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#106 | |
Philosopher
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Quote:
As far as spurious quotes go, quite often what is said is more important that who said it. |
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#107 |
monkey on the fringe
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My favorite quote from grade school was about Washington chopping down the cherry tree
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#108 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#109 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
If you care about the truth, you look it up. |
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#110 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: Southeastern U.S., ya'll
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#111 |
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With your making that claim I am left wondering whether you do not care about the truth or whether you do not know what the truth actually is.
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#112 | ||
Philosopher
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Quote:
Note that I am not *defending* spreading spurious quotes. I am merely saying that disseminating spurious quotes doesn't mean they don't care about the truth. Quote:
Sometimes it matters who said it. Quite often it doesn't. Last edited by QuantumIguana; 09-15-2016 at 09:18 AM. |
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#113 | |
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Quote:
Case dismissed. People don't spread spurious quotes because they don't care about the truth, but because they don't know what the truth is. It turns out that there is ample evidence that people often do spread spurious quotes knowing them to be untrue; there are countless examples among the realms of activists, politicians, journalists, conspiracy theorists, etc. as most who have needed through necessity but not love to work with them will likely attest, and it is well established that the information (including quotations) promulgated by such groups is not seriously questioned, nor desired to be questioned by those who align themselves with the particular ideology, or whatever, that it relates to. That being apparently so then hence my response to you of: With your making that claim I am left wondering whether you do not care about the truth or whether you do not know what the truth actually is. If you have such a high level of confidence in the honesty of your fellow beings you may like to investigate, for example, the results of surveys and the experiences of shop security specialists with respect to the proportion of the population that would shoplift if they knew that they would get away with it. Last edited by AnotherCat; 09-15-2016 at 06:11 PM. |
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#114 | |
Philosopher
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Quote:
People passed along the story of George Washington and the Cherry Tree for ages. Would you assert that they actually knew the story to be false? |
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#115 | |
Just a Yellow Smiley.
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Quote:
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#116 | |
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Quote:
To claim otherwise infers, as I laid out, an irrational trust in human honesty. I gave you an example of another situation (shoplifting) where surveys show that many of us are inherently dishonest. However, you discarded that opportunity to seek the truth on that, seemingly claiming that there is no reason to expect people dishonest in that way from being dishonest in the stories they pass on (and perhaps it did not suit your agenda to do so?). Furthermore, I gave the example of politicians, activists, journalists, etc. I have the experience of working with those types of people for whom it is not uncommon for them to knowingly tell or write stories with content within them of no fact, or to misquote others in order to embellish the story, the article or their own case. I have then seen that material being represented dishonestly as being unshakable truths by those whose agendas were similarly aligned. It would also appear that large parts of the population agree with me as those professions are shown in surveys to be among the least trusted by others. For example, while all polls say similar a just published Gallup poll finds only 32% of Americans say they have "a great deal" or "a fair amount" of trust in the mass media (and Americans are not alone in that). I take it you believe that the stories that journalists are writing, or the stories and the "quotes" they pass on are not known to them to often be in part false or misleading; that despite the fact that the majority of the population believe that material to be often in part false or misleading? And as I said, the readers of that material are often not above passing on what they know to be shady if it suits their own agenda to do so. I'll leave it at that. |
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#117 | |||
Philosopher
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And how would they know the story was false? They've heard it told as if it was true.
Quote:
Quote:
Even if the original source is lying, this doesn't mean that the person who passes that on is lying when they pass it on. That requires irrationally believing that people are far more informed than they really are. To lie, you must know what the truth is (or believe that you know) and make a statement contrary to the truth (or what they believe to be true). Consider Hanlon's Razor, which is often expressed as "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity" although I would replace "stupidity" with ignorance. It's simply more plausible that people are passing on spurious memes out of ignorance than that they know them to be false. Yes, they are sometimes created as deliberate lies, but the creation of a spurious quote is distinct from passing it on. I am not interested in the person who dishonestly creates a spurious quote, I'm only concerned with the person who passes it on. Saying "I wouldn't put it past them" isn't evidence. Quote:
Last edited by QuantumIguana; 09-15-2016 at 11:46 PM. |
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#118 |
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I wouldn't know where to start to respond to your rationales. However:As your post is completely a response to and quoting of my post you are giving the effect of claiming that I said those words.
But I did not say them at all, so you have demonstrated that your rationales are totally unreliable and delusional, and have provided proof by exception that your case is without merit as you have knowingly misquoted me to serve your own purpose. I have to say that this has been one of the very few occasions where someone has presented me a case that can be disproved by exception and that person has then gone on to provide that exception themselves, so disproving their own case ![]() In my opinion I conclude that you are only persevering as a time waster and so I'll leave you to waste that of others, not mine. |
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#119 | |
Philosopher
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Quote:
You claim, without evidence, that when people pass on spurious quotes they do so knowing them to be spurious. Saying that people are dishonest isn't evidence to support that claim. For people to be dishonest is a necessary condition, but not a sufficient condition. For people to deliberately pass on false quotes requires that they be dishonest, but being dishonest does not demonstrate that they are deliberately passing on false quotes. That some spurious quotes are deliberately created to deceive doesn't support your claim that the people who pass them on do so knowing they are false. For your claim to be true, people would have to be considerably more knowledgeable than they really are. People see quotes that agree with their agenda, accept it without question, and pass it on - they may think other sources are unreliable, but they trust the sources they use. Last edited by QuantumIguana; 09-16-2016 at 07:18 AM. |
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#120 |
eBook Enthusiast
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Moderator Notice
Please let's return to the topic of this thread, which is the proposal that historical novels should not exist. Thank you. |
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