Wogoga-
To be perfectly frank, I used to believe in a lot of this stuff during my pre-college days...
I was a very religious child until the age of around 10. But already at the age of 13, I had reached a scientific and atheistic world view, which remained essentially the same until the age of 25. Both religiousness in childhood and critical thinking in adolescence had come primarily from within me.
concepts like "souls" and "psychic energy" carried an odd albeit comforting appeal for me,
Even if the world view of reductionist materialism were well-founded, the use of "soul" and "psychic energy" is still fully reasonable, except if one denies the obvious:
- an identity in the whole life of a person which can be called soul by trivial concept formation
- such subjective states, where people simply may say "I have no energy"
and it made me think that yes, there could be something "beyond" the material world that waited for us after death.
At least since the age of 13, I have never assumed that there is something "beyond" the physical world.
Death has always seemed to me something essentially positive, a final relief, because it can end any suffering. Yet I had to give up the belief in this relief when I realized that reincarnation is a fact.
By the way, some of the biggest crimes of our times consist in preventing people forcefully from dying, e.g. persons fully paralyzed or crippled.
... the sheer awe and beauty that I found in naturalistic explanations of the world ...
You confuse "naturalistic explanation" with "reductionist-materialist explanation".
As soon as you recognize that your premises
- enzymes can build plants and animals without some primitive form of perception and goal-directed movements
- around 10 megabyte of genetic information are enough to transform a cell in a human person
- chance events can create humans out of dead matter
- complex patterns of machines can develop an ego out of themselves
Google hit counts are a poor indicator of things being real or not.
However, Google counts can be an indicator of whether concepts are widespread or not.
In the same way as for "physical energy", normally "energy" alone is used for "psychic energy". And there are 1,340,000 Google entries for the expression "I have no energy", versus 662,000 for "I have no appetite".
Checking a dictionary definition of the word "energy", as suggested, would probably be a lot more reliable.
The use of "energy" in the sense of "psychic energy" is so widespread and its meaning so obvious that we can ignore the authority of dictionary definition writers in this case.
Cheers,
Wolfgang
In many cases people recover from illnesses not because of, but despite medical treatments