Judy, your comment (below) seems very right on to me.  Similarly, do you think 
that your 
chronic criticism of Barry might be related as much to something about his 
personality or 
style that really rankles you as much as it is to his actual/perceived missteps 
in argument?

Marek

**

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "curtisdeltablues" 
> <curtisdeltablues@> wrote:
> <snip>
> > Me: I think a perfectly rational atheist is as much a myth as a
> > person who just believes everything.  We are all a mix of mental
> > abilities and this is necessary to live in the world.  None of
> > us just believe anything presented to us, we use the criteria
> > that we are comfortable with and has served us well to choose.
> 
> While this is true, and an important point, I
> think it's also the case that folks choose the
> criteria they use to evaluate a belief according
> to how comfortable they are with the belief--i.e.,
> more stringent criteria for beliefs that make 
> them uncomfortable, less stringent for those that
> they find appealing.
> 
> My sense is that the appeal or lack thereof of a
> particular belief comes first, and evaluation
> second; and that the evaluation is designed to
> reinforce or reject the belief on the basis of
> whether it does or does not have appeal to the
> individual.
> 
> When we reject a long-held belief, it's not so
> much because we have evaluated it objectively
> and found it wanting, as it is because something
> about the belief has ceased to have the appeal
> it once held for us. In such a case we're likely
> to choose evaluation criteria stringent enough
> to give us a rational basis for rejecting the
> belief, but in fact the rejection has already
> taken place.
> 
> And vice-versa, of course.
>


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