American Dream » Thu Jul 04, 2013 3:01 am wrote:compared2what? » Wed Jul 03, 2013 9:35 pm wrote:American Dream » Wed Jul 03, 2013 9:31 pm wrote:Same would hold true of many New Age luminaries. Rudolph Steiner has reams of material on celstial planes and on deva realms and the like- all revealed to him by extrasensory revelation.
Most trance channels the same- they want faith in their spiritual authority because that's really all they've got.
I do agree that "Icke provides no path to knowledge, only a divergent faith" because even though he may cherry pick facts to support some of his more dubious claims ultimately a lot of it boils down to his personal authority.
Well....Yes.
But does THAT injure anyone in any way? (Meaning: Any known way?)
Sincere question.
Icke has a great potential to injure movements for social change.
New Age authorities can injure people's pocketbooks, their freedom of thought, their effectiveness in the world, their ability to think clearly and independently, sometimes their time, their intimate relationships.
For some Icke is a New Age authority and he does have the potential to affect the lived quality of their lives.
That is a really tricky assertion - because at one level, every human being is powerful and has the potential through their action or inaction to greatly influence movements for social change - TienanMen Guy for example.
Who are the people for whom Icke is a New Age authority? I certainly dont regard him as an authority on *anything* except one - showing that sometimes, a human being can say something which is absolutely preposterous, can be showered with crap over it over a long period of time and it can turn out to be true. That does not mean anything more than that.
- and in my personal experience, often when a pseudoskeptic says
"X, Y, Z is untrue"
that can unpack (after some NLP metamodelling) into
"X,Y,Z is preposterous and dangerous and you are an idiot for being suckered into believing it and you will be financially fleeced and it shows you have lost your ability to think"
Now THAT is tricky - because
sometimes e.g. Quackwatch for example will highlight a person or area that IS a scam or IS a cult.
And at other times, they are not - and the result of triggering a 'cognitive firealarm' is extremely destructive, because a witchburning mentality can take place.
If you want to see this in action, just go to the TED site and see the lock-step thinking of the reductionist brigade who got the videos of Sheldrake and Hancock taken down.
So treating Icke as a cultDo you treat 'New Age' and 'cult' as the same? -
because the issues that you highlight IMHO apply very clearly to the latter and not at all to the former - notwithstanding the facts that much of what people know about the New Age is only a small part of the a very much richer, stranger, horrifying and hilarious picture (see TIDS).
From what I can see looking into his finances on duedil.com for a couple of hours and also his own video of where he lives and what he drives, he lives in a small one bedroom flat in the Isle of Wight, drives an ordinary car and pays himself about the same as a teacher.
I looked into whether Icke was classed as a cult on Rick Ross and the same debate was going on there in 2006 as has been going on here in 2013 - at which point, I burst out laughing
