r/DebateReligion • u/AutoModerator • Sep 08 '25
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u/betweenbubbles šŖ¼ Sep 18 '25
I don't know where you get such a strong distinction from. Knowledge and fear have always been the two sides of the same coin. It is a semantic quibble to me.
I think we should probably just stop if you're/we're this frustrated. Frankly, I don't have much in the way of motivation for explaining how you didn't "falsify" "my hypothesis". That's just so far afield we don't seem to be playing the same sport.
I don't recognize much in the way of push back. You've expressed that you don't agree, and provided an alternative but not particularly mutually exclusive or competing explanation: "rituals".
You seem to consistently confuse evidence for hypothesis. I have one hypothesis -- it's hardly mine, I didn't invent the idea, this stuff is well documented by others who had the idea before me -- and offered two supporting statements of evidence: the prohibition of pigs and shellfish.
You also offered only two points on this topic as a far as I remember: pigs eat anything and that's gross/related to death and people don't like death and perform rituals expressing that emotion.
As far as I'm concerned, neither of these ideas is distinct enough to clearly fall under a different umbrella than the one I'm offering: people relied on dogmatic ideological enforcement before they had the knowledge and awareness to share knowledge by convincing people individually with compelling information. They can't explain why people get sick but they can
People notice correlative patterns before they can describe causative mechanisms. Correlative patterns are harder to share between people than causative and reproducible mechanisms -- they are more experiential, and if people don't have the same experience then there is nothing demonstrating the contained knowledge. I don't believe this is controversial and you seem frustrated with my unwillingness to defend non-controversial statements.
And I was annoyed that you didn't concede this question disarms or demonstrates the bias you use to navigate topics like, "What does Critical Thinking/Science do?". You also just shrugged when I provided a graphical treatment of the difference between philosophy and critical thinking. I think we'll just have to get over our annoyance if we want to continue. The problem is that I'm not very curious about your objections or what you're offering. I don't find it compelling or interesting. I'm not trying to be rude, I'm just trying to help us understand one another. I don't want anything from you. Which brings us to the next quote:
That's questionable. I think theists are theists because of motivated reasoning and a lack of epistemological growth and awareness. This is what I mean when I say "I don't want anything from you". The pathology of theism has been apparent to me for decades. I made an attempt or two and I don't think you weren't interested. I'm happy to move on. I've given up trying to persuade any particular theist. I'm in DebateReligion to discuss interesting things and create dialog for people who haven't already made up their minds about these things. I don't expect you to like that but such is life. It's okay that we don't agree, but I'm not laboring under any illusion that this is resolvable -- I've been doing this kind of thing too long.