Daniel Peterson wrote:You seem to be getting a bit overwrought. Sit down and sniff your smelling salts for a bit.
Why do you feel the instinctive need to go in for the MB kill?
I don't get it.
cksalmon wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:You seem to be getting a bit overwrought. Sit down and sniff your smelling salts for a bit.
Why do you feel the instinctive need to go in for the MB kill?
I don't get it.
Daniel Peterson wrote:(Incidentally, our shared belief in a dying and resurrecting carpenter won't fare much better on her "gullibility scale" than will my belief in modified Egyptian writing on gold plates that are not available for beastie's inspection.)
Daniel Peterson wrote:cksalmon wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:You seem to be getting a bit overwrought. Sit down and sniff your smelling salts for a bit.
Why do you feel the instinctive need to go in for the MB kill?
I don't get it.
Why do you think that I feel some instinctive need to go for an "MB kill"?
Do you lack a sense of humor?
Do you really imagine that I'm the vicious brute of Scratch's fantasies?
Beastie is flatly (and quite gratuitously) insulting my religious beliefs, and I respond with the message board equivalent of dipping her pigtails in an inkwell, and you think I'm being horribly cruel?
But I'll try to be as somber and sober as a Puritan divine, at least for a few minutes, if it'll make you feel better about me.
(Incidentally, our shared belief in a dying and resurrecting carpenter won't fare much better on her "gullibility scale" than will my belief in modified Egyptian writing on gold plates that are not available for beastie's inspection.)
Except that we can positively state that there were Jews in Judaea at the time of Jesus. ;-)
beastie wrote:I'm not overwrought, Daniel, I'm actually having fun with this.
beastie wrote:I think it's funny that I fell for the parody.
beastie wrote:So here's the gullibility scale:
Fun and Easy to Use Gullibility Scale
1 – believing what you read on the internet
2 – buying lottery tickets
3 – believing aliens are visiting the earth
4 – believing aliens are regularly abducting mass numbers of people
5 – believing commercials tell the truth
6 – believing politicians tell the truth
7 – believing late night “get rich quick” schemes
8 – actually buying a late night “get rich quick” scheme
9 – believing a telephone psychic can give you useful information about your life
10 – paying a telephone psychic to give you the winning lottery numbers
beastie wrote:So where would you rate “falling for Arnold’s parody” on this scale? In retrospect, I put it at a 5.
beastie wrote:Where would I rate “believing in disappearing gold plates with reformed Egyptian on them that someone translated with a peep stone” ? 10.
Some weird and deeply counterintuitive things are nonetheless true:
Physical processes slow down on objects approaching the speed of light, such that a man on a spaceship returning to earth after ten years of travel at near light-velocity would be less than ten years older than when he left.
Everything in the universe -- every nebula, star, and galaxy -- emerged from a point far smaller than the tip of a needle several billion years ago.
Diseases really are caused by little animals that you can't see. (I cited an amusing passage on this very topic from John Stackhouse's Oxford book Humble Apologetics in a recent introduction to the FARMS Review.)
I guess I missed the joke.