Delvo
Дэлво Δε&#
It wasn't an argument, at least not to argue directly by itself that hypnosis is real. It was an example of my answer to the question of whether believing that a particular state of mind exists can affect one's ability to enter that state: "it can, and here's an example in which it does". By itself, this still leaves out other possible arguments for and against the idea of hypnosis, but it does answer the specific one it was meant to answer: it counters the specific reasoning that an altered state of mind can't be real just because of the correlation between ability to enter it and belief that it exists, by illustrating that there's nothing inherently wrong with such a correlation.The second part of your argument...
It actually doesn't involve either dreaming or any form of paralysis, but, more importantly, the difference between it and hypnosis is only relevant if there's some reason why the two states of mind should have different answers to the question I was answering. In other words, some had said that a correlation between "belief that a particular altered state of mind exists" and "ability to enter that state of mind" works as an argument against the existence of that state of mind... but, given that that argument does not work in one case (the one I described), which means it can't be presumed to work in general (for all other kinds of state of mind) why should it work in another case (hypnosis)?...sounds almost like lucid dreaming, or a mild form of sleep paralysis. Both of which are not hypnotisim.
That detail is not what falsifies their presentation of qi. There are other ways to falsify their presentation of qi in general, but that one particular statement isn't among them; considered by itself, a statement like "it works only/best on those who think it can" could be true or it could be false. It can be counted as either true or false in specific cases only in light of other evidence or reasoning related to those specific cases, not from anything inherently internallly self-evident or self-refuting about itself. I'm sure you have such evidence/reasoning against it in the case of qi, but you have given none here in the case of hypnotism.The first part of your argument is the same as those no touch "qi masters" who wave their hands around at their students while the flip around and fall over. Some of those also claim that belief in their qi is essential to it working.
Also, the facts that statement X is made by someone who also made statement Y, and that Y was false, do not make X false (argumentum ad hominem). And even if X were false, that wouldn't mean that some other statement made by some other person on some other subject must also be false just because of some vague superficial alleged resemblance between the two statements. So you're combining ad hominem (at the qi-guy) with guilt by imaginary association (from the qi-guy to me), building one type of invalid attack on top of another on top of another.
I don't know exactly what you mean by "physical" or why you figure it's necessary, but, skipping around that word, yes, believing that a particular altered mental state can really exist and can be entered voluntarily under certain circumstances does, in fact, increase one's odds of being able to do so... It's pretty obvious, really: of course you couldn't alter your own mental state if you didn't think you could. The concept of putting your mind in a state you don't believe exists doesn't even make any sense. It would be essentially trying to tell yourself to agree with an idea you don't agree with.
The issue had been raised, of whether belief that an altered mental state was a real thing could affect someone's ability to enter that state. I answered that it could and illustrated with an example. Your response was to pretend to be completely unfamiliar with either the idea of answering questions with examples, or the use of analogies... while trying to insult me into submission... instead of addressing the actual subject. This is a very common type of behavior for people who have realized that they have no case they can make in support of a position they've taken.all I get out of this is you have a third undefined state which has nothing to do with hypnosis.