Skepticism, Skeptics & Debunkers

Discussion in 'All Things Boats & Boating' started by Guillermo, Nov 28, 2008.

  1. Pericles
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    Pericles Senior Member

    Eric,

    Guillermo has opened Pandora's box and I for one am going to hook in for the wild ride. About 22 years ago I was broadreaching across Brightlingsea Creek straight at Point Clear hooked in on starboard tack. The 6 sq. metre RAF sail to port obscured my view upstream. I was lucky that day, because I slipped one foot out of the straps to look around the mast and discovered I was headed straight at the rusty steel side of an old coaster headed out to sea and very high out of the water. I went from 25 knots to zero in 6 metres by releasing the wishbone and splashing in to windward. Board & rig were pushed away from the coaster by its bow wave, but the half immersed screw looked awful close as I floated past. Chomp, chomp, chomp, was the sound!

    Ohhh, but the buzz!

    So, Pandora's Box is open to all and only Hope remained. Where shall we Sceptics (English spelling please) go to feast tonight? Basel II? :idea:

    Eureka! I have it! http://sealevel.colorado.edu/current/sl_noib_ns_global.pdf

    Perry
     
  2. masalai
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    masalai masalai

    Hi Pericles, looks a bit like a chart of one of the fiscal markets without the recession/depression and another source I have posted earlier declared 60m sea level rise potential if all land ice was to melt for those using ancient measurement scales that is about 197 feet ASL... Good swimming - I prefer warm to frozen....
     
  3. MikeJohns
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    MikeJohns Senior Member

    I wasn't going to go there; you are very bold :)

    You spoke of healing; efficacy of prayer on hospital patients has attracted some investigation and fraud has reared its ugly head, exposed because someone was skeptical enough to check.
    http://www.time.com/time/columnist/jaroff/article/0,9565,660053,00.html


    We could talk of the contortions that Christian fundamentalists go through to try and harmonize science and their beliefs; even in Naval Architecture. How many people still believe the Jammal hoax and that Noah’s ark has been found ?.

    Noah's Ark is a classic. Structurally the wooden vessel is 'sunk' before being built, yet there persists a claim dished up in every discussion, article and web page, that some un-named authority (a "Korean University" ) has showed that it was structurally sound. The same groups that vilify science, name drop universities and scientists to try and gain credibility without being specific enough for the source to be checked.

    Huge amounts of effort (at times blatantly dishonest) are expended by fundamentalists trying to warp science to fit allegory. They give otherwise intellectual minds an excuse not to think, because the desire to believe is so compelling. It really amounts to intellectual self neutering, and I have otherwise learned friends that do this.

    Einstein thought that we were essentially the collection of prejudices that we had gathered by the age of 18. If you were taught to be credulous for religious reasons then you are unlikely to be incredulous particularly of charismatic people’s claims.

    That people want to believe without question is evident in the religious groups founded by con-men that carry on under their own weight sans the original exposed con artist.
     
  4. Frosty

    Frosty Previous Member

    It was on telly the other night that the Noahs ark flood was a tsunami!!. But im not sure I believe that.
     
  5. Pericles
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    Pericles Senior Member

  6. Pericles
    Joined: Sep 2006
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    Pericles Senior Member

    Brian,

    The chart I posted is produced by satellites, first TOPEX and then JASON. The measurements are scaled in millimetres. The item you posted earlier is a crock of ordure. You are grasping at straws my friend. The oceans are cooling and the levels are falling by millimetres, just as they have been rising by millimetres as the oceans were warmed due to the heat of the sun. I am relieved I do not have such difficulty in remembering recently learned facts. :D

    "Os bós e xenerosos
    a nosa voz entenden,
    e con arroubo atenden
    o noso rouco son,
    máis só os iñorantes,
    e féridos e duros,
    imbéciles e escuros
    non os entenden, non.

    Regards,

    Perry
     
  7. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Ei, carballeira.....!!!! :D
     

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  8. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Hi, Eric. I see you've been reading Dawkins, but then you should read McGrath to get the full picture. :)

    Well, these are boating forums, you know, and Mike already pointed that. My original intention was talking scepticism (ok, Perry?) in its wider sense, not only about boating, but probably that's going to be too wide and it'll soon derive in having several discussions/debates at the same time, making the thread difficult to follow. So, perhaps it's better to tighten to boating matters, although, as Mike already cleverly introduced, we can 'colour' the debate admitting other issues as religious fundamentalism, i.e., if (and only if) the debates are boating related. Noah's Ark and Universal Flood are good examples.

    But it's up to you, my friends. Just let's avoid personal attacks. :)

    Final note: Perry, we can even admit food if it has something to do with boats! Let's try onboard's diets! :D

    Cheers.
     
  9. Pericles
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    Pericles Senior Member

  10. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Nice post, Bill. Should we discuss truth then?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truth

    Cheers.
     
  11. Pericles
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    Pericles Senior Member

    BTW, a good reason to give up beer. http://www.axethebeertax.com/

    33% of the cost of a pint is tax to Brown's useless government. Desist I say.:cool: :cool: :cool: Drink seawater, it will make you just as looney. :confused: :confused: :confused:

    Perry
     
  12. Pericles
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    Pericles Senior Member

    As Terry Pratchett wrote, "What you say is true; for a given value of truth". :D
     
  13. Pericles
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    Pericles Senior Member

    I suppose I had better post a translation.

    "The good and generous
    our voice understand,
    and with determination they attend
    our harsh sound,
    but only the ignoramus,
    and wounded and hard,
    idiot and dark
    don't understand us, they do not."

    Galician Anthem
     
  14. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Perry,
    using sauerkraut to avoid scurvy may be a good idea, but Mama Linda says the 'curtido', an Ecuatorian sauerkraut, is also very healthy. Now look what the Ecuatorian doctors say:
    "Salsa y curtido pueden ser factores importantes de gastroenteritis aguda, porque cualquier microorganismo patógeno puede cultivarse en esos medios."
    (sauce and 'curtido' can be important factors of acute gastroenteritis, because any pathogenic microorganism can be cultivated in those environments)
    http://www.elsalvador.com/noticias/2006/11/11/nacional/nac6.asp
    Remember this is an sceptics thread ;)

    Cheers.
     

  15. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Ignorant, not ignoramus.
    A somewhat shaming anthem, as it distilates a feeling of inferiority, in my opinion.
    http://www.nationalanthems.info/gal.htm

    Cheers.
     
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