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The Round Table
I know a guy who argues over facts
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<blockquote data-quote="RSteve" data-source="post: 555729" data-attributes="member: 164"><p><span style="font-size: 18px">Two of my very close friends are clinical psychologists. Both have said that cases of created or false memory syndrome are becoming disturbingly prevalent. Patients, at some point in their life, may create a fiction to justify or explain an event in their life. As years pass that fiction, often repeated, becomes a reality. The individual believes the memory actually happened. </span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px">I think that may be equally true about statements of fact and belief. If one hears and repeats over and over that something is factual, even when it isn't and they initially know that it isn't factual, with repeated re-stating the falsity to justify a position or comfort level, ultimately they truly believe the false statement is factual. And I would guess that's the essence of propaganda.</span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RSteve, post: 555729, member: 164"] [SIZE=5]Two of my very close friends are clinical psychologists. Both have said that cases of created or false memory syndrome are becoming disturbingly prevalent. Patients, at some point in their life, may create a fiction to justify or explain an event in their life. As years pass that fiction, often repeated, becomes a reality. The individual believes the memory actually happened. I think that may be equally true about statements of fact and belief. If one hears and repeats over and over that something is factual, even when it isn't and they initially know that it isn't factual, with repeated re-stating the falsity to justify a position or comfort level, ultimately they truly believe the false statement is factual. And I would guess that's the essence of propaganda.[/SIZE] [/QUOTE]
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I know a guy who argues over facts
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