fishbob said:To: Open Mind - Get real.
To: CFLarson - How??
The question of whether or not god exists is not a matter of opinion, and the fact that you have no way of knowing whether he does or not does not make it a matter of opinion. Treating it as though it were, by saying that it is your "choice" whether to believe it or not, makes absolutely no sense. I don't know what George Washington had for lunch on February 7, 1765, and there is no experiment I could conceivably do to find out, but that does not mean that it would be rational for me to simply choose to believe that he had a ham sandwich.I can't speak for Mr Larsen but as far as I am concerned it's quite easy.
The existence of God is unproven and in my view unprovable, so I am free to believe in Him or not, as I choose. In contrast the existence of a paranormal function such as telepathy is provable by properly designed tests. So as a skeptic I would need to be shown such proof before I accepted the reality of telepathy.
So it is with the existence of God. If someone were to devise a way in which His existence could be experimentally verified beyond doubt then I would not have a choice of whether to believe or not; I would have to abide by the result of such tests.
fishbob said:To: CFLarson - How??
CFLarsen said:Open Mind,
Define "something".
You are aware that one can be a skeptic and still believe in God, aren't you?
What is real? Must the real only be a clear strong effect, a weak very consistent effect or produce only predictable outcomes?fishbob said:To: Open Mind - Get real.
Aussie Thinker said:Open Mind,
Prayer was a created as a resort to fill in the area where Man REALLY wanted something to happen but his ability to control it was limited.
The less control man had the more likely he was to “prayâ€.
As man has grown up (well some of us) and realised that there probably is no such thing as God or the Easter Bunny, prayer has become pretty pointless.
The poll question is for skeptics, perhaps I should have said ‘paranormal’ skeptics…. It wasn’t a poll for believers. You are correct there will be some, I would guess extremely few, who believe in some paranormal phenomena but not necessarily prayer, I almost fall into that category myself. However as I said above I would pray for someone whether I think it works or not being open minded to the possibility it might do something beneficial.Hawk one said:The first option is clearly misleading, considering it's the only "no" option. Prayer is but one of the many paranormal claims. Even if one doesn't believe in prayer, it does not automatically follow that if one doesn't pray, one does not believe any paranormal phenomena exists.
Name these other optionsI suspect that OM knew about this when he made the poll, but chose to make a misrepresenting poll that will by default be inaccurate as it lacks several necessary options
I don’t think it is likely to be crucial but I now wish I had added that too. Point accepted, I could have missed something .... personally I like ‘other’ categories to be further defined ...... also people usually pray or not and have intentions of continuing to do so or not (I don’t mean self program or meditate) so there isn’t much ‘other’ options in there IMHOAt the very least, an "other" option would be absolutely crucial.
Open Mind said:Yeah but they wouldn't necessarily agree on what God is. To some it will be an external intelligence beyond earthly human ape brain understanding, to some it might be a collective unconscious we are all part of, to some it is the traditional manlike being, then there are Catholics praying not just to God but Mary or angels, etc. That is what a I mean by 'something' greater outside oneself
Open Mind said:I am not religious, I seldom pray but I would pray for someone if seriously ill that medical treatment cannot help, I would assume it is worth a try whether it works or not. I’m not sure science has evolved enough to measure the benefit or lack of benefit of prayer. For example can science measure any emotional benefit accurately yet? It seems to rely on the person in misery saying ‘I feel better’, we might only be measuring a person in suffering, ability to admit improvement in mind or body.
Open Mind said:For example if doctors conducted a trial to pray for someone without their knowledge, even if the person had been feeling slightly better, the patient thinking the doctor had done nothing might claim 'I feel just the same' .. a nocebo like effect. So the trial would need to give a placebo and see if the prayer + placebo beats the placebo only group ..... then you are adding placebo (to deceive) + prayer (that must be sincere?) is that a fair trial of prayer? Or how do we know those praying aren't just useless at praying?
Open Mind said:I have told the story on this forum before where my grandmother was healed from blindness by a priest, similar claims are in many religions, not just Christianity. Science measures what normally occurs and in doing so might miss what very seldom occurs i.e. paranormal. The rarely normal, unless easily detected and regularly occurring could always be given an loosely undefined 'something else' such as psychological benefit or misdiagnosis.
Open Mind said:What is real? Must the real only be a clear strong effect, a weak very consistent effect or produce only predictable outcomes?
Open Mind said:Actually I’m surprised so many said they will never pray again in this topic, life tends to get more unpleasant with age, when all in life goes logically wrong and is beyond current human ape science to improve, does one just commit suicide and be done with it? Or is the belief life has a greater purpose of greater comfort? I don’t see the great benefit of atheism upon the miserable
Open Mind said:The poll question is for skeptics, perhaps I should have said ‘paranormal’ skeptics…. It wasn’t a poll for believers.
Open Mind said:I wanted to find out if skeptics had ruled out ever praying again and it seems they have largely done so ....
Yes, so you are now agreeing with me, it was you who said define 'something', I deliberately left the definition of what they are praying to openCFLarsen said:You cannot decide for other people what they believe in, and how. There doesn't need to be agreement at all.
I doubt it could be verified to you, even if it was verified by other witnesses you would probably still dismiss it. It has to be regular, predictable laboratory effect ...... I'm not sure that is a reliable guide to what can possibly occur and what cannot.Your story is worthless, because it cannot be verified. You need to understand this.
When the effects are weak these are more open to various alternate explanations. When it involves the paranormal skeptics are more apt to assume fraud as being much more likely than an anomalous effect.If you had studied an inkling of science, you would know the answer to that one. An effect can be very weak - extremely weak, in fact, but what separates real effects from paranormal ones is that real effects can be detected.
I'm not sure, when the emotions of other humans beings are involved. I personally would not remove someone's hope if in circumstances considered hopeless by medical science. I wouldn't be certain enough to think some good might come from their hope.What is better: Real knowledge or fake hope?
Would you say then that to "hope for" something is equivalent to praying?Open Mind said:By 'pray' I do not mean meditation, I mean a mental request to something outside ourselves
Go vote........ it only takes a few seconds ....
Edited to define 'pray'
Open Mind said:Yes, so you are now agreeing with me, it was you who said define 'something', I deliberately left the definition of what they are praying to open
I doubt it could be verified to you, even if it was verified by other witnesses you would probably still dismiss it. It has to be regular, predictable laboratory effect ...... I'm not sure that is a reliable guide to what can possibly occur and what cannot.
When the effects are weak these are more open to various alternate explanations. When it involves the paranormal skeptics are more apt to assume fraud as being much more likely than an anomalous effect.