Paul
Wow. You just defined psi phenomena to necessarily entail nonphysical processes.
I'm not sure I did, actually. I said "control and information flow" - I didn't say "process". But maybe if you want to expand the definition of "process" to mean these things then you could call it a non-physical process. But is quantum entanglement a "process"? I'm not sure that this is the correct word for it. One of the pair instantly affects the other, but we see no process. All we see is the effect.
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The whole thing that makes PSI unusual is that it requires some sort of non-physical causality or non-physical information transfer.
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Holy begging the question cow.
More rhetoric. I am not begging any questions, Paul. The thing which makes PSI seem wierd is that things are happening which make things appear to be connected together in ways that don't appear to be physical. How can physicalism allow for someone's beliefs altering some of the details of the behaviour of physical reality from their perspective? I don't see how it can.
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Both of these are possible if physicalism is false and some other model is true, because there is another "route" open for the information and control mechanism i.e. in idealism it is direct via the metamind.
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And you know that the metamind is not relativistically limited because ... ?
Because there's no reason why it should be?
Because you get to imagine idealism any old way you want to.
No. I have refered to you many times to Peter Lloyd, but you clearly don't know who he is or what he wrote. Basically, I don't think you know what has been written on this subject. In his case it is two books, one making a very detailed version of the sort of arguments you hear from Ian, explaining precisely why Lloyd thinks physicalism is false and why Berkeleyanism solves the problems. Then he describes some of the required features of a Berkeleyan model which solves the problems. The second book examines the various serious collections of reports of PSI phenomena, including the work of Jacques Vallee, and explains how these reports map on to the Berkeleyan model.
The criticisms you are throwing at me now are completely unfounded and based on total ignorance on your part. You have no idea how or why Lloyd came to his particular version of idealism. I can guarantee you it wasn't by "imagining it any old way he wanted to". That is nothing but
pure rhetoric based on your own preconceptions.
On top of all that,
I am not even a frickin' idealist. I am a neutral monist. And my beliefs about the existence and nature of PSI phenomena are based upon a great deal more than just "making up whatever I wanted to". They are based partly on personal experiences of my own, and regardless of whether you think I went mad or think I was deluded at the time, I guess that even you accept that I wasn't deliberately inventing stuff. Put it this way - for someone who was inventing stuff I was putting on a damned good act of not being in control of what was happening to me. And they are partly based upon reading vast amounts of the material which is available and relevant, both from the histories of philosophy and
western mysticism, and from what has been written by people who collect anecdotal evidence about this (like Vallee). There's all sorts of sources of information if you aren't scared of having to wade through large piles of rubbish in order to find what you are looking for. Of particular relevance to me are the writings of the psychologist-philosopher and "guerilla ontologist" Robert Anton Wilson.
Why am I being made to feel like I have to defend these views as if I were a deviant? Why so much rhetoric? Why am I
in the dock?
The truth is that I am not in the business of going around expecting other people to believe what
I believe. That's what lifegazer does. But to a lesser extent, so do you - and people like Kevin. It's not enough that you are materialists/naturalists and I have a much more flexible view. There is apparently a need for people like you to make sure that people like me are regularly ridiculed for believing what we believe. It cannot be allowed to stand that a seemingly intelligent and reasonable and educated person could believe in PSI. It is a neccesary part of your own belief system that all other reasonable people should reject PSI like you do.
Why?
All of the above is of course rhetorical itself, since I used to be the same as you. I thought that the world would be a better place if the human race just evolved past its evolutionarily redundant attachment to belief in religion and paranormal weird stuff, and I knew,
KNEW, that all religions were bunk and paranormal weird stuff
simply didn't happen.
Geoff