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jupiter618
01-04-2012, 3:21pm
Just wondering how many like minded people we have on the forum. I'm a secular humanist with a passion for skepticism (with a k) and rational thought. I've been following many of the sceptical podcasts for years and keep up to date with news in science and skepticism (I'm educated in science and work in research).

I'm a huge fan of the music and comedy of Tim Minchin; he has an amazing way of expressing our point of view and making it funny and beautiful at the same time. He's a very tallented man.

Anyone consider themselves part of the community? We're a growing group in society!

Steve Axford
01-04-2012, 4:38pm
Never heard of it. What is it and what do you believe? What is the truth for you?

I @ M
01-04-2012, 5:31pm
I'm a secular humanist with a passion for skepticism (with a k) and rational thought.

Does being one make you a better photographer?
If the answer is yes please advise me of the joining fees.

ricktas
01-04-2012, 5:41pm
I am an atheist, but it's not my fault, cause its just the way god (lower case g) made me.

ameerat42
01-04-2012, 5:48pm
...He's a very tallented man...

(I thought he was just very talented.)

By Jove, Jupiter! That's a curly one. I consider myself alternately saturnine and mercurial, and not very martial. Sometimes too, rather down-to-earth, and betimes a lunar-tic.
But that's only when I have a thoughtless moment or two.
An/and not.

arthurking83
01-04-2012, 6:52pm
.... and not very martial. Sometimes too, rather down-to-earth, and betimes a lunar-tic.
......

I'm no longer very marital either now, but that's only 50% my fault :p

by the way Am, you being a Lunar-tic and all .... does this mean you're a night dwelling mammal infesting invertebrate, or a half of a time stroke that has an aversion to the Sun? :p

jupiter618
01-04-2012, 7:04pm
Being a skeptic is just admitting that you can't know the truth, all you can hope to do is accept what evidence you observe and try to be as observant and wide thinking as you can. It's nothing more than practised and intentional honesty, in the tradition of the Greek philosophers and continued to the present. It's not easy, we human beings are prone to falling into logical traps, i.e. logical fallacies. It's also deeply connected with ethics and morality. Humanism is the most advanced code of moral behaviour we have and it's a continuous work in progress.

There's a lot of woo around these days, and I thnk it's important that people are taught the skills of critical thinking and evaluation of evidence. We wouldn't want to return to the dark ages, would we?

Of course it makes you a better photographer! It makes youo better at everything you do! :)

ricktas
01-04-2012, 7:16pm
I think...that we should all just get back to what this site is for..photography!

Kym
01-04-2012, 7:17pm
Out of Focus is one thing (this forum)... But!!!

geoffsta
01-04-2012, 7:18pm
I am a long time Septic. My Dutch Ovens give my wife long term memory behavioral abilities. :D
But I'm also a sceptic. I don't believe anything until I know the facts for myself. I tend to always be honest, and if I don't know something, I'll look it up, or ask someone that has that knowledge.

jupiter618
01-04-2012, 7:19pm
Quoted from wikipedia

"Aristotle held more accurate theories on some optical concepts than other philosophers of his day. The earliest known written evidence of a camera obscura (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura) can be found in Aristotle's documentation of such a device in 350 BC in Problemata. Aristotle's apparatus contained a dark chamber that had a single small hole, or aperture (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture), to allow for sunlight to enter. Aristotle used the device to make observations of the sun and noted that no matter what shape the hole was, the sun would still be correctly displayed as a round object. In modern cameras, this is analogous to the diaphragm (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaphragm_%28optics%29). Aristotle also made the observation that when the distance between the aperture and the surface with the image increased, the image was magnified."


(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristotle#cite_note-25)

I @ M
01-04-2012, 7:20pm
Of course it makes you a better photographer! It makes youo better at everything you do! :)

Cool!!!!

You had better give me the joining details then but I have one lingering doubt about it all.
If I come out publicly and announce such things I am a little worried that people might google my email address and find out what I have been posting on the net.

Or am I being skeptical sceptical? :rolleyes:

Kym
01-04-2012, 7:24pm
Quoted from wikipedia...

Beat ya to it... http://www.ausphotography.net.au/forum/showthread.php?19220-History-of-Photography-(A-Timeline-of-significant-events) and a bit more :D

jupiter618
01-04-2012, 7:27pm
I realise sceptic isn't spelt with a K, but the skeptic movement has adopted that spelling as an identifier. Organisations like Australian Skeptics, with notable members such as Dick Smith and Phillip Adams and Paul Wild (former head of CSIRO).

Kym that's a great history or photography. I'll have to have a proper read of that.

arthurking83
01-04-2012, 7:59pm
Being a skeptic is just admitting that you can't know the truth, all you can hope to do is accept what evidence you observe and try to be as observant and wide thinking as you can. .....

Is this for some things, or for all things that we currently know of in the entire universe?

Does this mean that simple logic such as 1+1=2 is not so logical and is indeed open to another interpretation?

I've always been sceptical of such boastful arrogance in mathematics .. Is it actually 2 or is there some other answer that we're being 'protected from' by beings of a higher intellectual capacity?

I'm also sceptical of the notion that my scepticism of the absolute mathematical formula that describes 1+1=2, actually falls under the general umbrella of "observant" or "wide thinking" and may actually be a by product of a lack of sleep and many long hours over the past few months and the inevitable hallucinogenic effect that this situation may cause.

I'm adamant that I'm not yet at the Lunar-tic state, but there's a quarter moon out at the moment I have this screaming urge to jump onto the next canine I come across. :confused013

Bear Dale
01-04-2012, 8:08pm
I've always been a bit of skeptic of my septic, but 30 years on what I flush still disappears.

Kym
01-04-2012, 8:22pm
For AK...


The proof starts from the Peano Postulates, which define the natural
numbers N. N is the smallest set satisfying these postulates:

P1. 1 is in N.
P2. If x is in N, then its "successor" x' is in N.
P3. There is no x such that x' = 1.
P4. If x isn't 1, then there is a y in N such that y' = x.
P5. If S is a subset of N, 1 is in S, and the implication
(x in S => x' in S) holds, then S = N.

Then you have to define addition recursively:
Def: Let a and b be in N. If b = 1, then define a + b = a'
(using P1 and P2). If b isn't 1, then let c' = b, with c in N
(using P4), and define a + b = (a + c)'.

Then you have to define 2:
Def: 2 = 1'

2 is in N by P1, P2, and the definition of 2.

Theorem: 1 + 1 = 2

Proof: Use the first part of the definition of + with a = b = 1.
Then 1 + 1 = 1' = 2 Q.E.D.

Note: There is an alternate formulation of the Peano Postulates which
replaces 1 with 0 in P1, P3, P4, and P5. Then you have to change the
definition of addition to this:
Def: Let a and b be in N. If b = 0, then define a + b = a.
If b isn't 0, then let c' = b, with c in N, and define
a + b = (a + c)'.

You also have to define 1 = 0', and 2 = 1'. Then the proof of the
Theorem above is a little different:

Proof: Use the second part of the definition of + first:
1 + 1 = (1 + 0)'
Now use the first part of the definition of + on the sum in
parentheses: 1 + 1 = (1)' = 1' = 2 Q.E.D.

bowjac
01-04-2012, 9:06pm
I'm more of a sQUeptic. Rather than requiring evidence before accepting something, I'm more likely to QUestion why one may have that belief. Thus we enter parallel truths.

Mark L
01-04-2012, 10:12pm
........, and I thnk it's important that people are taught the skills of critical thinking and evaluation of evidence. We wouldn't want to return to the dark ages, would we?
....

I kinda like where you're coming from jupiter, though, unfortunately, the dark ages are upon us again.
We've reached a juncture in time were this is unfortunate.
I don't have children etc, so to a large degree, I don't care. Bugga.

Xebadir
01-04-2012, 10:15pm
I am rather sceptical about this whole concept of having a community of skeptics - for to be a community is to follow similar ideas while sceptics by nature is an oxymoron.

In other sceptic news - did you know that the Earth is flat and its logical? Simply take any single locale on the planet and place an object at right angles to both the meriodional and zonal directions ( in a sense pointing to the zenith), and you can thereby support your hypothesis that the world is flat* as a sphere is just a 3 dimensional numerical limit of corners tending to infinity :lol:

*At any one point.

geoffsta
01-04-2012, 10:20pm
Hang on... I have to chuck on the gumbies. Otherwise, if it gets past my ankles, I'll be in the Sh1t :lol:

jupiter618
02-04-2012, 7:18am
Oh great, flat Earthers rearing their ugly heads again! I suppose if I want to fly from London to New York I'd better head over Europe, Asia, stop over in Japan... ? LOL

It is a community. We have Skeptics in the pub meetings, all over the World. There are skeptics conventions ranging from modest to absolutely HUGE. Perhaps the most famous are the TAM meetings. I've yet to get to a TAM but would love to go.

http://tam.asnevents.com.au/ <- TAM Australia meeting I didn't get to. :( 2011 was in Las Vegas. No chance of getting there.

I @ M
02-04-2012, 7:29am
I've yet to get to a TAM but would love to go.

Did TIM go or did he stay hidden in the closet pantry with the FROOT LOOPS?

jupiter618
02-04-2012, 8:05am
HAr Har :rolleyes: I reckon you'd have a good time Andrew. A dry sense of humour is a defining characteristic of a skeptic. ;)

Kym
02-04-2012, 8:57am
I'm sceptical of skeptics ! :lol:

junqbox
02-04-2012, 9:32am
As Brian said- "We are all individuals"

ameerat42
02-04-2012, 9:49am
(I agree to disagree with anything or everything or neither or nothing, whichever comes 1st to last.)
(Imagined member of the Stray Thought Society - STS, now defunct.)

jim
02-04-2012, 9:59am
I am rather sceptical about this whole concept of having a community of skeptics

I tend to feel the same, though I do generally agree with them.

Phil777
06-04-2012, 6:26am
Yes, I sincerely hope all you skeptics and rational thinkers out there enjoy your Easter Holidays and join in the festivities with true appreciation of the real meaning of Easter - Chocolate Easter Eggs and chocolate bunnies and hot cross buns. Oh, look! They (who are they?) have hijacked the true meaning of Easter and replaced it with chocolate fertility symbols! Wow! And we never even noticed! Well, there you go! Zapped again! Much easier getting involved in gluttony and fertility rites than recognising the Truth of Easter. No, not Oestre. Yes, they hijacked it for sure.

I must also mention those who contribute to the Birds section and the Macro section on this site. Can I suggest you go and have a look and make note of the patterns in the plumage of the birds. Yes, the perfectly symmetrical patterns in the feathers. Are they not magnificent and phenominal? I would venture to suggest that any really honest person would find it hard to attribute such perfectly symmetrical patterns to random chance! Ha! The same goes for animals where, if you mentally split the animal down the middle, the left side is a mirror image of the right. (A bit like politics)
I would have to suggest that anyone still refusing to acknowledge the clear evidence of design in nature needs to closely scrutinise their critical thinking cababilities. Isn't it rational to think that design has taken place here? How do cells "know" how to create all these magnificent shapes and colours? How? Tell me! Ha! You cannot!
And not only shapes and colours but perfectly functioning entities - animals, birds, fishes, insects. Think about it people as you enjoy the extra days holidays this Easter. Then think of the true reason we celebrate Easter and why we need to be thankful for a loving Saviour, our Creator, who died for our sins on the cross in our place.
Happy Easter!

ricktas
06-04-2012, 6:31am
thread closed. i am not letting another damn religious vs evolution argument get underway on AP