This is where we start to get into trouble. Our rational minds deduce all sorts of things that aren't true because we don't have enough information otherwise. Looking up at the sky, a rational mind might well deduce that the Sun circles the Earth (in fact they did, until Copernicus came along). That same rational mind would then understand that that perfectly rational belief was nevertheless mistaken once more evidence came to light.thedoc wrote:ReliStuPhD wrote:How do you know they weren't made by wood fairies? (Seriously)thedoc wrote:What about "Woods Fairies"? On the old house we had a rather large deck and one winter I made a shallow pond to do some Ice Skating for the daughters. In the spring when the water had melted the wind would cause swirls on the water, and I told the girls that I had seen evidence that "Woods Fairies" were dancing on the water. I'm not sure they believed my, but I had shown them the swirls on the water.
That's the thing, my rational mind deduced that it was the wind, my spiritual or whimsical mind would say that it was Woods Fairies. Whether we admit it or not, each mind is made up of a rational part, and a more whimsical part. Which part rules your roost.
So again, how do you *know* it wasn't wood fairies? If it's simply a deduction based only on what you have personally observed, you might be terribly mistaken. Have you never been wrong with respect to a deduction your rational mind made?