tkhunny said:
There is a grave and important difference between an honest questioner and a combative crackpot.
cadamcross said:
Is a person a crackpot merely because he is combative?
If a complete stranger stalks up to you, blocks your path, and starts screaming at you, demanding that you justify your existance, and requiring that you disprove his (unstated) claims and beliefs, whilst never leaving the imposition of his faith, he is not "merely questioning received wisdom". His hostility is not meant to be productive, and is entirely outside of his rights: he's demanding (unearned) respect (respect that he will
not reciprocate), and he won't regard you to have "open-mindedly" "discussed" the "issues" until you relent and accept his definitions, his logic, and, basically, his "religion". You are not allowed to "bring in" dictionaries, history books, or logic that he does not accept; you must submit to his attacks and eventually to his claims. Because, at heart, the "issue" isn't the point. He's only interested in his authority. :shock:
When the original poster claimed to have proved that infinity doesn't exist (perhaps because it isn't a counting number? or because it isn't a location? or because it isn't a physical object?), and demanded that we submit to his (unstated) non-mathematical proof or else, within his (unstated) non-mathematical rules, prove it wrong, his demands and context seemed fairly familiar. :roll:
On the other hand, someone with an honest question is an honest questioner, and his approach and tenor are
quite different. Somebody who has carefully considered an issue and is respectfully requesting to discuss his thoughtful questions tends to approach one in a manner quite unlike the above, since the point is the discussion and growth, not him being "better" or "smarter" than you. Why anybody would expect such a person to express this intellectual interest in attacks is unclear to me...? But years of experience (decades, for some of the folks around here) has led many to understand that your wished-for situation is, well, fairly mythical.
On a mathematical note, "infinity" in a set of concepts, methods, and definitions. It isn't a cultural encrustation or a mere folkway, whose baleful impact on society "should" be "questioned", whose "age-old" "authority" is putting a brake on human progress. So I'm not sure how a political or sociological debate would relate...?
In the case of mathematical terms, either you accept logic and the current definitions, or else you accept logic but reconstruct things (proving their validity and usefulness as you proceed) from your own new definitions (which you provide in all completeness) -- or else you don't accept logic. I'm sorry, but it isn't "repressive" or "a block to human progress" or an attack on one's civil rights
not to wish to waste one's limited time and resources in an attempt at a logical discussion with somebody who doesn't accept logic.
My apologies for any offense my "political correctness" (and age) may cause.
Eliz.