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wordspeak2 wrote:That's a very sensible rule.
Let's keep the big picture in mind, peoples, really. Same team.
sergeant stiletto wrote:I'm glad to see this.
As a reader/lurker I've noticed an up tick in nastiness.
From the outside looking in there seems to be a bitterness among a handful of members that has taken hold - a sort of "seen it all", "nothing new under the sun" outlook that, as has already been suggested, fuels the rigor and squashes the intuition. Like there is some sort of agreed upon primer that explains all the bullshit and there will be no discussion outside of it.
And certainly no room for much woo anymore.
Simulist wrote:Is it that there is "certainly no room for much woo anymore" — and simply that — or is it that there isn't much room for wooishness that can't survive scrutiny?
That would be an important distinction, I think.
Joe Hillshoist wrote:This board is full of intelligent threads about woo that subject it to scrutiny and it survives. No one ads to them tho.
Joe Hillshoist wrote:Simulist wrote:For example, I sincerely believed that our world was being ruled over by a unified, overarching global consortium of a few guys who were all bent on global domination, which they'd largely already achieved — and that these very same guys were themselves ruled over by Lovecraftian entities almost impossible to envision."
Thats still effectively a good model for the way the world works, and while its not the whole story it certainly isn't false.
Joe Hillshoist wrote:The trouble is taking that attitude and living an effective life isn't an easy thing to do. Cos of "as above so below" those things aren't necessarily outside us either, and we probably rule them as much as vice versa and this sort of understanding effectively renders talking about them pointless, cos there are heaps of other models to describe reality that are more empowering and useful.
Simulist wrote:I don't think this forum's gone to "dog shit" at all (it's a wonderful forum, filled with insightful, very bright people), but most of my dearly-held beliefs during RI's so-called "halcyon days" sure as hell have — and that's not all bad. Especially when I consider, in hindsight now, just how embarrassingly simplistic my beliefs were then.
For example, I sincerely believed that our world was being ruled over by a unified, overarching global consortium of a few guys who were all bent on global domination, which they'd largely already achieved — and that these very same guys were themselves ruled over by Lovecraftian entities almost impossible to envision. Now, there are some merits to those fairly intuitive ideas but, taken without the necessary rigor... they're embarrassingly limiting. (Did I say "embarrassing"? I'm sure I did.)
Learning is a lot like walking — if we simply cling to the last stability, we never get anywhere. But if we embrace that previous step for what it is, realizing that it's been only one step, while moving on to the next step of the journey... well, we might.
Simulist wrote:Joe Hillshoist wrote:This board is full of intelligent threads about woo that subject it to scrutiny and it survives. No one ads to them tho.
You may be right. Why do you think that is?
Joe Hillshoist wrote:Simulist wrote:For example, I sincerely believed that our world was being ruled over by a unified, overarching global consortium of a few guys who were all bent on global domination, which they'd largely already achieved — and that these very same guys were themselves ruled over by Lovecraftian entities almost impossible to envision."
Thats still effectively a good model for the way the world works, and while its not the whole story it certainly isn't false.
Well, like I said, "Now, there are some merits to those fairly intuitive ideas but, taken without the necessary rigor... they're embarrassingly limiting." Limiting also because people tend to get stuck in belief. I certainly did, for a time — and on that very topic — and wound up tenaciously, and rather stupidly I must admit, clinging to that model which, like any model, is necessarily finite. Because here's the thing: I think any model capable of being processed by the human brain is a limited one, by definition, when dealing with a reality that is truly META-physical.
Because as much of the picture as you or I think we can see accurately, the reality is inconceivably bigger still.Joe Hillshoist wrote:The trouble is taking that attitude and living an effective life isn't an easy thing to do. Cos of "as above so below" those things aren't necessarily outside us either, and we probably rule them as much as vice versa and this sort of understanding effectively renders talking about them pointless, cos there are heaps of other models to describe reality that are more empowering and useful.
I may understand your whole meaning here, Joe, but I'm not sure. And I think I'm in agreement with what you're saying — certainly about "as above, so below" and the various many models that are also useful, in one way or another. So I guess I probably need to ask for clarification.
sergeant stiletto wrote:I'm glad to see this.
As a reader/lurker I've noticed an up tick in nastiness.
From the outside looking in there seems to be a bitterness among a handful of members that has taken hold - a sort of "seen it all", "nothing new under the sun" outlook that, as has already been suggested, fuels the rigor and squashes the intuition. Like there is some sort of agreed upon primer that explains all the bullshit and there will be no discussion outside of it.
And certainly no room for much woo anymore.
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