JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
But you got the roller skates from aliens, right?
Borg technology, to be specific. Industrial casters purchased from the Big Orange Retail Giant.
But you got the roller skates from aliens, right?
Borg technology, to be specific. Industrial casters purchased from the Big Orange Retail Giant.
Already professed belief in reincarnation, heaven, ect… there are simply too many woo hurdles to overcome for one thread.
I think it is evident in Henry's manner, behavior and effect on other people that he is not engaged in fraud. Whether he is effective, we can debate. That he is sincere, and well-intentioned of that there is no doubt. I believe it to be self-evident.
I am with you on all of this, especially the opening about not being bothered by belief itself. If that bothered me I would have to cut off 90%+ of all my family and friends. Nor does it bother me if someone does not want to discuss their belief or does so but says something like "I can't really defend it, but I believe it." I'm good with that.I'm not as bothered by a professed belief in a communicable afterlife as I am by the ongoing inability to articulate rational lines of reasoning to support such a thing. Why someone believes something is, for me, where the debate lies.
Why, according to him, should we believe Tyler Henry's claims? The best we seem to get is
He considers it "self-evident" beyond doubt that Henry is sincere and well-intentioned. Yeah, every successful charlatan tries to look like that. It's the sine qua non of charlatanism. He notes Henry's charm and its effect on others. Has he never seen a salesman at work? While at first glance this looks like a list of articulable reasons to trust him, it simply boils down to Henry being charming and affable, and Frank wanting to believe him. "There is no doubt," and "I believe it to be self-evident" are cop-outs. If we go farther back into the debate, we see similar admonitions that the show itself just ought to be considered evidence of its own authenticity.
We know the old adage: you can't argue someone out of a position they didn't argue themselves into. I don't see any evidence that Frank's acceptance of the show as authentic necromancy is based on any sort of careful analysis of evidence. Time after time it boils down simply to, "It just seems to be real," accompanied by increasing frustration that his critics don't accept that as an argument, and increasingly bizarre and fantastical dismissals of reasonable alternatives and contravening facts.
That is your limited experience. I get that. I trolled flat earth for a few months. It was fascinating to watch a person with no clue, so sure of themselves.
I can say conclusively, based on first hand research that ghosts, as they are advertised, and accepted in the "mainstream" are not real. If they are not real then NOBODY IS TALKING TO THEM.
The thing I find fascinating, Frank, is when a purveyor of one kind of Woo looks down on other types of Woo. Mediums are on the same floor as Flat Earthers.
William Shakespeare was the relevant xkcd before there was an xkcd.Even if they're not real, that doesn't stop people from trying:
William Shakespeare
Henry IV, Part 1 Act 3 Scene 1
GLENDOWER
I can call spirits from the vasty deep.
HOTSPUR
Why, so can I, or so can any man,
But will they come when you do call for them?
There is no American crane that can lift 1000 tons or even close.
I'm not as bothered by a professed belief in a communicable afterlife as I am by the ongoing inability to articulate rational lines of reasoning to support such a thing. Why someone believes something is, for me, where the debate lies.
Why, according to him, should we believe Tyler Henry's claims? The best we seem to get is
He considers it "self-evident" beyond doubt that Henry is sincere and well-intentioned. Yeah, every successful charlatan tries to look like that. It's the sine qua non of charlatanism. He notes Henry's charm and its effect on others. Has he never seen a salesman at work? While at first glance this looks like a list of articulable reasons to trust him, it simply boils down to Henry being charming and affable, and Frank wanting to believe him. "There is no doubt," and "I believe it to be self-evident" are cop-outs. If we go farther back into the debate, we see similar admonitions that the show itself just ought to be considered evidence of its own authenticity.
We know the old adage: you can't argue someone out of a position they didn't argue themselves into. I don't see any evidence that Frank's acceptance of the show as authentic necromancy is based on any sort of careful analysis of evidence. Time after time it boils down simply to, "It just seems to be real," accompanied by increasing frustration that his critics don't accept that as an argument, and increasingly bizarre and fantastical dismissals of reasonable alternatives and contravening facts.
I worked with an ad agency once and the guy who negotiated music rights had good stories, dealing with rock stars and all. One song in particular was difficult to get as he had to skip right over the publishing company and agent, and deal directly with the lead singer of the group. During the talks, held by phone, this singer had his psychic on his cell phone to his ear while talking to the agent / agency / etc. on the speakerphone. It was apparently a bit surreal. At some point, they wondered whether the cell phone thing was an act and he was pretending to consult someone, which is only marginally weirder.I have known people who will only make decisions based on what their psychic tells them.
It's rare to find a medium whose act is well done.
AIUI a psychic is someone who obtains information by any supernatural means, whilst a medium obtains information specifically by communicating with the deceased. So a medium is a psychic, but a psychic is not necessarily a medium. Palm readers, Tarot card readers etc are psychics (or rather they would be if they were genuine) but they are not mediums.Is there a difference between a psychic and a medium?
AIUI a psychic is someone who obtains information by any supernatural means, whilst a medium obtains information specifically by communicating with the deceased. So a medium is a psychic, but a psychic is not necessarily a medium. Palm readers, Tarot card readers etc are psychics (or rather they would be if they were genuine) but they are not mediums.
For the overview, Pixel42's post is as good as it gets, but with this question you have hit on one of the core problems in discussing someone's legitimacy or fraudulence. The claimant should define what they are, including their abilities and limitations (which includes the conditions required for success as well as expected accuracy), but they rarely do. And when they do, they are rarely consistent between claimants, and they are rarely consistent with the same claimant whose definition of his abilities will change based on the circumstance.Is there a difference between a psychic and a medium?
For the overview, Pixel42's post is as good as it gets, but with this question you have hit on one of the core problems in discussing someone's legitimacy or fraudulence. The claimant should define what they are, including their abilities and limitations (which includes the conditions required for success as well as expected accuracy), but they rarely do. And when they do, they are rarely consistent between claimants, and they are rarely consistent with the same claimant whose definition of his abilities will change based on the circumstance.