StanBearclaw
Muse
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2009
- Messages
- 967
Anyone else have any (de)formative experiences with hallucinogens? I had a bad trip on Salvia (of all things) that had me really screwed up for a couple months.
So again, I ask, how would you ever test the hypothesis that there is such a thing as synchronicity?
I've already been through this, but let's simplify: If you flip a coin 10 times, it would be surprising if you didn't obtain at least 2 heads and tails. The odds of getting all heads or tails, or even nine heads or tails, is slim, as the probability of a 10-0 mix or a 9-1 mix totals only 2.15%. In your world, though, a 10-0 mix or a 9-1 mix wouldn't faze you. In fact, you evidently wouldn't be fazed by a coin being flipped 1000 times with a 1000-0 or 999-1 mix.
Thanks for asking - because it WAS a very meaningful experience for me. it solidified my fragile, nascent belief in a universe that is 'indistinguishable from magical,' in which intuition can be a useful, and even rational guide to follow.
The teapots were an anchor that helped me make a very difficult paradigm shift, away from my deeply-entrenched reductionist, fundamentalist rationalism. Without such concrete 'evidence' in favor of the perspective that I'd found while on acid, it is almost certain that I would have quickly slid back into my previous outlook, in which everything was meaningless, and all coincidences were "mere."
Now when a coincidence happens - I notice. I laugh out loud, with deep, genuine pleasure - because it seems like maybe, just maybe - the universe is winking at me, and laughing along. And it feels good to laugh like that ... much, much better than the cynical snickering that I'd specialized in before.
Even without holding any specific beliefs, even though still an atheist ... being open to the possibility of meaningfulness in this world really is a gift that I am grateful for.
<ugh there's much more to be said than that I guess, but that's the gist of it and I gotta stop typing before my GF beats me.>
If you can't test for it, how do you know it doesn't exist?Well, since there is no such thing as synchronicity, I don't think you can.
I cited the Merriam-Webster definition, which requires "the coincidental occurrence of events and especially psychic events (as similar thoughts in widely separated persons or a mental image of an unexpected event before it happens) that seem related but are not explained by conventional mechanisms of causality."However, you would at least have to define what it means and what it requires.
For example, if you predicted that you could throw a die 20 times and get all heads, you could test that prediction.
If you simply wait until something that seems like synchronicity happens and then ask what are the odds of that happening, you're just committing the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy (and, as I've pointed out, I could do the exact same thing with ANY outcome).
Making meaning is a far cry from that meaning being 'out there', independant of our experience/cognition, however. Humans do conjure meaning and recognize patterns. We're wired to do so as a result of evolution. Recognizing this is at the heart of skepticism. I'm sorry to say it, but everything about TH's story leads me to the conclusion that he has merely abandoned some part of whatever rationality he may have once had.
I think what this means is that to make meaning and to try to find pre-existing patterns of meaning (turning coincidences into synchronicity, "conjuring up" meaning, etc.,) are two different things; in a way, they may even be opposite things. It amazes me to see the sheer amount of time and energy that people can spend in attempting to sort of artificially create illusions of meaning where they don't exist; I just don't see the point. In fact, I think that it can actually be destructive, because it can keep us trapped in the process of game-playing (waiting and searching for signs, mystical events and occurrences or"proof" that God is sitting around up in heaven waiting to answer our prayers or that reading The Secret is going to draw the will of the universe to answer our needs) and take us away from the process of creating real meaning.
There are plenty of examples of meaningful coincidences occurring, and I have experienced them myself. In one case, even a highly skeptical friend had to admit that there was probably something paranormal going on.
Do a quick web search and you'll see mountains of anecdotal evidence (I'm a newbie, so I can't post links yet). Some things are too timely and specific for me to dismiss as mere coincidence, including things I've experienced myself. How do you rationalize things that are so far outside of the laws of probability?
Note: I admit that many of these occurrences are, in fact, mere coincidences, but nowhere near all of them.
I think what this means is that to make meaning and to try to find pre-existing patterns of meaning (turning coincidences into synchronicity, "conjuring up" meaning, etc.,) are two different things; in a way, they may even be opposite things. It amazes me to see the sheer amount of time and energy that people can spend in attempting to sort of artificially create illusions of meaning where they don't exist; I just don't see the point. In fact, I think that it can actually be destructive, because it can keep us trapped in the process of game-playing (waiting and searching for signs, mystical events and occurrences or"proof" that God is sitting around up in heaven waiting to answer our prayers or that reading The Secret is going to draw the will of the universe to answer our needs) and take us away from the process of creating real meaning.
OK, I am comfortable with that explanation, thanks.
Things happen that make us think. I am fine with that. Just keep thinking, and stick to the middle ground. Extremism in any form (and I truly think you tried too hard to take an extreme view with your "deeply-entrenched reductionist, fundamentalist rationalism") can lead to equally bad conclusions.
So, have fun, enjoy life, and stay rational.
Thanks, I'll try, on all counts ... I agree that the middle ground is where it's at with this (although I am sympathetic to both those who deny meaningfulness of all coincidences and those who find meaning everywhere) ...
Not if that anecdote were taken from the sum total of everything that all humans on the entire planet do. And that's what reporting such an event after the fact is. In fact, the law of truly large numbers tells us that very unusual and improbable events are expected to happen all the time--especially when you consider all the people on the planet and everything they could possible do (and you don't define ahead of time which of these unusual or improbable events you will find significant).
However, if you say, "I'll get all heads in the next 20 coin tosses" and proceed to do just that, I would find that significant.
If Mildred Ames from Upper Teaneck, NJ reports that in 1953, she flipped a coin 20 times and got all heads, it would not impress me in the least. You, however, would report it as an example of synchronicity.
Evidence?(Ps it's been shown that certainty is no indicator of accuacy - if you think you remember exactly what you were doing when 911/JFK/Challenger happened, you're probably wrong on most of the details)
So do you consider this experience a one-time thing? Or do events like this happen all the time, and we ignore the signs?
How would you distinguish a drug-induced hallucination from a mystical experience?
30 percent said that the experience was the primary spiritually significant event of their lives, with approximately 70 percent rating it in their top 5. To put this into perspective, participants rated the experience alongside the birth of their first child, or the death of a parent.
The team also observed a residual benefit that the participants experienced months after the initial hallucinogenic experiments. After their drug induced mystical experience, 79 percent of subjects believed that their lives had become more satisfying; with many also believing that their overall mood and state of mind had been significantly improved. Friends, family and associates of the participants are said to have substantiated their claims in follow-up interviews conducted by the research team.
To Teapots happen So can I ask, when you first met your landlord..is there a chance you saw that teapot in the house or with him and just didnt notice it...but the heightened senses during LSD registered it when you saw the teapot for sale?
Humans do conjure meaning and recognize patterns. We're wired to do so as a result of evolution. Recognizing this is at the heart of skepticism.
How do you reconcile your atheism with your belief that the universe has meaning?
What about the state of mental quiet, and the realization that it is the default awareness of all creatures simultaneously? In the shared background state, everything happens in the same moment? Is this what acid and synchronicity have come to? Teapots.
I'm a little confused about what you're trying to say. In my view, 'making meaning' is exactly what we do when we 'find pre-existing patterns of meaning', because those pre-existing patterns do not exist outside our own minds--or at least whatever meaning we assign to them doesn't. If we recognize a face in a pile of rocks, the actual arrangement of rocks exists, but the face doesn't--we made that up.
Pattern recognition is something that we're wired to do automatically, and it's wonderful that we're so good at it. But it's also a dual-edged sword, so to speak, and if we really want to know what's going on we have to be constantly on the look out for situations in which this abiliity trips us up. Stories like TH's are just that--stories. They can be quite entertaining, and of course our lives are enriched if we enjoy them when they happen, but there's just no need to posit any sort of universal will or external meaning in order to get the benefits of enjoying a good story, and doing so just makes it that much harder to keep our propensity of self-delusion in check.
I don't care whether you call it instinct, intuition, 6th sense, the subconscious, the still small voice of god, whatever - to ignore such a powerful instrument is as irrational as throwing out reason entirely. Intuition is a well-honed machine, far older than mankind, far deeper than our meager analytical abilities … yes, of course it has limitations and pitfalls, and it can to lead us into factual error, but these things are no less true of reason ... especially so when we're not fact-finding, but meaning-making ...