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THE SPEW ZONE

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Raymond S. G. Foster

High Elder Warlock

Power Poster

THE INFINITE REGRESS FALLACY

LOGIC AND EVIDENCE
LOGIC AND EVIDENCE

Regression Fallacy: Ascribing a cause where none exists in situations where natural fluctuations exist, while failing to account for natural fluctuations.


Infinite regress is not a sufficient explanatory mechanism. It does not resolve the problem it is invoked to answer but instead postpones it indefinitely. Each belief or claim is said to be justified by another, which itself requires justification, and so on without end. This structure provides no grounding point—it defers resolution rather than offering one.


Beliefs are not equivalent to facts. 


While beliefs may be informed by facts, they remain interpretations, models, or assumptions. A belief cannot ultimately justify another belief without some form of evidence or shared foundation. Otherwise, the structure risks circularity or infinite regress: “A is true because of B, B is true because of C, and so on without closure.” This is not explanation but deferral.


In cosmological contexts, infinite regress fails to answer origin questions. 


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Raymond S. G. Foster

High Elder Warlock

Power Poster

Abortion Debates, Claims and Reality

The Abortion Debate: Clarifying Misrepresentations
The Abortion Debate: Clarifying Misrepresentations

Opening Statement


I did not expect to enter this debate, but one thing must be made clear: twisting words, redefining terms by association, and misrepresenting arguments are destructive habits. They fuel ignorance, which in turn breeds arrogance. This is especially evident in the abortion debate.


Key Points


  • Weak Argument from Opponents

    • Critics of Pro-Life positions often demand: “Where in the Bible does it say abortion?”


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Raymond S. G. Foster

High Elder Warlock

Power Poster

Can Warlocks or Witches Be Christian, Jewish, Etc?

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All Hail the One and Three


Overview


This is a loaded question and takes a lot of considerations; there is no single yes/no answer — it depends on how you define “Christian” and “witch,” which scriptures or traditions you accept, and whether you prioritize institutional teaching or personal conscience.


The simplest answer to this is by name at least as such are presented within most Christian traditions, regardless if being misinformed, or the centuries of distortion well into the present of the very meaning of either title, it would be a no. As far as a private personal craft you keep to yourself or a very, very small number of trusted friends and/or family, sure, in that sense you can call yourself whatever you want.


Modern Efforts of More Smear:


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