It may lead people to believe you’ve attached more weight to evidence supporting your theory than to evidence refuting it. I’d say, if you’re trying to convince people of something that flies in the face of scientific orthodoxy, it’s advisable not to let slip that, before you started your researches, you had a huge emotional preference for what you ended up concluding. The remark gives an interesting insight into his approach. Unlike Mark Sargent, I don’t have a preference. I’m content for the world to be whatever shape the world is. Then again, I wouldn’t say I positively liked it either. In fact, I’m not sure you can really feel it at all. I mean, don’t they? Personally, I don’t mind it. I thought that was a revealing statement. “Nobody likes this uncomfortable feeling of being this tiny ball flying through space,” Mark Sargent, who believes that the world is flat, told the BBC the other day.
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