That's what I thought. It looks like it was the latter; I'm looking at a part of the situation that doesn't matter to you.Serafina wrote:You see, it is pretty simple:
One person can explain his argument logically. But he get's annoyed by the other persons failure to understand it, so he gives up.
The other person can not explain his argument logically. He get's annonyed by the other persons demand for an logical explanation, so he gives up.
The ability to present an logical, honest argument is all that matters here. Creationists can never do that:
Either they have to ignore evidence (dishonesty) or argue illogically.
Inside the head of the creationist, we find the delusion that an argument from faith is just as good as a logical argument, if not better. They believe (wrongly) that they can take the slots in a conversation where you'd normally put a logical argument, put in an argument from faith, and still be saying something valid. They believe that their own religious beliefs are self-evident truth, you see, on par with "two plus two equals four."
They remain wrong, but that's not my point. My point is that they think they are doing the same thing you'd think you were doing by dismissing an argument that two plus two is three. They're wrong, but they don't know that; if they did they wouldn't be wrong.
I'm only talking about the internal thought process here. It's not a question of whether what they're saying is true, or whether it's good debating practice, or whether they have a right to do it when they don't have a logical argument. I'm not claiming any of those things. I'm saying that they feel much the same thing that a rational person feels when confronted with absolute stupidity: a sense that the other person only disagrees with them because the other person is a clod.
And, just to underline this one more time: this does not make them right or justified in doing so. It was never meant as anything but a comment on the psychology of religious fanaticism.