Not wanting to change mind/admit error. By entirely surprising. Especially if invested a lot of time defending her incorrect point.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @OnYouLikeGlue
It's not a failure to understand the distinction. It's a refusal to apply it consistently coz cultural relativity.
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Replying to @OnYouLikeGlue @HPluckrose
Still think it's possible you're underestimating the desire to not be wrong, and this is leading to her stubbornness here.
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Replying to @OnYouLikeGlue
The latter conflate concepts to make their ideology work & get vague & change subject. Motte & Bailey. Most often seen with religion.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @OnYouLikeGlue
They don't tend to think about it later & decide they were mistaken in thinking they had evidence for their God or whatever.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @OnYouLikeGlue
Coz not motivated by desire to look right but desire to hold on to belief.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
You may be right about the motivation. I still think it's possible for a seed to be planted they'll reflect on over time...
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Replying to @OnYouLikeGlue @HPluckrose
...and you may be correct that it's not a likely scenario.
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It's not going to be genuinely thinking a logic worked & realising it doesn't coz there was no logic,
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