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Like if you are a Christian trying to prove to Atheist they are wrong or vice/versa.
If you don't have this problem please explain to me how you pick a best answer if all the answers are one's you dissagree with?
Thanks.

2006-12-11 14:17:18 · 13 answers · asked by haiku_katie 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

13 answers

You can let others pick. What I do is read what they say, and the one that at least tries to be real I pick. If, someone just try to be hateful, it show me they really not know anything. Also, Humor is good if it tasteful.

2006-12-11 14:21:42 · answer #1 · answered by Snaglefritz 7 · 0 0

Even if you disagree with all the answers I'd pick the one that is most thoughtful, logical and intelligent. From the subject you described I would look at the answers that aren't completely biased and that show some respect for your position. Sometimes if I can't decide which answer to pick, or if I forget that I asked a question, I let the voters choose.

2006-12-13 15:17:32 · answer #2 · answered by DawnDavenport 7 · 0 0

If I already know an answer, I wouldn't ask a question about that. If I don't know an answer, I'd pick the answer with the best references (after checking those references). If no references are provided, I'd pick the answer of the majority, then choose the specific answer by how well they worded their answer.

I feel that asking questions that you already know what specific answer you want is unethical. It is a waste of everyone's time and not what this forum is intended for.

2006-12-12 01:19:56 · answer #3 · answered by Witchy 7 · 0 0

The purpose of Y! Answers is to ask questions and pick the one that answers your question the best. This is not some religious forum where you preach about how much you love God or how much you don't believe in God, but people seem to forget that.

And if anyone gets converted into a religion because of someone's question on Yahoo! Answers, then I just feel sorry for him/her.

2006-12-11 14:20:44 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I try not to pick answers I agree with as a general rule. The best answer should be one that made me think. If I had to google something to disprove the answer or look it up in a book, the answer made me think, so by my reasoning a darn good answer.

Another way I pick the best answer is to find the one that made me laugh the hardest.

2006-12-11 14:22:54 · answer #5 · answered by Just Wondering 3 · 1 0

First: I don't expect my questions to "prove" anything to anybody. Most people already believe what they want to believe, precisely because they want to believe it -- that's why beliefs rarely change.

Second: It's annoying when all the responders miss my point; so I just give up and put it to a vote.

Third: I can pick a BA that I disagree with, IF it's funny. Alas, that doesn't happen often, either.

2006-12-11 14:22:36 · answer #6 · answered by ? 7 · 1 0

on the top of the day who supplies a rats ****? I answer those inquiries to get a sense for the form of questions that folk could ask of me as an instructor and that i merely answer them to the better of my skill. I many times merely steer away from questions that are patently geared for a undeniable answer to settle for and extremely attempt and concentration on the questions of individuals new to martial arts. I even have extra beneficial issues to do than prepare my element to young ones on the different area of the international, I by no potential argue my form with my mouth, or use different practioners as an occasion of my means, I enable my own technique communicate for itself and that i'm continually chuffed to lose, i'm plenty extra in all possibility to stroll away with extra understanding, even with the undeniable fact that no one ever seems to desire a real martial debate, as a sparring experience may be the real communicate no longer the hypertheticals. besides i think of this answer is a minimum of extremely on subject remember lol.

2016-12-30 07:12:04 · answer #7 · answered by belis 3 · 0 0

you are not looking for people who agree or disagree with you. you are looking for "a good or best answer" among the ones given to you. that is quite different. you should concentrate on the logic and the natural instinct of the answer -- compared to the question asked. think about it twice. and you will definitely find the "best" answer among the worst. that is the way to go about it. hope it helps.

2006-12-11 14:23:26 · answer #8 · answered by s t 6 · 1 0

One idea is to pick the answerer that seems most honest in their conviction(even though they may be way out in left field)

2006-12-11 14:21:01 · answer #9 · answered by bonsai bobby 7 · 0 0

I generally pick the one that ticks me off the least, if all are disagreeable.

2006-12-11 14:19:51 · answer #10 · answered by judy_r8 6 · 1 0

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