Nyarlathotep
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2003
- Messages
- 7,503
Here I thought this was going to be a thread about "moichandizing, moichandizing, moichandizing". I was all ready to go with my official Spaceballs lunchbox, T-shirt and flamethrower.
0.26% you mean.
And I fail to understand how this is generous. On the contrary, I would have thought this was very ungenerous.
However if it is anything like only 0.26%, I think the hypothesis that various normal explanations suffice might well be reasonable.
People used to think NDEs were extremely uncommon until the 1980's. But the same principle applies. Namely people are reluctant to talk about their experiences.
People used to think alien abduction was extremely uncommon until they heard the story of Betty and Barney Hill. But the same principle applies. People hear stories that predispose them to look for coincidences and label them astounding.
0.26% you mean. And I fail to understand how this is generous. On the contrary, I would have thought this was very ungenerous. I would imagine people would tend to keep quiet about it for all sorts of reasons.
II
0.26% you mean.
Ersby
Oh yes. So it is.
II
And I fail to understand how this is generous. On the contrary, I would have thought this was very ungenerous.
Ersby
Because I didn't use all organ transplants. If I had the figure would've been ten times smaller..
But we are not talking about some inner experience. We are talking about something that alters people's personalities in such a way that it stands out.
Not only themselves, but also their families, friends and coworkers would notice.
It would be impossible to keep it quiet.
It was stated on the site with the journal article.How does one determine whether a jounal is peer-reviewed or not? I'm asking because the Journal of Near Death Studies does not sound like it's peer-reviewed, but I'm more than willing to be shown I'm wrong.
His musical tastes changed? Pardon me, but that doesn't seem to be extraordinary in any way. I never used to like country music, but in my 30s developed an interest in certain kinds. About the same time a friend of mine started listening to classical music. No transplants necessary. Hardly seems astounding.
No, they wouldn't necessarily jump to that conclusion. But transplant patients are followed rather closely, to see if they suffer side effects.I don't think it would necessarily stand out. Suppose I received an organ from a woman and subsequently developed an interest in shopping. But presumably I could resist such an urge to go shopping. Or even do it secretly!
But suppose people did see me shopping, or talking politely to you guys, or some other uncharacteristic behaviour. Are you really suggesting that people would jump to the conclusion that it must be due to the organ transplant? Come now.
What if the recipients knew about the donor (as many do)? Wouldn't that mean that the changes in their personalities could be due to their belief that they should pick up traits from the donor?
Not if they just feel your impression is wrong rather than making a definitive claim.
I'm not so much interested in the hypothesis as to why it happens. I'm more interested if some of these people really do change certain aspects of their personalities, and acquire new skills, which it would be unreasonable to suppose happened in any "normal" manner.
I make no claims and have no evidence apart from the stories I have read.
Let's examine the figure further. You say there were 28,801 organ recipients in 10 years. Is your claim that only 0.26% of them experienced anything unusual? Or do you agree the figure might be much larger than this?
Were each of these 28,801 people given a personal interview to establish if they experienced anything unusual?
So Schwartz picked the people from all organ recipients rather than just the major organs?
From the link:
In one amazing story, an eight-year-old girl who received the heart of a murdered 10-year- old, began having nightmares in which she relived the crime. Her dreams helped police solve the murder.
Molly gets a new heart from a murder victim. Soon after the transplant, Molly begins having dreams about a "dark figure in a ski mask", who, after Molly has been under hypnosis, turns out to be the murderer, who is now behind bars.
Source
In another story, a shy, reserved woman has vivid dreams about the donor, even though she never met this person. She also develops a more assertive personality.
A third heart recipient strangely picks up his donor's musical taste.
From all indications, the cells communicate with one another, passing new memories on throughout the body when foreign cells are adhered to the body. This might explain why some humans have vivid memories of past lives, especially when under hypnosis, that were never lived. They are reacting to cellular memory, not reincarnation.
All coincidences are astounding.I don't know about the cellular memory hypothesis, but the coincidences in the 10 cases that are detailed in the paper are pretty astounding.
I understand that Schwartz found 2- 5 coincidences in each patient. It would be more impressive if the same coincidence appeared time and time again. If most patients found their musical tastes changed that would be interesting, but even then it would need to be compared to a control group.
Hey that is what I way saying in the paragraph before the one you quoted. Coincidence or what !!!I have absolutely no idea what your life is like. Apart from your interest in skepticism, I know zilch about you.
Yet, I am certain that we can find 2-5 - at least - "coincidences" among ourselves. If we look for similarities, we will find them.
Schwartz is, as usual, datamining.