Chaos Magic

There are volumes of evidence for such events; anecdotal evidence, to be sure, but evidence none the less.

Anecdotes are not evidence. We've been over this.

Until you personally investigate for yourself, scientific reports are just formalized anecdotes. Even if you are told that the findings are replicated the claim itself is "anecdotal" until you actually make the same observations firsthand.

In any case, the very nature of such reported experiences renders them only communicable via anecdote. The only "proof" one can have of such events would be to experience them firsthand.

Hardly. It's entirely possible to have a verifiable record of the fact that the person could not have known something (e.g., that there was a laptop on top of the shelf) prior to the OBE and did know it afterward.

I understand that you believe that there is evidence of OBEs, but saying that it can't be scientifically tested is silly. It very much can be - and has been.

I'm saying that even reports of scientific testing are "anecdotal" unless you participate in one yourself. You stated some pages back that you accept the findings of the scientific community on faith [albeit, not a large leap of faith] that they aren't all lying/mistaken. Why then, when there is a sizable population of people -- including scientists -- who are reporting these particular phenomena do you automatically assume that the reports are untrue or otherwise unreliable? I can't help but to conclude that your criteria for "evidence" is steeply lopsided and biased towards maintaining a strongly held world view.

From what I've read, its been done before and there have been some reported positive results. The real question comes down to whether one chooses to consider such reports trustworthy.

And we don't.

This isn't a matter of anti-psi bias, either. This is a matter of demonstrably flawed methodology, cherry-picking, and other unscientific practices. These studies have been exposed multiple times by multiple people as being flawed.

Have you made the effort to personally verify them for yourself or are you simply taking their word? Do you consider it possible that the critics themselves are mistaken/dishonest? Why/why not?
 
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The only excuse for that would be a conspiracy to hide it's existence from the general public. Now, finding proof of such a thing is another story. But a lot of believers in the paranormal like to use it.

All the information about the alleged phenomena are publicly available to anyone who is genuinely interested. Even so, theres a segment of the population that has strong personal biases towards discounting all such reports, regardless of the source. People lend credence to what they want -- what need is there to invoke a "conspiracy"?
 
There may be an impasse here due to a lack of corroborative evidence.

Might I describe an experience I had where there was clear evidence that something perhaps a premonition occurred.

You know the kobe earthquake in Japan, well I had a premonition in a dream approximately a week before the earthquake happened.

In my dream I was in a tourist party in Japan being shown around a cave by a local tourist guide. Suddenly there was a a loud noise and a big commotion, parts of the roof of the caved in and I found my self squeezing into a confined space with the guide, who was trying to show me where I would be safe. I woke up suddenly with feelings of claustraphobia.

This was such a striking dream that I told numerous people about it.

A week later the earthquake happened, I was amazed and told the people I had told about the dream, remember that dream I had last week? of three people two remembered and agreed that it was some kind of premonition. The third denied I had said anything, even though I remember telling them.

Now I haven't tried to explain what happened, I let the facts speak for themselves.

Has anyone got any suggestions of what happened here.

Ahh

Now I know what I would need to attempt the million dollar challenge.

Another dream,

The night before 9/11, I had two dreams where I was in my local airport Heathrow in London.
For some reason I was intensely interested in watching the planes landing and taking off. Both dreams where the same, I very rarely have consecutive dreams the same.

One of the planes a Jumbo Jet came towards me too low. I was somehow fixed on watching this plane, it was getting lower and lower, I was terrified.
The dream became very intense and resulted in a feeling of claustraphobia like in the Kobe dream. I felt I could not escape the crash, when suddenly I was safe it had passed. But continued to to get closer to the ground, I could hear a frightening grinding sound as the pilot was straining at the controls to pull up from the ground. I woke up shaken, with a strange feeling like just after having a close call in a motor accident.

It stayed with me most of the morning and I was continually drawn back to the image of that plane almost scraping the ground.

A few hours later I heard the dreadful events of 9/11 unfolding live on the radio.

I have not before or since had such an intense dream about airplanes.

The only logical conclusion is that you're deluded/lying :rolleyes:
 
Ahh

Now I know what I would need to attempt the million dollar challenge.

Another dream,

The night before 9/11, I had two dreams where I was in my local airport Heathrow in London.
Nothing happened in Heathrow on September 11 2001.

For some reason I was intensely interested in watching the planes landing and taking off. Both dreams where the same, I very rarely have consecutive dreams the same.
Or you don't remember them.

One of the planes a Jumbo Jet came towards me too low. I was somehow fixed on watching this plane, it was getting lower and lower, I was terrified.
None of the planes in the 9/11 attacks were 747s. Two were 757s, two were 767s. They look very different from the distinctive 747 Jumbo Jet.

The dream became very intense and resulted in a feeling of claustraphobia like in the Kobe dream. I felt I could not escape the crash, when suddenly I was safe it had passed. But continued to to get closer to the ground, I could hear a frightening grinding sound as the pilot was straining at the controls to pull up from the ground. I woke up shaken, with a strange feeling like just after having a close call in a motor accident.
It's unlikely that any of the pilots were trying to pull up; three of the crashes were entirely deliberate.

A few hours later I heard the dreadful events of 9/11 unfolding live on the radio.

I have not before or since had such an intense dream about airplanes.
So, we have another dream that doesn't match the events in any way.

What's your point here?
 
Pixy, you ever gonna get around to sharing what the contents of your auditory hallucinations were? At this point you haven't even declined so I'm inclined to assume that you're being deliberately evasive. You're not afraid are you? :)
 
I'm saying that the most compelling evidence a person can have of such experiences is to undergo them themselves.
That's just an excuse for not having any evidence. And it's not a very clever or interesting excuse.

Independent corroboration of information with other parties is part of what makes such phenomena so extraordinary to begin with. The only persons for whom the veracity of the events is seriously doubtful would be uninvolved third parties.
Correct. That would be because these things do not happen.

That is, you had an experience, but it's perfectly normal and easily explained. The only unusual aspects are those you assign to it yourself, and those are just your interpretation.

If there were anything actually unusual going on, there would be evidence that could convince a third party. If not in your case, then somewhere in the millions of reported cases. If not a single incontrovertible example, then at least something distinct and statistically significant when taken as a whole.

Instead, there is nothing. Nothing, AkuManiMani. Nothing at all.
 
Pixy, you ever gonna get around to sharing what the contents of your auditory hallucinations were? At this point you haven't even declined so I'm inclined to assume that you're being deliberately evasive. You're not afraid are you? :)
Are you ever going to get around to understanding that your memory is unreliable and malleable, and that being convinced that your memory is correct actually contraindicates that being true?

Because that is the only thing you have to talk about.
 
Until you personally investigate for yourself, scientific reports are just formalized anecdotes. Even if you are told that the findings are replicated the claim itself is "anecdotal" until you actually make the same observations firsthand.
In case you missed it, AkuManiMani, we walked on the Moon.

That thing, in the sky? Been there.

What have your magic elves done for you lately?
 
PM: "It's not true!"

AMM: "How do you know this?"

PM: "Because it isn't. Theres no evidence."

AMM: "But there are countless reports of such events even from scientists who've endeavored to experimentally test them."

PM: "They're all lying fools! I know this because I can consult with 'The Entirety of Science'. It is infallible and always corroborates my bald assertions"

AMM: "Um, thats quite a feat, to know what un-met strangers have experienced. Can you give us information as to your own experiences?"

PM: "Of course. My knowledge is absolute. Ask away."

AMM: "What are you feeling right now?"

PM: ".............."

AMM: "Erm, okaaay...You mentioned experiencing some peculiar auditory hallucinations during periods of great 'stress'. Care to share with us the contents of those hallucinations?"

PM: ".............."

AMM: "Uhm...PM, are you going to answer the questions?"

PM: "YOUR MEMORY IS FALLIBLE! YOU'RE MAKING THINGS UP!"

AMM: ".............."
 
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PM: "It's not true!"
A more accurate quote would be "Evidence?"

AMM: "How do you know this?"
All mystical nonsense suffers from the same two problems as I noted originally with regard to homeopathy:

(a) It's impossible.
(b) It doesn't happen.

PM: "Because it isn't. Theres no evidence."
And there isn't.

AMM: "But there are countless reports of such events even from scientists who've endeavored to experimentally test them"
Reports? Who cares about reports?

Where's the evidence, AkuManiMani? You're giving us vague hand-wavey incomplete half-remembered stories. The researchers you dote on give us only an inverse correlation between experimental rigour and statistical significance.

Still waiting for any evidence at all.
 
Reports? Who cares about reports?

You reported having hallucinations. What were their contents? Is your recollection of them completely confabulated? What evidence do you have that you experienced any hallucinations at all? Perhaps you're lying or simply mistaken?
 
kudos

PM: "It's not true!"

AMM: "How do you know this?"

PM: "Because it isn't. Theres no evidence."

AMM: "But there are countless reports of such events even from scientists who've endeavored to experimentally test them."

PM: "They're all lying fools! I know this because I can consult with 'The Entirety of Science'. It is infallible and always corroborates my bald assertions"

AMM: "Um, thats quite a feat, to know what un-met strangers have experienced. Can you give us information as to your own experiences?"

PM: "Of course. My knowledge is absolute. Ask away."

AMM: "What are you feeling right now?"

PM: ".............."

AMM: "Erm, okaaay...You mentioned experiencing some peculiar auditory hallucinations during periods of great 'stress'. Care to share with us the contents of those hallucinations?"

PM: ".............."

AMM: "Uhm...PM, are you going to answer the questions?"

PM: "YOUR MEMORY IS FALLIBLE! YOU'RE MAKING THINGS UP!"

AMM: ".............."

Most strawman arguments are implicit. Congrats for making yours explicitly.
 
[ETA: By the way, whats with you highlighting everything in black color font? Its pretty rendundant and makes replying to such a long post more tedious than necessary... -_- ]
I typed the reply in Word then transferred, most likely an artifact of that process.

Epistemologically speaking, what makes the assessment of a third party more valid than the experience of firsthand observers?

What I stated was that the combination and examination of multiple first hand accounts can lead to a better udnerstanding of the event than that given by any individual first hand account. You want to know why I get upset? Because of your statements like this, that simply apply an apparently random meaning to what I actually say.

So, to put it simply, its more an issue of credulity than veracity.

No, it's a matter of resources. If there is no need to investigate something, then don't. However, when we are looking into whether or not something is true...when it actually matters, then it warrants a more careful look.

Not to mention that no event occurs in a vacuum. We know people make coffee, we know people drink coffee, so there is no need to prove that coffeee exists, that it was available in the area, that it can be ingested by people, etc, etc, etc. Compare that to a case where we're positing a whole new category of energy, entirely new entities that do not mesh with what is currently known. THe coffee exampel does not have to overcome any previous evidence. A claim for psi powers, spirits, or similar has to overcome a host of past experiements that show failed results, as well as have a valid way to overcome the problems that would develop in fitting it with current knowledge.

I never claimed the accounts of my experiences as proof of their reality. Whether a claim is accepted as fact is purely the personal prerogative of the third party hearing the claim, regardless of the value that party attributes to certain kinds of evidence. Without firsthand experience a claim [accepted or rejected, accurate or inaccurate] is not knowledge but a bare proposition that one may attribute a certain degree of trust or distrust.

So you argue for solipsism.

-Ofcourse-
there will be variations between different observers' accounts of different events. Do you mean to suggest that such variation somehow nullifies the veracity of those experiences?

I mean to argue that differences between the accounts of the same experience can help one determien which parts are true, and which are not. It can help determine which aspects of the accounts are more likely to be true (i.e.-more consistent), and which are more the result of failed perception, faulty memory, or simple lying. If ten people witness a robbery, and 9 say they say a white man and one says they saw a black man, in the absence of other information what is the likely color of the robber? This is not a complicated concept.

The 'strength' of any evidence is relative to the credulity a given party is willing to extend. Even if one is presented with 'proof' of an event it is still their choice of whether to accept it or not. In either case, the veracity of an account is not dependent upon the degree of evidence available or the credulity of those hearing it.

I agree, something is either true or not, regardless of Belief. But the argument here is how one can best arrive at truth, by what method(s). The metaphysical argument you keep trying to turn this into is unanswerable and essentially meaningless.

You gave examples. I asked for more relevant examples. You accused me of dishonesty in response to this request. Your underhanded conditional apology not withstanding, you were %100 at fault. Period.

Well, since my own experience is the only real knowledge, you are wrong.

We've no clear model for how "coherent spiritual energy" should operate so its more than a little premature to speak of it's (im)plausibility.

No, it isn't. There are certain properties it must have to act in ways as reported. Many of these properties are incompatible with current understanding. This makes them, at the least, very implausible.

I wouldn't jump to conclusions on that just yet.

I was waiting for you to bring up quantum. Are you familiar with actual research in quantum mechanics? Do you have any understanding of what it means when it talks about entangled states? Do you undertsand why it uses the modifier "pseudo-" in front of telepathy? That you believe this supports the existence of telepathy as reported simply confirms your limited understanding.

Hey, if you're right about my 'incomprehension' of the scientific process I've fooled the system well enough to progress in my major. Thats gotta count for somethin', right? ;)

Not really.

I'm not recommending that standards should be lowered. What I am suggesting is that the methods may very well have to be modified to investigate certain phenomena. Even more "mundane" studies of consciousness require extensive "internal" introspective study as well as "external" observation. Whenever one is dealing with phenomena related to consciousness subjective factors must be taken into serious consideration.

But science already has methods to do this. Social science do look at personal perspectives and introspective study, but with the understanding that these can often be flawed. That's the part you've been arguing against. Your claim seems to be that your own personal experience trumps everything else (the generic you here, as in any individual). Yet, assuming this simply leads to solipsism. It's a form of special pleading, especially when there is ample evidence that the personal perceptions of people are often incorrect. The only way to form this into something coherent is to assume that only your own perspective counts.

If you haven't noticed I've already given pages of details regarding my personal experiences. The more I've given, the more I've been accused of "self-aggrandizement" and claims that I must be mistaken or making things up. I'm then given lectures about standards of evidence and insistence that all the details I've given are insufficient evidence anyway, precisely because they're anecdotal. Again, what it comes down to really isn't an issue of the quantity or quality of the information I've provided, but of the willful incredulity of the parties involved. The details I've provided are more than sufficient to make an honest assessment. How much credence you choose to lend my accounts is not my problem or my responsibility. I don't intend to waste my own time playing the "prove it" game.

Then why bring it up to begin with if you don't plan to prove it? And I'd argue about details...you've been vague. You typed a lot of words, but said little. Technically, you gave enough details for an honest assessment, that assessment being that you have not sufficiently ruled out mundane reasons for your experience.

If you're that curious start doing your own investigations. Arguing with me about it over a web forum isn't going to accomplish a damn thing in the way of advancing your own knowledge or understanding of the topic. In any case, you can read up on actual studies done on the subject [including those with positive and negative reports] till you're blue in the face, but until you have your own fisthand experience of such phenomena you'll not have any real proof. Even then it is still your choice whether to accept or reject it.

Did you understand what I actually said there? Because, from your response, I don't think you did.

The whole point is that you haven't given enough information for anyone to even attempt to recreate your experience. And replication matters.

And yes, there are studies and such on this, and other accounts. But you know what? They aren't consistent. Studies with good controls are invariably negative. Accounts with successes range as far as the imagination in methods to achieve them, including some of the same methods that failed when tested more rigorously.

Actually, the Wright brothers reference wasn't my example, but Katopale's. The example that I actually brought up was that of the controversy surrounding Ludwig Boltzmann's atomic theory and the professional persecution he [and like minded colleagues] faced on account of it. Either way, all you have to do is read up on the history of science yourself. Its not always pretty and the individuals involved do not always behave rationally -- even in the face of contravening evidence. The main point one can draw from this is that science is only as good as the people conducting it.

Actually, I never made the claim that science could not be dogmatic, or that individuals always behave rationally. That's your straw man. I asked for examples of where a well-tested theory was overturned. Where is the contravening evidence? In cases where it existed, it has been accepted...not immediately, not without growing pains, and not without haeartache on both sides. But even then, I'm still waiting for an example where a fundamental, well-tested theory was shown to be wrong.

I'm motivated enough to do my own reading on the subject and to form my own conclusions. From what I've read of history individual scientists [and communities of scientists] have behaved dogmatically and irrationally, scientific methodology not withstanding. Hindsight just makes the follies of the past more apparent, and we would be wise to learn from them.

I agree. And this is where our disagreement lies. These scientists relied on their own, personal experience instead of looking at and accepting the evidence beign presented. And on the flip side of this coin are the numerous examples of scientists who based conclusions on personal experience, and very little evidence. Pauling and vitamin C, for example, or Newton and Alchemy. Hoyle and the Steady State theory.

Theories and principles are not knowledge. That you don’t understand this is not my failure ;)

Just out of curiosity, what are they if not knowledge? Are do you simply equate knowledge with your own personal experience? Let me ask you point blank...are you a solipsist?

The only intellectual dishonesty you see is your own projection, dude. If anything, you're the one associating yourself with a cohort of group-thinking reactionaries looking to defend an established world-view. I've no "side" to score points for; I've my own views, unique to my own perspective, which are liable to be at odds with the opinions of just about everyone else -- "woo-woo" and "skeptic" alike. If you wanna make this some kind of ego shoving match I'll be more than willing to just aggravate the hell out of you. If you want a rational exchange with me quit getting your knickers inna bunch everytime I ask a question or make a point you don't feel comfortable with. Otherwise, we can just drop the issue and you can kill time in a manner you feel is less challenging. Its really your call.

If I want a rational exchange, I'll most liekly have to go elsewhere. My "knickers get in a twist" because I have to keep explaining what should be simple, obvious concepts (such as more matching eyewitness accounts means the event in question is more likely to have occurred as reported). It's not that you make a point that I don't feel comfortable with, it's that you continually and, unless you are truly ignorant, intenitonally misunderstand straightforward statements. It's that you claim knowledge of subjects (quantum telepathy, for example) that you are proveably ignorant of. It has nothing to do with an "ego shoving match"...I'm not the one claiming my own personal experience as the sole arbiter of reality. I'm not the one making "pronouncements from the mountain" on what is really real, or on what is true "knowledge". But I agree, if you want to drop the insults, condescention, and "I have a secret window to reality" attitude, and actually respond to my arguments instead of what you think I'm arguing (or what you might prefer someone were arguing), I'm more than happy to. Besides, it takes two to argue, you're in this just as much as I am. So it's really your call, too, "dude".
 
You reported having hallucinations. What were their contents? Is your recollection of them completely confabulated? What evidence do you have that you experienced any hallucinations at all? Perhaps you're lying or simply mistaken?
You seem confused.

Try again. Do you understand that your memory is unreliable and malleable? A simple yes or no will do. A request for information is fine. Anything apropos.
 
You seem confused.

Try again. Do you understand that your memory is unreliable and malleable? A simple yes or no will do. A request for information is fine. Anything apropos.

Slippery as a greased willy aren’t you Pixy.

At least be specific. You’re being an awfully sloppy skeptic.

Are you suggesting that everyone’s memory is unreliable and malleable?
…all memories?
…all the time?

Or are there gray areas, and what are they…specifically? Upon what definitive evidence do you base any of these conclusions?
 
Slippery as a greased willy aren’t you Pixy.

At least be specific. You’re being an awfully sloppy skeptic.

Are you suggesting that everyone’s memory is unreliable and malleable?
…all memories?
…all the time?

Or are there gray areas, and what are they…specifically? Upon what definitive evidence do you base any of these conclusions?

This is funny. So much more so in that humor wasn't intended.
 
Until you personally investigate for yourself, scientific reports are just formalized anecdotes. Even if you are told that the findings are replicated the claim itself is "anecdotal" until you actually make the same observations firsthand.



I'm saying that even reports of scientific testing are "anecdotal" unless you participate in one yourself. You stated some pages back that you accept the findings of the scientific community on faith [albeit, not a large leap of faith] that they aren't all lying/mistaken. Why then, when there is a sizable population of people -- including scientists -- who are reporting these particular phenomena do you automatically assume that the reports are untrue or otherwise unreliable? I can't help but to conclude that your criteria for "evidence" is steeply lopsided and biased towards maintaining a strongly held world view.



Have you made the effort to personally verify them for yourself or are you simply taking their word? Do you consider it possible that the critics themselves are mistaken/dishonest? Why/why not?

Actually that's what you do in physics classes. They're called experiments.

Here's some you can do yourself.

http://physics.about.com/od/physicsexperiments/Physics_Experiments.htm
 

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