Editing Talk:258: Conspiracy Theories
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Religion is not a conspiracy theory. Conspiracy theorists have proof. {{unsigned ip|199.27.128.63}} | Religion is not a conspiracy theory. Conspiracy theorists have proof. {{unsigned ip|199.27.128.63}} | ||
:Why are so many atheists so incompetent at basic principles of logic and skepticism? What you mean to say is that conspiracy theorists have ''evidence''. They tend to lack proof. There is a huge difference, fundamental to the principles of logic and the philosophy of science. β [[User:Kazvorpal|Kazvorpal]] ([[User talk:Kazvorpal|talk]]) 05:51, 29 October 2019 (UTC) | :Why are so many atheists so incompetent at basic principles of logic and skepticism? What you mean to say is that conspiracy theorists have ''evidence''. They tend to lack proof. There is a huge difference, fundamental to the principles of logic and the philosophy of science. β [[User:Kazvorpal|Kazvorpal]] ([[User talk:Kazvorpal|talk]]) 05:51, 29 October 2019 (UTC) | ||
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For me, the most interesting tension comes from ("self-reflective") bug report which doesn't (only) refer to conspiracy theorists but, maybe even more, to Cueball himself who beleives in God but still thinks that his own belief in God is a bug to be reported. Reporting could be seen as reporting to God in which he beleives. And that's the simple one. But also reporting that bug could be a report to the consciousness existing beyond the constraints of very comic Cueball is part of. That consciousness is then xkcd audience. Existence of such a consciousness beyond comic's universe would be the equivalent of God in some other universe. Self-reflective awareness of that "alien" existence, and not having a proof for its own comic universe, would make Cueball a religious guy. Randall Munroe decides about the proving possibilities in this particular case. [[User:Marcell|Marcell]] ([[User talk:Marcell|talk]]) 00:39, 13 April 2014 (UTC) | For me, the most interesting tension comes from ("self-reflective") bug report which doesn't (only) refer to conspiracy theorists but, maybe even more, to Cueball himself who beleives in God but still thinks that his own belief in God is a bug to be reported. Reporting could be seen as reporting to God in which he beleives. And that's the simple one. But also reporting that bug could be a report to the consciousness existing beyond the constraints of very comic Cueball is part of. That consciousness is then xkcd audience. Existence of such a consciousness beyond comic's universe would be the equivalent of God in some other universe. Self-reflective awareness of that "alien" existence, and not having a proof for its own comic universe, would make Cueball a religious guy. Randall Munroe decides about the proving possibilities in this particular case. [[User:Marcell|Marcell]] ([[User talk:Marcell|talk]]) 00:39, 13 April 2014 (UTC) |