Fence Sitter wrote:Sethbag wrote: I really like how Stak put it recently in another thread, stating in just three words what I've formerly taken whole sentences or even paragraphs to get out: fallacy of misattribution. The experiences they've had are real experiences, but A) they aren't what people think they are, and B) don't mean what people think they mean, and C) don't come from the source people claim they do.
Seth can you link this thread?
Oops, I mistakenly said Stak when it was in fact Tarski who wrote the sentence, and I didn't get it right as far as the three words. There's my problematic memory for you!
The thread is right
here, and what most impressed me was Tarski's distillation of the problem was this sentence right here:
Tarski wrote:The spirit is a mainly garden variety neurochemical phenomenon together with a learned error of attribution.
I apologize for my mistaken reference here. I was very impressed with Tarski's simple one liner, and I guess in my mind I was mulling it over and reformulating it in terms of misattribution, and as soon as I thought of this as a fallacy, my mind immediately turned to Stak, because he's the one usually talking about fallacies lately. The mind plays tricks on one. Thanks for asking me for the link, and forcing me to resolve this and correct what I said earlier!
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen