There is nothing wrong with providing links for context and further explanation. If you were to be swayed by my arguments simply because of a smug tone and impressed by the number of links, I would have yet another reason call you a sloppy thinker.
I never claimed to have irrefutable evidence for crop circles being hoaxed. I simply showed that humans can do this and are doing this and it was never a phenomena until humans started doing it.
You are right you did not, however you implied it with the following:
Saying 'I can not understand how humans could make crop circles' does not mean humans aren't able to do it. The 'crop circles being formed' video is am admitted hoax, as are the first ever recorded (complex) circles. Doug Bower and Dave Chorley confessed to making over 250 circles in the 70's and 80's. If you look at the history of crop circles, complex patters didn't show up until these two started making them, and they got more complicated each year after. Isn't it odd that a mysterious force felt the need to step in and mimic hoaxers?
Here is an example of a circle that was created by men overnight. This photo is not in dispute; it was planned and made by men who are pointing to no mysterious force as an explanation.
In fact,
here is an entire website documenting the groups who do these circles, who sell books and guides on how you can do it to. They document circles being made. So again, just because you can not fathom how it could be done by humans, doesn't mean it can't.
To which I'm still waiting to see the evidence for the above circle. What's so sloppy about wanting to see evidence for your claim?
In support of your explanation you sighted a video that is a well known hoax, which causes me to wonder about your ability to research and evaluate evidence before you decide on a belief.
Actually, I'm being a pretty good sport here, making an evaluation, posting links, soliciting others opinions, and re-evaluating, in the face of criticism. But with the crop circles, the jury's still out. No definite proof by any of the evidence that you've brought to the table that proves beyond a reasonable doubt what you say here;
Crop circles are man made creations, 100% of the time, unless you are talking about simple crude circles that are a result of confused animals walking in circles or fungus rings rotting the crop.
You said something earlier,
I did not mean to imply that if a result causes us to question the fundamentals of an entire field of research we should automatically dismiss it. Indeed, such an event may point to undiscovered knowledge. But I was speaking about two competing theories which make the same predictions and equally explain the evidence. One makes no more assumptions that necessary, the other goes on to assume human consciousness plays a part. My question was, since that extra assumption causes us to question everything we know, and is not necessary to explain the evidence, why favor it?
This idea of whether to favor extra assumptions is very useful.
If there is one thing that is rudimentary to critical thinking it is that the human experience can not be trusted to determine valid conclusions. When you say you will trust your own experience no matter what anyone says about it, it reveals your true nature; you favor your beliefs over any evidence. If one is to trust the human experience, we must be aware of the well documented, well understood mistakes of logic, perception and memory that humans are sure to make, as well as applying reasonable doubt. Note that reasonable doubt is not the same as general distrust. There are hundreds of papers and experiments documenting precisely what these human vulnerabilities are. Not only are people easily fooled by others, they are extremely adept at fooling themselves.
Pardon, but my experience of the phenomenon is evidence. If I didn't have the experience of firewalking and refuted your explanation I would say your statement is true. However, I do have evidence of my experience (unburned feet) that supports my belief.
Walk your talk. Go firewalk without any mental preparation beforehand and show me your evidence.
You engage in the truest sense of ignorance by cherry picking only what you want from experiences and evidence to back up your presumptions. It has been well demonstrated that someone who is interested in the truth first looks at the evidence and then decides on an explanation. Although you are willing to hear oppositions to your belies, you are not willing to pay attention to them, and only consider them to the point of finding a reason to dismiss them.
That's funny, imho, with that statement, you are the kettle calling the pot black.
Ultimately you can not explain why you favor supernatural explanations over natural ones, except to say that the natural ones do not make sense to you. When you point out why they don't make sense, it comes across as a person who simply doesn't understand the information, and not just someone with an open mind. In other words, your views do not seem genuine.
My friend, now you're just being inflammatory,... we were having such a civil discussion.
EDIT: The question was never put to me but I'll answer it. However I'll frame it a slightly different way. I favor inquiry over explanations. I favor living in a question that have the possibility of expanding my knowledge base and worldview irregardless if the explanations are based on the scientific method or not. The natural world contains phenomenon some of which we understand, some of which we do not and most of which we have not even formed the questions for.
My worldview is inclusive with the central premise being that we are fundamentally a blended being, one that is informed by the the outer world where I exist as an individual identity and an inner world where there is no "I". This inner world, this inner experience is the basis by which I focus my thoughts. Ultimately, why do some thoughts feel good and others do not?
To illustrate my point, back to the topic of this thread, "About those beliefs you're ashamed of holding". In other terms; thought and the corresponding emotion. It's useful to go the other way. Feel. What does it feel like to be in your body right now? Ok, if it's not so good, then I propose that there is an underlying thought that is out of integrity with what one truly desires. What's more important is to just simply think a better feeling thought. And right there my friends is the difference between being subject to one's circumstances or having true freedom.
People who seek the truth learn from both books and experience. Critical thinking is the result of a trained mind and can be applied to all aspects of thinking, including creative, emotional and spiritual thinking. It is an approach to interpreting the world; skepticism. It is in fact a systematic way of carefully and thoroughly observing nature while using consistent logic and standards to evaluate the results. What part of this do you have a problem with? Is it being systematic, being careful and thorough, or having consistent logic and standards? To abandon critical thinking is to embrace ignorance, negligence, and inconsistency, since these are all things skepticism addresses.
I've got no problems with critical thinking at all. I embrace it.
To think is not the same as feeling. If you think you can apply thinking to
feeling then I suspect you also aren't very successful with the opposite sex. If you think you analyse spiritual inspiration, that somehow to me is missing the point. I understand that you state you can apply critical thinking to these domains but that's like a person with a hammer thinking every problem is a nail.
I'm sure you've had the experience of 'being in the zone' that star athletes claim. What is so difficult about viewing the natural world with natural laws as simultaneously understandable and mysterious? What is so difficult about being so 'in the moment' that there is no thought?
my psychic powers are tingling...
i predict rose ingores relevance of this and quickly skips onto a new line of nonsense that is "definative proof"
Fail.