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How do people become cracks? |
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| Jul23-12, 12:45 AM | #1 |
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How do people become cracks?
Recently, I came across a website of a guy that has had a physics education, but for whatever reason, he rejects it. He seems more like a troll than a legit crack. However, this got me wondering: how do people become so delusional as to dedicate hundreds of hours writing such crap? Do you think they enjoy writing this kind of material? What motivates these people, and what begins them on this process? What kind of psychology underlies these people?
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| Jul23-12, 08:56 AM | #2 |
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There have been several studies of this subject. Sorry I don't have any links.
Basically, the delusional mind finds pleasure in "knowing" something that others don't. This holds for conspiracy theorists and crackpots in general. They will happily spend way more than just a few hundred hours "proving" their points. My advice ... ignore them and move on. There is nothing you can do. |
| Jul23-12, 09:22 AM | #3 |
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I would like to add that some of them are actually mental.
I know one guy who has too large an ego and whenever things don't go his way, rather than accept that he made a mistake, he blames others for conspiring against him (because logically, his premise that he is perfect, means it cannot be his fault). This led to him becoming a conspiracy nut. In a way, though, almost everyone must have at least one belief that is not based on empirical evidence, so the potential exists for self-checking to break. Even science. A law is "verified by experiment" not "proven true" because we know it's not necessarily, we just have faith that it will hold when tested to best of our current knowledge. |
| Jul23-12, 09:47 AM | #4 |
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How do people become cracks? |
| Jul23-12, 10:02 AM | #5 |
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| Jul23-12, 10:16 AM | #6 |
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Faith is an assertion of absolute conviction of that which is not evidently true. That does not fit here. |
| Jul23-12, 11:22 AM | #7 |
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It is true that the application of scientific method assumes that (1) there are rules, (2) we can understand those rules, and (3) those rules do not change without notice. However, that merely means that the enterprise of science is one gigantic test of a scientific hypothesis: that the universe logical in the sense specified by those assumptions.
As Ryan says - no faith required. I certainly don't question those assumptions every day but, ultimately, if the universe is not logical in that sense, scientific method happily predicts its own demise. |
| Jul23-12, 01:45 PM | #8 |
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Faith: any strongly held conviction
Looks good to me. Are you perhaps using a different definition? |
| Jul23-12, 01:53 PM | #9 |
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Faith 3: something that is believed especially with strong conviction; especially : a system of religious beliefs 3a : a strong persuasion or belief Science doesn't use "faith", it uses "understanding" of results and evidence. |
| Jul23-12, 02:12 PM | #10 |
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I know scientists are sometimes upset by the word fatih because it has religious connotations, but not all faith is tied to religion. |
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