Man of Honour
- Joined
- 27 Sep 2004
- Posts
- 25,821
- Location
- Glasgow
I get where you're coming from, but it doesn't stand up over an average of an infinite number of possibilities.
e.g. I tell you this: "there's a giant vengeful pig with a very curly tail, she's pink and she requires that you must not eat for a week or you won't go to heaven".
do you:
a) google it (research)
b) starve (faith)
c) laugh at me?
is your answer still the same if I do it 9999999[..]99999999 times?
I'll take option d) please Bob. I'm apathetic agnostic about a great many things, is there any reason for me to care about said giant vengeful pig? If the answer is no then my option d) is to express no opinion on the pig and continue on with my life merrily.
If your point is that in some circumstances you can't just blithely follow the same rules to deal with every possible issue then you're almost certainly right but I'd argue that disbelief in an issue as a default will require more adjustment and more regularly than not expressing an opinion initially.