On Saturday, January 19, 2013 7:01:44 AM UTC-5, raylopez99 wrote:
> > It wasn't mostly the computer science types who were claiming that,
>
> Right.
Got any evidence that he's right? Or just lots of opinions, as usual.
> Minor is trolling as usual, but while I troll, I also provide useful information.
If I were going to start trolling, I would begin by creating a significant number of **original** threads (sorry for using all this technical jargon, Phillip).
Instead of, say, commenting here and there on threads introduced by geniuses like yourself and Sam Sloan, I would get creative and invent my own threads, comming up with new (and whacky) ideas and of course disguising them so they looked like serious opinions or questions. In other words, my posting style would begin to look a lot like your own, or that of Mr. Sloan!
Am I correct in remembering that your old pal Larry Parr used to insist that Dr. Blair was 'trolling' when he stubbornly and persistently corrected the record with regard to Larry's own considerable nonsense? In any case, Larry tried every trick in the book, but to no avail. Dr. Blair did not easily suffer fools, as Mr. Parr soon discovered. But back to the main idea.
I would be only too happy if either of you two fellows could provide any actual examples of what you seem to believe are 'philosophers' doing what the academics or 'scientists' obviously did: made claims which in retrospect (and at least to some of us, even back then) were obvious blunders. Let me give you an example of what I mean...
Right here in Indiana (a handy quote pops to mind: 'If there's a bright center to the universe, you're on the planet that it's farthest from.' --Luke Skywalker), there was a very strong chess master who got his stuff published in multiple places, and whose predictions, like so many others of this stripe, have proved wrong. No biggie-- everyone makes mistakes. But the whole reason they published his opinions ...and that's all they were, opinions... was on account of him supposedly being an authority, someone who knew his stuff and therefore could be trusted to make carefully reasoned conclusions, restrain from over-reaching, etc. Boy were they wrong (as usual).
You see, along with royal titles and political power and academic titles and money and good looks and rating points and all that sort of thing, comes an unwelcome 'bonus,' in the form of hubris. (Another handy quotation leaps to mind: 'A man's got to know his limitations.' --was it the movie Dirty Harry?)
Thank goodness I don't have to suffer the consequences of having any of those sorts of things. And you're not exactly leading man material yourself, Phillip.
When I read the term 'philosopher,' I think of Socrates. Then I realize he was a Sophist, tried and convicted of corrupting the youth, etc. So my mind wanders a bit, recognizing that most who have at some time or other been labeled 'philosophers' fell well short of the mark. But maybe Mr. Murray has different (read: lower) standards. Anyway, I have deliberately refrained from reading the next post in this thread until *after* I have responded to this one, though Mike Murray's name becons at the bottom of my screen.
Have a nice day, Phillip, and thanks for the laugh (rgc's permanently resident troll accusing someone else of trolling). Well, I _would have_ laughed if I had been in the right mood.