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Burnt Hill » 20 Jan 2015 21:12 wrote:Ill manners? My op suggests inviting HMW back(something I don't believe will happen, just something to consider-considering he is being mentioned throughout various threads). He has, or is in the process of achieving a status he never had while here. Of course this will elicit different responses from various posters, as long as an eye is kept on the op then all is well. There have been many long expositions of a more personal nature for years on many threads, and never a suggestion of moving them "elsewhere", why here(there is another thread about him nearby), and why now?
brekin » Tue Jan 20, 2015 8:25 pm wrote:Everyone is going to have their own definition, and putting aside for a moment, the general definition of New Age fluffy thinking that throws out any logical or even rational analysis I'd say, for me, for this particular forum, "woo" is any cherished and beloved topic that causes someone to suffer duress and regress when it is put under any rigorous examination.
We all have our woo centers and one man's woo can be another man's hard science, but the woo is out there, because its inside all of us. Dosage will vary of course.
MayDay » Tue Jan 20, 2015 11:04 pm wrote:Hugh was never much more than a sde show here, far as I recall. KWH is probably real, but prolly not in the way he proposed it. Project Mockingbird was prolly real, but not to the extent that he believes it. I'm glad he's gone. Such a headache.
BrandonD » Wed Jan 21, 2015 6:25 am wrote:brekin » Tue Jan 20, 2015 8:25 pm wrote:Everyone is going to have their own definition, and putting aside for a moment, the general definition of New Age fluffy thinking that throws out any logical or even rational analysis I'd say, for me, for this particular forum, "woo" is any cherished and beloved topic that causes someone to suffer duress and regress when it is put under any rigorous examination.
We all have our woo centers and one man's woo can be another man's hard science, but the woo is out there, because its inside all of us. Dosage will vary of course.
Thank you for that well thought-out answer, it is a bit of a relief to read actually. I associate that word with more mainstream debunkers, and it generally refers to anything paranormal or without a conventional scientific explanation. That word woo is specifically intended to shame and silence people who aren't following the mainstream party line, so when I see such a term being repeated I sometimes instinctively ask myself if I'm in the right place.
I've experienced some very strange things, and I give those experiences serious consideration rather than disregard. Which makes me "woo" from the typical perspective. I'm sure many of us here are like that, actually.
So then, where is the line drawn? Absolutely everyone here is woo from the perspective of the evening news anchor. From where I stand, I find it difficult to draw a hard line between exactly what is "woo" and what is not, because that line presupposes that all the facts are in, that right now at this moment in time we know precisely how physics and time and consciousness and all the rest of it works. Which to me is beyond absurd.
Critical examination is a very enjoyable process, my feeling of objection is more directed towards the attitude that creates terms like "woo" in the first place. People who entertain unconventional ideas are not in any way less stable or less intelligent than the general population. It is in fact a mark of intelligence, as well as courage, to intentionally depart from convention.
Those who unintentionally depart from convention, well, they might lie in another category altogether.
Nordic » Wed Jan 21, 2015 1:44 am wrote:Actually, BrandonD, I think your definition of "woo" is the one being used here. The Manatee hated all "woo" and thought it all to be CIA propaganda. He thought all the UFO phenomena was CIA created, for instance. All of it.
brekin » Tue Jan 20, 2015 8:25 pm wrote:Everyone is going to have their own definition, and putting aside for a moment, the general definition of New Age fluffy thinking that throws out any logical or even rational analysis I'd say, for me, for this particular forum, "woo" is any cherished and beloved topic that causes someone to suffer duress and regress when it is put under any rigorous examination. We all have our woo centers and one man's woo can be another man's hard science, but the woo is out there, because its inside all of us. Dosage will vary of course.
BrandonD wrote:
Thank you for that well thought-out answer, it is a bit of a relief to read actually. I associate that word with more mainstream debunkers, and it generally refers to anything paranormal or without a conventional scientific explanation. That word woo is specifically intended to shame and silence people who aren't following the mainstream party line, so when I see such a term being repeated I sometimes instinctively ask myself if I'm in the right place.
I've experienced some very strange things, and I give those experiences serious consideration rather than disregard. Which makes me "woo" from the typical perspective. I'm sure many of us here are like that, actually.
So then, where is the line drawn? Absolutely everyone here is woo from the perspective of the evening news anchor. From where I stand, I find it difficult to draw a hard line between exactly what is "woo" and what is not, because that line presupposes that all the facts are in, that right now at this moment in time we know precisely how physics and time and consciousness and all the rest of it works. Which to me is beyond absurd.
Critical examination is a very enjoyable process, my feeling of objection is more directed towards the attitude that creates terms like "woo" in the first place. People who entertain unconventional ideas are not in any way less stable or less intelligent than the general population. It is in fact a mark of intelligence, as well as courage, to intentionally depart from convention.
Those who unintentionally depart from convention, well, they might lie in another category altogether.
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