What if humans and monkeys decended from the same creature?
What if the world isnt realy flat?
What if we are not realy the center of the universe, but rather a single planet amongst many, in an everchanging universe?
Your right. The what if game is a complete waste of time...
How dare I think outside the box.
I appreciate the sarcasm and annoyingly I will clarify my meaning. The "what if game" as previously mentioned by myself as useless; is and will always be useless. My meaning of "what if game" is a meaning where someone proves a point then the other person responds with a what if sentence with little to no time or thought placed into the questions. Also there is a difference between a question used to get and answer, and a question used in an attempt to prove someone wrong.
For even further clarification in hopes of removing any chance of further misinterpretation I will provide you with a example you can relate with. The example is the one above, you made a point that if we could only see in black and white then we would not have discovered color. I bet Jay would know what the name of this type of phrase is but I do not. The basic premise is that you state a fact then draw a non fact based conclusion from it. i.e. If we can only see black and white we do not see colors. That is the fact, then the phrase we will never discover colors is the assumption presented as fact when it is not a fact at all.
Next part, I prove your statement incorrect.
Next, you respond with a what if we did not have eyes we would never discover light. Now this is the what if game, rather than accepting your original point was erroneous you continue on the same line of questioning showing lack of comprehension on the original point.
Then I respond with how your "what if" question is also incorrect, which is easily proven by the fact that radio waves were not discovered to be a form of light wave until after they were being used. So radio waves were discovered without the use of sight ( assuming you do not take into account that eyes were used in all aspects relating to the discovery)
Next, You respond with another what if question which again shows lack of understanding.
Basically I am being forward because I felt obligated to explain this to you. To your benefit I can see how it can be misunderstood but to the extend you misunderstood it is onerous. Not to mention your eruditely sarcasm caused me to waist my time responding to your "what if question".
If many people see something as true, it has a high potental of being true
This is False, This is false, this is false. Sorry I just had to repeat this three times to get it into your head. In the risk of acting perfunctory I will make the following statement for the first time, your point is false, it is not worth proving that it is false.
A further breakdown: You have a theory about something. You have tested it, tried it, and found it to be true. *as true as anything can be* You then get other people to try the same experiment you did, and talk to them to see if they came to the same conclution that you did. You have shared your perspective on the given knowlage, and if you all find it to be a true statment/experiment/theory, it has a much higher chance of being so.
This explanation is far from what you were stating a number of posts ago.
Here is what you said before,
To be honest, there is a method to finding out if your religion is true. There are measurable means by which to follow it. Problem is, they could be coincidence, or luck, based on what your perspective is.
Now your new post and your old post are clearly different. In the old post you are attempting to say that there are measurable ways to finding if a religion is true, but those means may be " coincidence, or luck, based on what your perspective is." Where as your new post contradicts what your old post stated. In the sentance " You then get other people to try the same experiment you did..." You are stating that findings are no longer perspective based there are measurements reproduced and the results compared. in summary, your old post claims you can have evidence but it is perspective based. And your new post is demonstrating understanding for the fact that perspective does not matter when methods of intersubjective verifiability are used.
So Jay was correct is asking you to read it again because you did not and may still not understand the difference between talking to someone else about your day at work, and the practice of intersubjective verifiability.