

    I see no reason to believe your God might exist and plenty of reasons to believe your religion is a scam, so your little thought exercise is stalled before it begins.

    I'm not particularly interested in your view of religion. I'm interested in your answers. If you answer no, then give logic reasons (not faith-based reasons) that actually stand up, unlike the one above. They are logic questions afterall.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,903 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Yet people do receive genuine letters saying an unknown great aunt has died and left them an enormous sum. You are incorrect to say that none of them are true.

    You seem to have changed emails to letters there. Letters from a solicitor on their headed paper, the details of which can be verified, which are entirely different from unsolicited emails. I get an email saying that an aunt that I didn't know existed has left me millions, it is a scam. I get a letter from a legal firm that I'm a benefactor in the will of an aunt I didn't know about deserves more investigation, though might still potentially be a scam. We still haven't moved from your first point there.

    Like many people, I get about 4-5 of these emails a day. How many of these would you respond to and how many would you bin immediately?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,458 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    The ideas expressed in both areas are my own.
    I rather thought so - they're so brazenly wrong that I think even the noisier of the US's tramyard preachers would blush before reaching for them.
    You can deal with either (although I'd be particularily interested to see whether you can see and raise on smacl's effort.)
    There's nothing to see here.

    You use the word "belief" in two entirely separate contexts. Then, noting that you've used the same word, you inexplicably claim that you're describing the same thing.

    It's a little like watching an amateur magician who, on his first live night, might cadge a writstwatch from some poor sap in the audience, smash it with a flourish and a hammer, then hand back the broken bits, in the mistaken belief that he'd done the full trick.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    robindch wrote: »
    I rather thought so - they're so brazenly wrong that I think even the noisier of the US's tramyard preachers would blush before reaching for them. There's nothing to see here.

    Coming from you that's a bit limp. You don't seem to know what a 'zero sum game' is (given both sides of the abortion referendum was engaged it it, apparently). And you don't read what you write before posting to check elemental mistakes.


    You use the word "belief" in two entirely separate contexts. Then, noting that you've used the same word, you inexplicably claim that you're describing the same thing.


    Watching American Sniper or something. Hoping for that long range headshot?

    The usual protocol is to quote so it can be seen what you're referring to. Especially in your case since you sometimes don't even read what's written correctly. You might be a mod, but there are objective reasons to suppose you're not necessarily firing on all cylinders recently.



    It's a little like watching an amateur magician who, on his first live night, might cadge a writstwatch from some poor sap in the audience, smash it with a flourish and a hammer, then hand back the broken bits, in the mistaken belief that he'd done the full trick.

    Sometimes you have to make things bite sized.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    smacl wrote: »
    You seem to have changed emails to letters there.

    Let it be an genuine email from a solicitor if you insist :confused:

    Letters from a solicitor on their headed paper, the details of which can be verified, which are entirely different from unsolicited emails. I get an email saying that an aunt that I didn't know existed has left me millions, it is a scam. I get a letter from a legal firm that I'm a benefactor in the will of an aunt I didn't know about deserves more investigation, though might still potentially be a scam. We still haven't moved from your first point there.

    Like many people, I get about 4-5 of these emails a day. How many of these would you respond to and how many would you bin immediately?

    This is all a very long winded way of saying that you give religion no credence. That's known. That's a given.


    I'm not interested in your beliefs about religion, for I know your beliefs already. I know you don't consider your beliefs to be of the same quality as you hold the religious beliefs to be. Your beliefs "are different", "better", in your mind at least.

    The questions posed you aren't looking for "probability assessment" based on the belief system you adhere to. Your probability assessments work for you and that's fine.

    What is requested of you is that you follow the logic down and conclude as the logic insists you need conclude.

    After that, we can move it on a bit .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    The homophobe is being intolerant.
    The "we" is society.

    This is what was written:
    What isn't clear is whose being intolerant. And who is the 'we' doing the adjudicating on what is intolerant.

    The inclusion policy can be argued to be intolerant about someone expressing their belief.

    The expression wasn't intolerant: it didn't say homosexuals should be excluded. It didnt say homosexual expression shouldn't be allowed or should be made illegal.

    It said what the belief held about unrepentant homosexuals coming before God. Just like the expression of the belief that smokers, though tolerated, face a nasty end.

    The beliefs above are arrived at via different means. To suppose the one means valid (empirical evidence about the effects of smoking) and the other (religious belief) invalid is to stake a claim to the supremacy of faith in empiricalism over faith in spiritualism.

    You might do me the pleasure of dealing with the arguments?



    It's now intolerant to come to the conclusion that someones beliefs are not true? When I point out the Paradox of Tolerance, I didn't expect you to dig deeper.

    Tolerance doesn't decide beliefs aren't true and seek to squash them. The whole point of tolerance is that you tolerate, despite personally having a contrarian opinion. That raises a problem - how do you draw the line. But the problem isn't resolved by intolerance.

    You have to have a basis. And I'm wondering what the basis is: it seems to be mere emprical/rationalist secularism. One belief system (on the rise) vs another (on the wane).

    Might is right?


    And the judgement isn't really based on ther veractity of the belief, it's based on it's intolerance. He is a homophobe regardless of whether he is right.

    I don't think you've thought this through.

    If the belief was held to be true by the powers that be, they'd be saying

    a) they believe God exists

    b) God's a homophobe.

    You want to rethink this one?


    I.e. his conclusion is based on his premises. Slow clap. Any chance you would like to refute his argument

    Refute? I don't need to. I'd ask for a proof of his philosophical underpinnings. He is relying on them afterall. Without a sound basis for what he says, what he says is fairies at the bottom of the garden territory.
    We might actually get somewhere.

    Without a proof all you're left with is a belief. I mean, it a big deal to claim, for instance, that all that is to be known is to be known empirically. Now, "all that is to be known" is everything. To say you know everything (or have the means whereby everything that is to be known can be known) lies in the realm of a god.

    That's a pretty high bar.


    If it's beliefs vs. beliefs then we have a stalemate. That doesn't solve our problems, indeed it opens a can of worms, but it might stop the finger pointing. You say terrorist, I say freedom fighter.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,458 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    And you don't read what you write before posting to check elemental mistakes.
    Or "elementary mistakes", as we say in English.

    Lots of people mess up - indeed, many seem to be entirely unaware of - the language's two distinct adjectival forms - attributive and predicate.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    robindch wrote: »
    Or "elementary mistakes", as we say in English.

    Lots of people mess up - indeed, many seem to be entirely unaware of - the language's two distinct adjectival forms - attributive and predicate.

    Whatever.

    You might not have the time other than to take creative writing potshots. You might be too bored with it all (I get it: it's boring to listen to folk think admitting to logical conclusions means letting the existance of God getting a foothold in the door). You may even think you're above all this: that your conclusions are true so what's the point.

    But my belief is as sound for me as yours presumably (an understandably, given how my belief views your mindset) is for you.

    And a belief your system remains, unless it can provide something that, ultimately, have to pull itself up by it's own bootstraps.

    It's only ever going to end up in a stalemate. Which is ever only my point. Those who think I'm trying to elevate my belief over your belief can rest assured. It's not possible for either of us. That's the bottom line of faith.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,458 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    You might not have the time other than to take creative writing potshots.
    He who would take grammatical potshots at other posters should not point the gun at their own foot.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    robindch wrote: »
    He who would take grammatical potshots at other posters should not point the gun at their own foot.

    It was a little less than grammatical: you accused me of zero sum score when that patently a ridiculous (and a challenge unanswered by you) idea.

    You supposed I didn't believe the bible when I clearly do (what "believe the bible" means is open to discussion, granted. But to say I don't believe it, when I clearly didn't say that, isn't a grammatical issue)

    Spellink and the grammar I couldn't give a fig about. Substance is the meat.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,903 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Coming from you that's a bit limp.
    Watching American Sniper or something. Hoping for that long range headshot?
    You might be a mod, but there are objective reasons to suppose you're not necessarily firing on all cylinders recently.

    Mod: As per the charter, please address the post and not the poster.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    smacl wrote: »
    Mod: As per the charter, please address the post and not the poster.


    Given your activity in this thread, it's highly improbable that you missed robindch's potshots.
    It's a little like watching an amateur magician who, on his first live night, might cadge a writstwatch from some poor sap in the audience, smash it with a flourish and a hammer, then hand back the broken bits, in the mistaken belief that he'd done the full trick.

    Can I enquire what it is in particular about my posting which has attracted mod interest?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,903 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Given your activity in this thread, it's highly improbable that you missed robindch's potshots.



    Can I enquire what it is in particular about my posting which has attracted mod interest?

    Mod: If you have a problem with a post, please report it. Do not discuss forum moderation in-thread. Thanks for your attention.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    This is what was written:

    You might do me the pleasure of dealing with the arguments?

    I did deal with them. You questioned who was being intolerant and who judges that it's intolerant. The rest of my post dealt with the relevant parts of the rest of yours. I omitted the waffle.
    Tolerance doesn't decide beliefs aren't true and seek to squash them. The whole point of tolerance is that you tolerate, despite personally having a contrarian opinion. That raises a problem - how do you draw the line. But the problem isn't resolved by intolerance.

    How many times do I need to link to the paradox of tolerance? It explains all of this. You are tolerant up to just before the point where you are tolerant of the intolerant.
    I don't think you've thought this through.
    If the belief was held to be true by the powers that be, they'd be saying
    a) they believe God exists
    b) God's a homophobe.
    You want to rethink this one?

    Nope, I've already said that even if god exists and sends gay people to hell then god is a homophobe.
    Refute? I don't need to. I'd ask for a proof of his philosophical underpinnings. He is relying on them afterall. Without a sound basis for what he says, what he says is fairies at the bottom of the garden territory.

    I've given you his argument. Repeatedly. To repeat, for the last time:
    In simple terms, you can't include everybody when some people don't want others included. If you must exclude somebody then those people, the intolerant, should be excluded.
    (Because I know you are going to ask this) why do you exclude the intolerant and not who they are intolerant of? - you exclude the intolerant because they are who brings intolerance into the system and by excluding them you minimise the amount of intolerance. Like everything in life, it can't be 100% pure (i.e. perfectly tolerant) so you minimise the bad.

    That is the argument you need to refute. Why shouldn't we minimise intolerance and why isn't this the best way to do it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,834 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    But my belief is as sound for me as yours presumably (an understandably, given how my belief views your mindset) is for you.
    Just in case you missed it, are you going to respond to this post? Because it address your problem here. Your belief may be as sound to you as robindch's is a s sound to him, but that doesn't mean either of your beliefs are sound to an impartial onlooker. How does the onlooker decide which is sound?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    [snip]

    smacl beat me to warning people not to question mod decisions on thread.

    Mod hat on : Cards will be issued if people continue to do so...


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,458 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    It's a little like watching an amateur magician who, on his first live night, might cadge a writstwatch from some poor sap in the audience, smash it with a flourish and a hammer, then hand back the broken bits, in the mistaken belief that he'd done the full trick.
    Can I enquire what it is in particular about my posting which has attracted mod interest?
    As you have asked - well, you post as though you'd studied philosophy at some point, but your conclusions are amongst the daftest I've read here in 14-odd years on A+A - completely self-defeating, and completely self-contradictory but you continue to post them regardless. There is quite a funny side to getting things so wrong, and I - for one - do appreciate the funny side here :)

    Also, you've been honest enough to post about your hardline religious views in the past - such as, AFAIR, the time you mentioned you'd be prepared to kill somebody if the voices you hear in your head told you to. Most religious people would stop before admitting that in public. There's another fine contradiction right here between somebody who willingly admits that they would kill somebody while simultaneously disagreeing with abortion - makes no sense to me at all, but then, mental backflips aren't my thing.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    But my belief is as sound for me as yours presumably (an understandably, given how my belief views your mindset) is for you.
    Just in case you missed it, are you going to respond to this post? Because it address your problem here. Your belief may be as sound to you as robindch's is a s sound to him, but that doesn't mean either of your beliefs are sound to an impartial onlooker. How does the onlooker decide which is sound?

    Impartial onlooker? What on earth is that?

    Worldviews (which informs how one looks on) are like assholes..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    Robindch wrote:
    As you have asked - well, you post as though you'd studied philosophy at some point

    You give the impression of someone who has. Yet when this one who hasn't studied philosophy pointed out a kindergaarten error in your application of 'zero sum score' recently, you went all .... silent.

    Most folk who I studied mechanical engineering with (in two different colleges) had no real aptitude for it - sure they walk out with their 2:1's and get a job in the sector. But actual ingrained aptitude?

    Forgive if I don't bow to a white coat - especially one who incorporates so little substance in their responses.

    Put it this way: if God exists and I know it, a consequence would be that I know 'empiricists' claims about the only ways we can know are wrong from the get go.

    Certainly, the never ending expressions of belief in empiricism on here ... but no proof (emprical or otherwise) .. aren't going to put much of a dent in anything. "Philosophy says it, ah buleeve it, da settles it" seems to be the mindset.








    but your conclusions are amongst the daftest I've read here in 14-odd years on A+A - completely self-defeating, and completely self-contradictory but you continue to post them regardless. There is quite a funny side to getting things so wrong, and I - for one - do appreciate the funny side here :)

    Also, you've been honest enough to post about your hardline religious views in the past - such as, AFAIR, the time you mentioned you'd be prepared to kill somebody if the voices you hear in your head told you to. Most religious people would stop before admitting that in public. There's another fine contradiction right here between somebody who willingly admits that they would kill somebody while simultaneously disagreeing with abortion - makes no sense to me at all, but then, mental backflips aren't my thing.

    Rigor isn't a strong point in your arguments, clearly. Neither is your recall total of my argument. Selective is how I'd describe your 'synopsis'.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,218 ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe



    Forgive if I don't bow to a white coat - especially one who spends his time in the peanut gallery and makes emmental errors, despite being educated in the field.


    Rigor isn't your strong point, clearly. Neither is your recall total. Selective is how I'd describe your 'synopsis'.

    Mod: Antiskeptic, dial down on making personal remarks about other posters please or cards will be flourished.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    Ah, this old goat.

    Yeah, the one that is ducked and dived around, as ever.
    You claim to have some special sauce knowledge. Another poster appears, lets call them uncleskeptic, claims to have some special sauce knowledge that contradicts yours.

    The empiricist's special sauce will do for the purposes of onwards discussion.

    And lets say, for arguments sake, that one of you is 100% right, their special sauce exists and is accurate.

    Okay

    1) How does a completely impartial onlooker, with no special sauce knowledge of any kind, tell which of you actually has any knowledge?

    As outlined above, everyone has a special sauce (a.k.a. worldview). There are no impartial onlookers.

    2) How do you tell?

    How do I tell? Or how does the non-impartial onlooker tell?


    I don't see a logical crux or flaw. What I see here is a stalemated position: two worldviews, neither of which can prove their root. And no impartial judge to decide.

    It's a problem generated by the lack impartial judge. I see no logical crux or flaw.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 24,458 Mod ✭✭✭✭robindch


    Forgive if I don't bow to a white coat - especially one who incorporates so little substance in their responses.
    An unusual response from somebody who bows to an imaginary white beard :)


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  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,903 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Put it this way: if God exists and I know it....

    Your logic is faulty as your argument is clearly based on a false predicate. You don't know that god exists, you believe it but there is no objective evidence to support that belief.
    You seem to be working from the view that the more candidates standing for election, the reduction in the probability of any one candidate being elected. In bald speak this is true.

    However, if one candidate's starting position sees him with a reasonable expectation of obtaining 80% of the vote, the entry into the fray of a candidate from the Monster Raving Flying Teapot party will affect the probability of the formers victory not one jot.

    You seem to be trying to promote the possibility of your belief holding true based on the fact that it is a popular belief, which is not only an argumentum ad populum fallacy as already pointed out, but contradicts your previous criticism of human rights standards as being no more than the mood of the people.
    He who lives by the mood of the time, dies by the mood of the time.

    So much for enlightened thinking.

    Quite so.


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