ShadowPen said:
Perhaps I can explain it better than I did the first time.
Open mindedness is a concept that is dwindling in modern society, which, I believe, is adding to social collapse. No matter how you feel on something, what your opinion is, someone within the group of people who believe it is closed minded. Again, doesn't matter what the opinion is.
Open mindedness isn't the 'acceptance' of new ideas, but rather a bit of a consideration.
An idea may have merit, though you may not agree with the method or ideology.
The only real example I can think of at this point is my view on evolution.
I don't believe humans evolved from apes.
I believe humans and apes have a similar ancestor, and we branched off, remaining relatively close, but never actually joining. I site the 'evolve or die' section of survival of the fittest. If we evolved from apes, apes would have, logically, died out.
However, while I may not believe it, I understand that there are mounds of evidence suggesting that we did, in fact, evolve from apes. However, I am still not convinced. I understand why someone else would believe that, and there is no obvious flaw in logic, it is simply what I believe.
Maybe that clears things up.
It clears up your stance, but doesn't make you any more correct. If one has considered all other viewpoints, found them lacking, and ascribed to his own, he is not being "closed minded", he is rather simply being conclusive. You're falling into a very common trap about the discussion of biases and open-mindedness, which is to presume (a) that any given discussion on a topic is the first a person has thought about it, and (b) that open-mindedness requires some measure of perpetual fence-straddling. If what you're saying is that you assume that any person who by the time he's reached college has come to a conclusion, it must be because he hasn't really considered all the possible answers, you're being a bit closed-minded yourself.
For me to look at the evidence for both theism and atheism and say "yep, atheism makes more logical sense", and thus brook no disagreement isn't being closed-minded, it's having made a decision. To be able to understand how one comes to a conclusion different from yours isn't being open-minded, it's being analytical.
Belief cannot be validated by belief alone. It is not the true shibboleth. And consideration of an idea does not have to take the form of illogical promulgation of incorrect ideas. If I say that two plus two equals five, you don't have to "consider" whether I might be right in order to not be closed-minded.
Similarly, if you say the moon is made of cheese, I do not need to go do in-depth research about the validity and opposing arguments. Your belief wouldn't pass the laugh test, and doesn't merit consideration. So, if I've done the study, and thought about it, and concluded that God does not exist, then from my perspective anyone who has not done the research is themselves closed-minded. They've not spent the time to truly analyze critically and rationally their own beliefs (as I have), and thus they deserve no respect.
Your desire to be open-minded thus would actually exculpate the closed-minded from ever having to open their minds. Alternative medicine doesn't work. I don't need to "consider" whether it does, since I've got the entire medical community (by which I mean the actual doctors) behind me.
So don't tout a close-minded desire to be open-minded as anything other than crap. If one side is right, they're right. If one side is reasonable, they're reasonable. To ask the reasonable and right to reconsider being unreasonable and wrong is silly.
Edit: before you say "see, you're just as closed-minded as I said", bear in mind that I've actually done the research. I may be biased toward rationality and logic, but I doubt you'd find many people to say that it's closed-minded to believe in science and reason... Except for religious people, but they're closed-minded about giving credence to feelings and stories.
Your agnosticism seems to lend validity to my belief that you enjoy your position on the fence, and would like to tout the virtues of it, but I don't buy it. Either there's evidence god exists, or there isn't. To pick any other position is to simply cop out of the discussion, and that's not any more open-minded than to have picked a side based on ones own experiences and conclusions.