Don’t be so quick to assume you are correct or rational just because your beliefs are within a particular cluster, no matter how accurate those beliefs seem at first. After all, the one of the virtues of rationality is to continue to be curious even after you think you’ve found the answer. You might even be wrong about ghosts (although that seems pretty unlikely). The point is, not all of the things that “skeptics,” or “traditional rationalists” as they are often called here, believe are necessarily true. In fact, some of their epistemic standards are incorrect or too weak. Continue to question what you believe—if you put forth a genuine effort, I think you’ll find that you still have some lingering irrational beliefs that can be corrected.
Don’t be so quick to assume you are correct or rational just because your beliefs are within a particular cluster, no matter how accurate those beliefs seem at first. After all, the one of the virtues of rationality is to continue to be curious even after you think you’ve found the answer. You might even be wrong about ghosts (although that seems pretty unlikely). The point is, not all of the things that “skeptics,” or “traditional rationalists” as they are often called here, believe are necessarily true. In fact, some of their epistemic standards are incorrect or too weak. Continue to question what you believe—if you put forth a genuine effort, I think you’ll find that you still have some lingering irrational beliefs that can be corrected.