Tarski wrote:
So? You say this like it is obviously a bad thing?
A couple years ago you were going around recommending Shermer's books and promoting other skeptical/rational ideas. Were you evil or insincere?
In my opinion you were, metaphorically speaking of course,...sober.
I am patiently waiting for you to once again excomminicate yourself from the gospel of credulity.
Of course, I guess we will first have to wait until your acceptance of Mormonism reaches it's biannual peak.
For several years I have subscribed, and still do, to Shermer's e-skeptic newsletter. I read it with much interest. I'm almost always on the look out for anything new Dawkins has to say. I've already quoted Shermer's perhaps lesser known views, and how both he and Dawkins are actually "open" to ideas they seem to debunk in public (no doubt you will disagree). Lost count of how many times I've linked to
This Classic Debate (Dawkins had to "disabuse" Collins of some "ideas" he had about him).
DAWKINS: My mind is not closed, as you have occasionally suggested, Francis. My mind is open to the most wonderful range of future possibilities, which I cannot even dream about, nor can you, nor can anybody else. What I am skeptical about is the idea that whatever wonderful revelation does come in the science of the future, it will turn out to be one of the particular historical religions that people happen to have dreamed up. When we started out and we were talking about the origins of the universe and the physical constants, I provided what I thought were cogent arguments against a supernatural intelligent designer. But it does seem to me to be a worthy idea. Refutable--but nevertheless grand and big enough to be worthy of respect. I don't see the Olympian gods or Jesus coming down and dying on the Cross as worthy of that grandeur. They strike me as parochial. If there is a God, it's going to be a whole lot bigger and a whole lot more incomprehensible than anything that any theologian of any religion has ever proposed. (page 9)
From my "library of quotations":
"Doubt everything or believe everything: these are two equally
convenient strategies. With either we dispense with the need for
reflection." - Henri Poincare
"Modern science should indeed arouse in all of us a humility before the immensity of the unexplored and a tolerance for crazy hypotheses." -Martin Gardner
"Man's greatest asset is the unsettled mind." - Isaac Asimov
"Science today is locked into paradigms. Every avenue is blocked by beliefs that are wrong, and if you try to get anything published by a journal today, you will run against a paradigm and the editors will turn it down" - Sir Fred Hoyle
Like most here, I've probably posted far, far more than I ever should have when at certain "junctures", or "thought stations" (not
final destinations), or speaking your mind when it perhaps would have been better to say nothing. So yes, I'm "vulnerable", vulnerable to the
truth, wherever it may lie (which I suspect will be a lifelong "state" for me), so I don't subscribe to "Mormon dogma" nor "scientific dogma" when I believe I see it. There are some things Mormon I will
never defend here, and I see a similar sort of "dogmatic thinking" in commentators like Shermer and Dawkins,
et.al.
Anyway, I'm tired of defending and explaining myself here. As Susan Blackmore said, "it never gets anywhere", whether you're on the skeptical side, or the "credulous" side. Though I have to say, it's not bad entertainment, but that's about all.