Like it or not, we all believe. Even when the things we believe have been established on empirical evidence, this is usually based not on our own observations of the evidence, but on acceptance of the findings of others. This is especially so in this increasingly specialised world.
[FONT=verdana, sans-serif]I didn't read the entire post as it was a bit[/FONT][FONT=verdana, sans-serif] long, but the above jumped out at me. [/FONT][FONT=verdana, sans-serif]
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I have to agree with this. [/FONT][/FONT]
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I usually feel like I'm tipping one of society's sacred cows when I say the following, but this is why I take something of a reporter's approach to things of which I'm not a first-hand eyewitness. I refuse to get all doctrinaire about such things as the age of the earth, because believe it or not, when it got it's start ... I wasn't there. So I'll say that it "allegedly" is thus-and-so, rather than "It is so because Expert A tells me so" (which isn't such a far cry from "... for the Bible tells me so").[/FONT][/FONT]
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No, whatever belief I have about a "fact" to which I don't have first-hand access will be based upon my having decided to place my faith in (what I believe to be) experts' information about the age of the earth -- or whether a planet is suddenly no longer (considered) a planet. If I stumble across a practical reason to believe it, based on first-hand experience, all the better.[/FONT][/FONT]
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Even with more current fare, such as the news (when I bother watching it
) -- I can't say I know what's going on in the world, only what is said to be going on in the world. Until I have the energy and the urge to hop into a car/plane/boat and travel to each and every point on the globe to verify for myself that such-and-such took place, I cannot know it happened, I can only believe it happened, based on what I know -- the latter which is not that it happened, but that it is said to have happened (wasn't it Robert Brault who (allegedly) said that one doesn't [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=verdana, sans-serif]
realize how little accuracy there is in network TV reporting until they cover a story in one's own hometown?).
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I will usually be able to provide evidence that something is said to have happened before I'll ever be able to provide evidence that it actually did happen. [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=verdana, sans-serif]
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Do I carry one huge grain of salt around with me, or what? 
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