“Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.” ~ Albert Einstein
(Einstein is calling you "lame" WTF)
None of which discounted the books contention , nor the books on the founding fathers.Shermer says it’s so, and so you believe him? Yet another instance of the blind leading the blind. Hence, you are denying your own eyes when you read Jefferson’s own words where he wrote: “I am a real Christian”? Or you are a pompous ass and presume to second guess Jefferson on his own, professed beliefs?
You sir are exactly what a book like that is written for. Not likely. It’s pretentious psychobabble – that’s your cup of tea.
You do not believe in science, Are you really calling Shermer’s book science-fact? you believe in some pie in the sky. And your “pie in the sky” belongs to someone else. So, quit trying to pick the pockets of others to pay for your personal financial shortcomings. Originally Posted by WTF
... Originally Posted by WTF
Thay is not what Munchmasterman said Wrong! You’re remiss for one of two reasons: 1) you didn’t read both posts, or 2) you do not understand both posts.
The book I recommended premise was that people do not understand scientific analysis. BTW, if you want others to “believe” in your messiah, how ever are you going to deal with this little factoid?
~ Your messiah, Michael Shermer, says, “By the criteria of science and reason, God is an unknowable concept. We cannot prove or disprove God’s existence through empirical evidence or rational analysis.”
Plus, isn’t it also troublesome for you that he is a devotee of both Ayn Rand and the Austrian School of economics? How do you reconcile those facts with your “pie in the sky” aspirations? Originally Posted by WTF
Sorry bud. I was referring to the original book in the post. So your maxim of “go with the majority: they’re always right” now has an addendum—“go with the majority: they’re always right – but only when they agree with you.” Typical position for a dim Dim to take. The book isn't a course matter reference or class text book. Suggest you clarify that point with WTF – it’s his bible. So you don't like it. Big deal, get over it.
You just had a chance to show your knowledge of brain chemistry. For the lay-person, the term "experience" is close enough to what you said (everyone knows the pyramidal tracts are a housing development outside of CairoSo is “De-Nial” – except for this pathetic puddle of piss you’ve managed to dribble here). And before you start bitching about that choice of word for the chemical process of imprinting, I bet there is another word similar to experience that lops a semester of reading off the table. They don't need in depth biology classes to catch the gist of the subject. When it’s used as a weapon to attack and demean others, it damn well should have intellectual sharpness. But then again, you and WTF do often enter into verbal jousts unarmed. BTW, you and WTF are offering different and conflicting arguments. Evidently you haven’t been reading WTF’s posts, but that’s quite understandable. Books are written for different levels of readers with different backgrounds. Get over it. You are, of course, agreeing with the critic that claims the book is written to accommodate your and WTF’s juvenile level of understanding?
Showing the review wasn't part of some plan to be used to buy books. The point of your post was quite clear. When it blew up in your face, you started backtracking with this puddle of piss post. Trying to extend a book review to cover all aspects of purchasing books is pretty simplistic, don't you think? When taken collectively, it’s the only way to purchase: it’s called research. I showed a review that was well thought out and with lots of details. Opinion, remember? The book itself is “opinionated” psychobabble; not science.
The bottom line here is that you disagree with the majority of the reviewers. Similarly, your refusal to agree with the majority of the reviewers on the second book is your dodge to avoid admitting your “maxim” regarding the first book is not at all valid. This isn't a text book. It's a person's take on an inexact science. Suggest you clarify that point with WTF – psychobabble (in his mind) – is infallible. A book he want to sell to more than 50 people. He has tried to make it informative for people who don't have a huge background in biology. Not being simplistic, just realistic.
You can't seem to tell the two apart. You and WTF are like two peas in a pod. BTW, who gets top? Originally Posted by Munchmasterman