JK,
That wasn't what I meant. I was referring to your lack of understanding of psychology and human nature.
You can "refer" to it if you like, but you've yet to demonstrate it. What "lack of understanding" do I have exactly, other that is from not agreeing with your personal opinion on the matter which - so far as I can tell - rests on no knowledge whatever of the subject you blithely dismiss?
And your blind insistence of your scientific rational approach to everything, even the irrational.
What makes my insistence on rationality "blind" in your opinion? And what would a non-rational approach to the irrational look like do you think - killing a chicken and reading the entrails? Counting the raindrops running down a window? What?
Of course I think the rational approach is the only way to deal with the irrational - what other way is there?
I don't think "more probably correct" cuts it. That's just guessing on the matter; shear speculation.
No it isn't. It's actually a probabilistic evaluation of the truth values of propositions based on inter-subjective experience. The text book says that apples fall - I observe that apples fall - everyone I know observes that apples fall. I conclude therefore that it's probably true that apples fall.
Fred on the other hand intuits that apples fly sideways.
Then what?
Intuition isn't something you necessarily choose to do in all, if very many, occasions. It is something that is just there if and when it occurs. Your idea of applying the scientific repetition criteria to it just shows you do not understand what it is.
Actually I do understand better than you it seems what it is - it's called "guessing".
I never made that claim within the post in question - show me where I did?
You made the claim about your right for your views to be "aired". I was merely responding to that: the right to speak and the right to listened to are
not the same thing.
In fact show me that your posts are evidentially useful.
Which ones?
It's simple enough: test my rational belief that the lift will probably take you to the ground floor safely; now test Bill's intuition that jumping out of the 22nd storey window will do the job.
What were your findings?
But it often starts there, which shows they are useful.
No, it shows that they are useless until and unless to do
more than "start there". "Starting there" is just guessing.
That outburst is trying to hide an unfounded assumption that the consensus must be true. As you have agreed that is not always the case. Note I'm broadly referring to academic psychology here; those which have are/have been trendy fads and so on.
It's doing no such thing, as I've explained to you more than once already.