Newsgroups: alt.meditation.transcendental, alt.meditation
From: jst...@panix.com (Judy Stein)
Date: 1997/12/18
Subject: Re: Deductive Reasoning
In article <677emp$9b...@uuneo.neosoft.com>, > I am no fan of the typical anticultist. I have yet to agree with That may be the case. But if it is, what sort of position is the > very much of what any one of them has said. However, I think that > it is their ideas that are bs, and it is very easy for all of us > to have bs ideas. I have run accross anticultists on the net who > were, IMO, very dishonest amoral people with secondary gain agendas. > But I have also run accross many anticultists who just live by > reaction just like most of the population does. I don't find > anticultists to be any more out of it in general than we all can > be at times. Humans have not survived on critical thinking as much > as good reflexes. typical anticultist in to claim purported cultists are unable to think critically? If you're going to charge the other guy (or group) with I don't think the phrase is used with much of a sense of what it In Mabel's post, we saw that her criterion for the ability to It's not so much a matter of whether anticultists are any more It's a similar situation to those who would impose censorship on What's of concern is that the anticult movement institutionalizes When a right guaranteed by the Constitution may potentially be > While I would be among the first to point out to a specific person If rigorous critical thinking does not come from within the > the folly of his/her thought processes, I would like to think it > is at least in part a desire to give them constructive imput anticult movement, it's incumbent on those outside the movement to provide it. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ You must Sign in before you can post messages.
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