Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Avery W3AVE wrote:
[snip] Some very smart people believe very strange things. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, he of the Sherlock Holmes tales and obviously a writer who understood logic and reason, believed in fairies with little wings, like Tinker Bell. It was because of a hoax by two children who planted fake photos of winged nymphs outdoors where he could see them, but not close enough to inspect. World-famous scientists have been taken in by "mindreading," mental spoonbending, and other stage fakery that is part of any good magician's trick bag. Totally rational, intelligent people subscribe to aura therapy, which involves passing the hands around the "patient's" body without touching it, even though an experiment by a 9-year-old girl completely disproved its validity a couple of years ago. How about we stick to the pros and cons and not make personal attacks? We're way OT as it is. One of the co-inventors of the transistor was famous for another reason: he espoused his opinions about Africans being inferior because he said their brains were small. World-famous scientists, or authors, or anybody else with training in a specialized discipline, should be questioned just like the greenest college student when they speak outside their area of expertise. There are, sad to say, cases where ad hominem attacks are warranted, and this is one of them. The original post is off-topic, but that's a minor offense on Usenet. However, the claims _ARE_ laughable, and anyone who champions such nonsense deserves to be offered a discount on a bridge: if nothing else, it's a chastening reminder that, in the future, those who were disposed to believe them should drop a gold brick on the ground before negotiating a purchase. Paraphrasing Richard Pryor: "Your dignity will heal a lot faster than your bank account balance". William P.S. I would set the followups, but I can't think of a group where this discussion belongs. -- A little learning is a dang'rous thing; Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring; There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain, And drinking largely sobers us again. -- Alexander Pope, Essay on Criticism |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
05-235 - Any new procode test arguments? | Policy | |||
Achtung! Attenzione!All shortwave frequencies to cease 11-14-04 due to Judgement day arriving. | Shortwave | |||
Hey Twist!!!! | CB | |||
GAY PRIDE WEEK VICTORY | Shortwave |