No, I don´t think I changed a definition. I took the definition and interpreted it in a way that doesn´t lead to nonsense. That´s the slack you always need to cut definitions, because every term comes with several commonly used meanings (which are documented in dictionaries and encyclopedias) - and it´s no problem whatsoever to prove any statement nonsense if you pick certain definitions of the terms used in the definition.See, the difference here is that you're all for changing definitions against how they're commonly used in order to (productively) make sure there isn't nonsense.
"The fans celebrated their idol." I´m naturally assuming that "fan" isn´t used in the meaning of "propeller" here.
This may or may not be accurate - I just don´t know how you arrived at this idea.You're more for making changes (ethos), and I'm more for noting problematic norms (observation?).
Well, I don´t agree that I have used an uncommon definition. I just used a common one that doesn´t render the statement in question nonsensical.I'm for keeping the commonly used definitions and seeing what type of nonsense results. The nonsense that results tells us (garbage in, garbage out fashion) that the definitions are whack.
OTOH, I have yet to see any definition of "skepticism" that uses or implies what the Wiki-definition you have provided clearly doesn´t say nor imply (but which would be crucial for your point to be valid): that skepticism suggests itself as an approach to "ALL THINGS".
Actually, I don´t care much what certain fringe groups may "prop up" any given term as. If I´d take that route I could easily shoot down any idea by showing how some people claim to adhere to it and come to very strange results. Christianity isn´t Pat Robertson, communism isn´t Pol Pot, and skepticism isn´t your friend who told you that it must be applied to "all things" and is "the panacea to life".Thus, skepticism as it's used by at least certain groups of people (and here our psychological observations are clearly different, you believing that people don't prop up skepticism as a panacea, me that people who often tout skepticism often do, and there's no room here but for an impasse given different observations) is nonsense.
On a sidenote, skepticism - by any definition of the approach I am aware of, including those you have provided - can be the panacea to life or even only to accurate beliefs: simply because it merlely proposes a method to avoid rashing to conclusions, and doesn´t provide any method how to arrive at safe conclusions.
Received, I find it a bit odd that you start from definitions, and then suddenly appeal to your "psychological observations". Plus, I don´t think there´s such a thing as a "psychological observation". Psychology is always interpretation. I think that - at least - you could name names (and preferably not those of some crackpots that don´t have any credibilty, but can no doubt be dug out somewhere in the width of the internet) and quote statements that you psychologically interpret as putting skepticism on the pedestal you (and I) think it doesn´t deserve to stand on. Just so at least I get an idea whom and what you are talking about.
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