Greetings,
Below are some terms related to believing and beliefs. They come from the Apple Dictionary 1.01 ed.
Since some of these terms show up alot here at the AK website, perhaps we need to look at what they mean.
Where would you place yourself in regard to this continuum of 'skeptical to gullible' ?
Are these true definitions or just points of view?
Can we even have hard and fast definitions on something as personal as beliefs ?
Dictionary
“skeptic
noun
1 a person inclined to question or doubt all accepted opinions.
2 Philosophy an ancient or modern philosopher who denies the possibility of knowledge, or even rational belief, in some sphere.
Thesaurus
“skeptic
cynic, doubter; pessimist, prophet of doom.
“Dictionary
gullible
adjective
easily persuaded to believe something; credulous :
antonym: suspicious.
“RELATED WORDS:
callow, credulous, gullible, ingenuous, naive, trusting, unsophisticated
Some people will believe anything.
Those who are truly gullible are the easiest to deceive, which is why they so often make fools of themselves.
Those who are merely credulous might be a little too quick to believe something, but they usually aren't stupid enough to act on it.
Trusting suggests the same willingness to believe (: a trusting child), but it isn't necessarily a bad way to be
( | a person so trusting he completely disarmed his enemies).
No one likes to be called naive because it implies a lack of street smarts (: she's so naive she'd accept a ride from a stranger), but when applied to things other than people, it can describe a simplicity and absence of artificiality that is quite charming ( | the naive style in which nineteenth-century American portraits were often painted).
Most people would rather be thought of as ingenuous, meaning straightforward and sincere (: an ingenuous confession of the truth), because it implies the simplicity of a child without the negative overtones.
Callow, however, comes down a little more heavily on the side of immaturity and almost always goes hand-in-hand with youth.
Bets