It was a waste of your time from the beginning, as were the years you spent editing and collating all Lessans' writings, and the years you've spent flogging this stuff on various message boards. You've convinced nobody, and lots of people, here and elsewhere, have said pertinent things about the book but if they don't happen to agree with you they get this "poor me," "you're wrong," and "you don't understand" response. And you've been caught lying. You're a victim of what's called the sunk cost fallacy.
dexter said:You've invested a lot of time and energy in promoting Lessans' ideas, and also invested a lot of yourself in them, this man is clearly some kind of guru to you, so quitting would be a tacit admission that you've been wasting your time all along and Lessans really has nothing to offer. Unfortunately, it's true that Lessans really has nothing to offer, and you HAVE been wasting your time and energy. And money; the book was published by a vanity press, not a real publisher expecting to make money from it, which must have cost you a bit. Bowing out is probably a good idea, as long as you don't start up the same foolishness somewhere else. Give it up and get on with something else, you have nothing to sell.
Interesting, that "sunk loss fallacy", wish I'd had that one to hand with some of my former bosses - may they RIP. lol
You know, just IMHO stuff... But even with the three coupe de gras delivered by you, mentalfloss and karrie, I don't think Janis will be able to stop. You can't can you Janis? Friend or father, it would be a betrayal of sorts of someone so significant even just in memory it would be unbearable to hurt so?
History tells us there comes a time when you stop because you've done all you can for someone else, how about some wise words from seven hundred years ago:
Paradiso "The Divine Comedy" Dante:
Fifth Sphere (Mars: The Warriors of the Faith)
"You shall leave everything you love most dearly:
this is the arrow that the bow of exile
shoots first. You are to know the bitter taste
of others' bread, how salt it is, and know
how hard a path it is for one who goes
descending and ascending others' stairs."
_________
Ok, one bit at a time here: "as long as I have a chance before the book goes to press" So you are spamming! Vanity press, publishing company, not yet published but about to be.... Whichever, that's spamming in my book. (Pun!)Peacegirl (who must have templates or responses stored, no-one types that fast) staggeringly said: "I think I am going to take out the section (as long as I have a chance before the book goes to press) on the sun exploding because this really is unimportant in showing why the eyes are not a sense organ and why so many words are not symbolic of reality . . .
It was a waste of your time from the beginning, as were the years you spent editing and collating all Lessans' writings, and the years you've spent flogging this stuff on various message boards. You've convinced nobody, and lots of people, here and elsewhere, have said pertinent things about the book but if they don't happen to agree with you they get this "poor me," "you're wrong," and "you don't understand" response. And you've been caught lying. You're a victim of what's called the sunk cost fallacy.
You've invested a lot of time and energy in promoting Lessans' ideas, and also invested a lot of yourself in them, this man is clearly some kind of guru to you, so quitting would be a tacit admission that you've been wasting your time all along and Lessans really has nothing to offer. Unfortunately, it's true that Lessans really has nothing to offer, and you HAVE been wasting your time and energy. And money; the book was published by a vanity press, not a real publisher expecting to make money from it, which must have cost you a bit. Bowing out is probably a good idea, as long as you don't start up the same foolishness somewhere else. Give it up and get on with something else, you have nothing to sell.
I think I am going to take out the one section on the sun exploding (as long as I have a chance before the book goes to press) because this really is unimportant in showing why the eyes are not a sense organ and why so many words are not symbolic of reality. In fact, this was an afterthought which he did not have in all his books. Therefore, I don't want to turn people off before they even get started.
If you insist on publishing this Peacegirl, I think you should entirely leave out the part about eyes ''not being a sense organ''. All it leads to is the conclusion that words are not symbolic of reality but you simply don't need to say ''eyes are not a sense organ'' to get to that conclusion.
I say this because this part is exactly where I dropped out of the book completely. And I have a pretty high level tolerance for outrageous claims. So if someone like me dropped out, you can be sure almost everybody will.
Ok, one bit at a time here: "as long as I have a chance before the book goes to press" So you are spamming! Vanity press, publishing company, not yet published but about to be.... Whichever, that's spamming in my book. (Pun!)
bcool said:"I think I am going to take out the section on the sun exploding because this really is unimportant . . . " Whooee! I think that most people would tend to think that leaving out an assertion that the sun is going to explode may be somewhat important in assessing the validity of both a very radical and rather unrealistic theory as well as the reader's opinion of the author's rationality.
bcool said:" . . . the eyes are not a sense organ . . . " Yes they are! To state otherwise is to definitely put the whole book in the 'absolute rubbish' catagory. Don't be silly! And don't expect us to be silly enough to waste time debating this with you.
bcool said:" . . . why so many words are not symbolic of reality . . . " Every word in the whole book actually.
bcool said:You said you were leaving. Well?
bcool said:As expected, instead you desperately searched every post for something to argue, to pretend to debate. Round and round in circles... As long as you get the responses you crave no matter what they say, just as long as you get something, anything to give you an excuse to post the same old stuff over and over ad infinitum.
bcool said:I said you were driven, you're proving it with every word you feverishly type.
bcool said:I could do what you do: Leave this thread! Now! You don't understand. You're not listening. You're not contributing you just want to argue with me. So leave! Come back when you are able to understand! Go!
bcool said:__________
I'd be more impressed, at any rate, if we could actually have an authentic conversation about free will and determinism without the involvement of this man and his book. Obviously the purchase of some book is not as important as having the conversation about the material on its own merits. If we could actually be convinced of this information without having to spend money, that would be a much more effective way to spread this ideology - assuming it is the ideology and not the book that is actually what is important here.
mentalfloss said:Would you be happy, peacegirl, if we somehow accepted your proposal but didn't reference this author or purchase his book?
Tell me, how did you determine that these people proved anything other than giving their opinion
I lied because I wanted this book to have a chance, and if I gave my identity people would laugh and say "No wonder she believes in this book; it's her fathers'. Isn't that exactly what you are doing? I moved in the direction of greater satisfaction to lie rather than deal with people calling me 'loyal' or 'faithful', as if that's all it is. I did this as the lesser of two evils, and if you want to blame me, go ahead, but I believe you would have done the same thing if you had been in my shoes.
Don't you get it peacegirl.... that's all Lessans has done too, only he's thrown in the words 'theory', and 'mathematical', and 'true' with his opinion, and called it science, without doing anything scientific to back his claims. What's good for the goose as they say.
You said he was an "established mathematician," which means he's recognized as such by other mathematicians, and he wasn't. I doubt you know enough mathematics to know whether he was an incredible mathematician or not. He appears from the book to have a certain facility with mathematical puzzles, but that doesn't make him a mathematician. As for the rest, walk the talk. You can't criticize me, I'm just doing what I'm deterministically compelled to do, I had no choice.He was an incredible mathematician.
Karrie, that's just the point. It is NOT just an opinion. If it was I would never have invested the time and energy to this, whether it was my father or not. Please don't condemn me because I was his daughter. That in and of itself does not make me a believer in something that is not true. There is science to back up his claims, but it is not empirical at this point, it is a priori. Just give him a chance Karrie before you throw out the baby with the bathwater.
Truly, if I made not one cent but could get people to pass this knowledge on, I would rest in peace until the day I die because this is truly not about me at all. It's about man's nature that can help our world. That's it!
Then it's not science yet, it's speculation.There is science to back up his claims, but it is not empirical at this point...
It is not a priori. No one thinks or functions the way Lessans thinks we all need to in order to be peaceful, therefore there is no experience for him to draw from to justify it with a priori argument.
You said he was an "established mathematician," which means he's recognized as such by other mathematicians, and he wasn't. I doubt you know enough mathematics to know whether he was an incredible mathematician or not. He appears from the book to have a certain facility with mathematical puzzles, but that doesn't make him a mathematician. As for the rest, walk the talk. You can't criticize me, I'm just doing what I'm deterministically compelled to do, I had no choice.
That is not what aprioi justification is. In fact, it is just the opposite because it is telling people to accept the premise, at least temporarily, on an a priori basis, which you have not done.
That is not what priori means in a scientific sense. That's what it means in an imagining sense, when it is an argument with no basis in logic. So, you're admitting that it has no basis in logic, in empirical human experience?
No, I am saying that it is much more than logic. It is mathematical whether you see it or not. That's why it is a priori, but even for those who don't buy into this as being a priori, in order to go on, you need to accept this as a priori TEMPORARILY! You will never be able to enjoy this book without letting go just a little bit.
I didn't say he does, I said he does if he's going to be called an established mathematician. Otherwise he's a hobbyist.No no no, you will not get away with this Dexter. A mathematician does not require approval from anyone.
Actually, you do s_lone. If something is coming in on the waves of light, then how can there even be a projection onto a screen? Think about it. I am not asking you to give a knee jerk reaction. Just think about it.