Re: Wedging in creation theory



Desertphile wrote:
On Thu, 26 Apr 2007 01:01:08 -0700, Timberwoof
<timberwoof.spam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


In article <1177552732.303774.255960@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"nando_ronteltap@xxxxxxxxx" <nando_ronteltap@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:



Yeah your postings just consist of insults

If just one person calls you an ass, you can ignore him.

But if a dozen people call you an ass, then you better hoof it down to the tack shop and get fitted for a saddle.

Pure poetry, that. Only I suspect for Nando being an ass would be
a step up.


The one thing that strikes me as uniformly uniform in this discussion is people's responses to your ramblings. Everybody keeps telling you pretty much the same things. So you have to ask yourself, is everybody else wrong in the same way, or is the the error in your perception or interpretation of the world?

http://www.npi.ucla.edu/ssg/schizoaffective.htm

WoW! You nailed it!
"Positive Symptoms

Positive symptoms refer to thoughts, perceptions, and behaviors that are ordinarily absent in people in the general population, but are present in persons with schizoaffective disorder. These symptoms often vary over time in their severity, and may be absent for long periods in some patients.

Hallucinations. Hallucinations are "false perceptions"; that is, hearing, seeing, feeling, or smelling things that are not actually there. The most common type of hallucinations are auditory hallucinations. Patients sometimes report hearing voices talking to them or about them, often saying insulting things, such as calling them names. These voices are usually heard through the ears and sound like other human voices.

Delusions. Delusions are "false beliefs"; that is, a belief which the patient holds, but which others can clearly see is not true. Some patients have paranoid delusions, believing that others want to hurt them. Delusions of reference are common, in which the patient believes that something in the environment is referring to him or her when it is not (such as the television talking to the patient). Delusions of control are beliefs that others can control one's actions. Patients hold these beliefs strongly and cannot usually be "talked out" of them.

Thinking Disturbances. The patient talks in a manner that is difficult to follow, an indication that he or she has a disturbance in thinking. For example, the patient may jump from one topic to the next, stop in the middle of the sentence, make up new words, or simply be difficult to understand."

Klaus

.



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