Chaos Magic

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.


Did you notice that your dream didn't have a plane being flown in to the World Trade Center? Actually, it didn't even have a plane crashing in to a building.

What purpose do you think this very loosely related dream would have other than being an odd coincidence?
 
I have about as much reason to doubt my recollection of the event in question as I would to doubt my memory of what I wore just yesterday -- perhaps even less so, especially considering the extraordinary and emotionally impactful nature of the latter.
You sound as though you expect an inaccurate memory to be different somehow from an accurate memory.
 
You sound as though you expect an inaccurate memory to be different somehow from an accurate memory.


I follow most of these similar-threads and have read stuff about memory reliability and so on, but this is the first time that that thought occurred to me.

How would one know that a memory is not accurate? Probably by comparing it to similar memories or stories or, you know, seeking evidence that the memory is accurate.
 
Can anybody cite a study that gives any evidence at all that NDE's are anything more than dreams or hallucinations that occur either just before the brain death or just after?

Can anybody cite a study that gives any evidence that these experiences include any information that the patient could not have had before the onset of unconsciousness?
 
In my dream ...
This was such a striking dream that I told numerous people about it.

...

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

Another dream,

...

It stayed with me most of the morning and I was continually drawn back ...

I have not before or since had such ...

And I often can not tell whether I've had a dream last night, or several months ago. I can't tell if I remember correctly, if I am conflating several dreams, or if whatever.

And that is just at the moment when I "remember" the dream ... God only knows how accurate a memory of a moment when I "remembered" a dream is. ;)
 
I follow most of these similar-threads and have read stuff about memory reliability and so on, but this is the first time that that thought occurred to me.

How would one know that a memory is not accurate? Probably by comparing it to similar memories or stories or, you know, seeking evidence that the memory is accurate.

Exactly.

You can't know if your memory is accurate simply by examining the memory. You have to compare it to other things. You have to support it with other evidence.
 
Pixy
Quote;

"So, we have another dream that doesn't match the events in any way.

What's your point here?"


Just a random coincidence, (not even that I guess).

There can be no possible point then.
 
Pixy
Quote;

"So, we have another dream that doesn't match the events in any way.

What's your point here?"


Just a random coincidence, (not even that I guess).

There can be no possible point then.


It can be considered a coincidence, but statistically it really doesn't strike me as anything that impressive. It certainly is an interesting story, but I wouldn't take it to mean anything more.

You might find PixyMisa's posts a little rude, but I hope you understand what him and I are getting at with our responses.
 
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It can be considered a coincidence, but statistically it really doesn't strike me as anything that impressive. It certainly is an interesting story, but I wouldn't take it to mean anything more.

You might find PixyMisa's posts a little rude, but I hope you understand what him and I are getting at with our responses.

Thanks, I can understand how Pixy has hardened his position as a result of all the 'heated discussion' which has gone on in this thread.

My point is it may be hindering any exploration of what the OP is about.

The OP is asking 'Skeptics' to withhold their disbelief in order to explore some ideas related to altered states of consciousness etc.
The presumption being that such experiences should be allowed a little breathing space rather than being shot down like a turkey shoot.

I would like to discuss such experiences.
 
If someone were to actually establish one of these nonsensical claims as true, they'd have done humanity such a service that they'd be awarded one of each Nobel Prize, the Fields Medal, and the Victoria Cross just on general principle. They'd be showered with grant money from every research organisation on the planet. They'd be treated like they were Einstein, The Beatles, Winston Churchill and a young Diana Rigg rolled into one.

And what do we have?

Nothing.

Have you ever read 'Madam Blavatsky's baboon'? an excellent real life account of a Turkey shoot.
 
Thanks, I can understand how Pixy has hardened his position as a result of all the 'heated discussion' which has gone on in this thread.

My point is it may be hindering any exploration of what the OP is about.

The OP is asking 'Skeptics' to withhold their disbelief in order to explore some ideas related to altered states of consciousness etc.
The presumption being that such experiences should be allowed a little breathing space rather than being shot down like a turkey shoot.

I would like to discuss such experiences.

The experiences were discussed, evidence was asked for, sulking ensued.

There hundreds, perhaps thousands of fora across the internet where you will be able to trot out anecdotes and not be challenged over the conclusions that you draw from them. This isn't one of them.
 
The experiences were discussed, evidence was asked for, sulking ensued.

There hundreds, perhaps thousands of fora across the internet where you will be able to trot out anecdotes and not be challenged over the conclusions that you draw from them. This isn't one of them.

One side effect of the mystical/god/spiritual experience is that it makes one incapable of writing a simple declarative sentence.:)
 
The experiences were discussed, evidence was asked for, sulking ensued.

There hundreds, perhaps thousands of fora across the internet where you will be able to trot out anecdotes and not be challenged over the conclusions that you draw from them. This isn't one of them.

Fair point about this forum. However my point was, is this thread not asking us to suspend disbelief for a moment?
I don't draw any conclusions from my experiences. However I can tell sometimes when there is something happening which I cannot fully explain through my understanding of science and common sense.

My opinion is that the paranormal is that which has not yet been explored and demonstrated scientifically.Magic and even God likewise.

Have we reached the plateau of scientific discovery, where all things can now be explained and 'hocus pocus' can be exposed for the delusion it is?

The tooth fairy and big foot can now be consigned to the Hageographies?

Even the big bang, just a blip?
 
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Fair point about this forum. However my point was, is this thread not asking us to suspend disbelief for a moment?

Actually, no. The OP suggested that unless we had an experience ourselves, we should basically STFU because we had no basis to form an opinion or make a decision.

I don't draw any conclusions from my experiences. However I can tell sometimes when there is something happening which I cannot fully explain through my understanding of science and common sense.

I can believe this. But the leap from "I can't explain it" to "It's unexplainable" is a logical fallacy known as an Argument from Ignorance. It's even worse form is the leap from "I can't expalin it" to "God/Aliens/Spirits did it".

My opinion is that the paranormal is that which has not yet been explored and demonstrated scientifically.Magic and even God likewise.

That excludes quite a bit, though. Most of us aren't talking about things that haven't been explored, but things that have been explored since the beginnings of scientific investigation and are still found lacking. There is a "bias" against accepting paranormal, and that's because of the long history of negative resutls in paranormal research (not to mention numerous cases of known fraud and hoaxing).

Have we reached the plateau of scientific discovery, where all things can now be explained and 'hocus pocus' can be exposed for the delusion it is?

No, but we have reached a point where there are some things we know cannot be true, if the universe operates according to understandable rules. Because if they were, the other things we know to be true (to a high degree of confidence) would be wrong.

The tooth fairy and big foot can now be consigned to the Hageographies?

What? If you mean can be be fairly certain these are myths, then yes. With a very high degree of confidence.

Even the big bang, just a blip?

No idea what you mean by this. If you're asking what caused it, the only rational answer that anyone can make at this time is "we don't know". The difference (and not just with our origins, but in general) is that science can accept that answer, and keep looking into to see if we can learn more. Religion (and the paranormal explnations in general) simply declare "<Insert favorite diety/creature/ghost here> did it!" and stifles further investigation into the actuality.
 
Thanks, I can understand how Pixy has hardened his position as a result of all the 'heated discussion' which has gone on in this thread.
Check my join date and post count. I haven't hardened my position at all. If've been waiting for evidence here for eight years, and I've requested it several thousand times.

So far.... Nothing.

My point is it may be hindering any exploration of what the OP is about.
My point is that no.

We are exploring what the OP is about, by asking for (a) a clear and coherent statement of fact, and (b) evidence. Neither one has been forthcoming.

The OP is asking 'Skeptics' to withhold their disbelief in order to explore some ideas related to altered states of consciousness etc.
In other words, he can't convince anyone who actually thinks about what he's proposing, so he wants people to stop thinking.

No. Thanks, but no.

The presumption being that such experiences should be allowed a little breathing space rather than being shot down like a turkey shoot.
Why? They're turkeys; let's shoot them.

I would like to discuss such experiences.
Sure.

Take your two dreams for example. It's entirely possible that you had dreams like that on those occasions. One of the things that's striking and makes your account plausible is that the dreams don't match the later events very well at all.

The Heathrow dream would be a better fit for the Flight 125 incident, where a 747 (hit!) had to make an emergency landing (hit!) at Heathrow (major hit!) after cabin pressure failed.

Except that happened in 1987.
 
Fair point about this forum. However my point was, is this thread not asking us to suspend disbelief for a moment?
It's actually asking us to suspend critical thinking.

What we've replied is that once evidence has been presented and evaluated, if it is convincing, we will (tentatively) believe the claim.

I don't draw any conclusions from my experiences. However I can tell sometimes when there is something happening which I cannot fully explain through my understanding of science and common sense.
Well, sure. Our answer to that is to study the phenomenon in more detail, rather than to assert that because we don't understand it immediately, it requires some huge scientific paradigm change.

My opinion is that the paranormal is that which has not yet been explored and demonstrated scientifically.Magic and even God likewise.
It's been explored; it just hasn't been demonstrated. We conclude, therefore, that - pending contradictory evidence - it doesn't exist.

That's why we always ask for evidence.

The research has been done; the evidence is in; there's nothing there.

But, if new evidence came in that contradicted all the old evidence, if this new evidence could be confirmed and replicated, then the old evidence would be wrong (or at least incomplete).

That's why we always ask for evidence.

But we never get any.

Have we reached the plateau of scientific discovery, where all things can now be explained and 'hocus pocus' can be exposed for the delusion it is?
Well, certainly hocus pocus can be exposed for the delusion it is. That was true a century ago as well.

Even the big bang, just a blip?
All the galaxies in the Universe are flying apart from one another. Trace that motion backwards in time, and 13.6 billion years ago they were all scrunched up in the same place. The Big Bang happened. What caused it, or even if it had a cause, is another question.
 
You know, most of this comes down to you insisiting that there are positive studies that we are ignoring.

I'm not aware of any positive studies that were done with good controls, that adequately removed the possibility of more mundane options. And none that were replicated.

I don't discount these because they "clash with my worldview", per se. I discount these because of past history: there are no definitive studies done. The OBE and NDE accounts are a perfect example, there is very weak evidence for these events, usually after-the-fact, without controls. No way to verify that the data supposedly gained in the OBE was actually gained during the time that a person was clinically dead, none (that I am aware of) where brain activity was known to be stopped, in short none that rule out other explanations.

That history is what must be overcome. Thathistory forms my worldview. I don't discount the possibility, but I do expect a high level of evidence...because it has to be higher than the evidence against.

I'm going to address a few specific points, because again you are placing words in my mouth and missing the obvious. But I believe it would be best to limit the discussion to a single class/category of paranormals experiences, so that specific studies and evidence can be examined. If you're game, why not point us to a study you think offers good support fo OBE/NDE?

Fair enough. Lets start with the links I provided in my reply to Pure Argent.

So you directly experience my motivations and intentions? Fascinating.

No, I don't, therefore I don't beleive you hacve them. All knowledge is first-hand, and since I have no first-hand experience of your motivations and intentions, I don't believe you have any. I'm simply applying your own logic...because my own experience is the only knowledge.

Actually, the above statement demonstrates that you either A) do not understand my actual argument or B) you're deliberately straw-maning as, once again, you're confusing belief with experiential knowledge. You have direct access to your motivations and intentions. Your direct knowledge of your internal subjective states epistemologically trumps a third party's beliefs concerning them --unless they somehow have a direct mental link to your consciousness. Of course, you could be lying about your actual motivations but, without direct access, an external third party can only make inferences and decide whether to invest a certain degree of faith in them; the third' party's relation to said knowledge is one of inherent uncertainty.

In the same vein, I directly experience my intentions and motivations -- I know them with complete certainty. This direct knowledge allows me to know that your earlier accusation of dishonesty was completely false, as well as unfounded. Being as how I directly -know- what my intentions were, and you responded to a strait-forward request for more relevant examples with charges of dishonesty, I'm inclined to suspect that you're projecting.

[BTW, I tested out your claim that your earlier color/font mishap was an artifact of "transferring" text from Word. I conducted an experiment of my own which produced negative results. Should I conclude that you're full of it?]

Just to be clear, what do you mean when you speak of "coherent spiritual energy"?

The typical idea of a non-corporeal intelligence that survives a physical body, or exists independent of any detectable physical structure.

In principle, such an entity should not be undetectable by physical structures, as it must be able to operate in tandem with the physical structures we refer to as organic bodies. If they exist [independently or not] they have physical consequences and are thus congruent with known physics, even if they are not, as of yet, included in current physical models.

My understanding is limited but not yours is not?

First, this is another perfect example of you creating a straw man. Not what I said, stated, or implied.

I did, however, state, imply, and intend to convey the idea that my understanding is not as limited, because I understand what that article was stating as to actual possibilities, and it does not support, even remotely, the idea of telepathy being a possibility. That you would post it as a possibility simply tells me you did a quick search for something that, at a first glance, might give one pause, but either did not bother to actually read it or did not understand it.

Actually, I specifically searched for a short wiki article on the subject as I'd already read much about that specific topic, non-locality, and entanglement phenomena in general. The point was to demonstrate that, even within the confines of known physical theory, non-local distal influence akin to telepathy is considered possible. Its a bit silly and disparaging for you to automatically assume that disagreement with you on this topic implies incomprehension.

The special pleading comes in when fallibility of personal experience is invoked as the only possibility when it is at odds with theoretical expectation. Such criteria put theory ahead of empirical observation in the assessment of truth which is inherently inimical to the epistemology of the scientific method. If a subject reports seeing red when the theoretical expectation is that they should be seeing purple then it is the theory that requires the greater measure of critical scrutiny. The same applies if multiple subjects report the same class of experiences which happen to be at odds with certain theoretical expectations -- especially when those experiences have corroborating details and commonalities.

And here is where you simply run off the rails entirely.

Correction: Here is where you, once again, completely miss the point of my argument and, once again, chalk it up to a failing on my part...

The theory is supported by an enormous amount of obersvational evidence. If 9,475 people are shown a box and asked what color it is, and 9,450 claim "It's red", 25 claim "it's green". First, what color is the box? We know that red-green color blindness exists. We can objectively measure the precise wavelengths of light reflected form the box. We can establish, very soundly, the theory that the box is red.

Now, if another person comes along and says "Hey, that's a nice green box there", you are stating that it would be unscientific to then say "No, the box is red. Sorry, but you're wrong." Of course, in this situation no one else can look at the box, so a better analogy is someone statign they looked at the box before it was destroyed, and the box was green. The data does not support that. They may well have seen it as green...but there's no reason to believe it was green. And the observer themselves, if they are actually being skeptical, should consider the possibility that they are mistaken somehow.

Okay, consider this:

I personally know a synesthete who experiences sounds visually. In his awareness, each human voice is a dynamic and unique array of shapes and colors. One person's voice is experienced as warm, pulsating orange ovals, another as purple circles, and mine he experiences as "red spinnie squares". There are many other synesthetes who have different subjective experiences of the world which can vary widely, yet they receive veridical information from their senses none the less -- some of which, their "normal" peers may not have access to.

Do you consider the senses of synesthetes faulty? If so, would you submit that they are not qualified to make valid scientific observations? If a given synesthete [with his/her own unique subjective makeup] has a perception that differs from what a well established scientific theory predicts they should is their perception "false", or is it indicative of a limitation in the theory?

This ties into a much broader point: The current paucity of scientific understanding with regard to consciousness and the subjective in general.

Do you consider it impossible that even a small portion of documented positive cases/studies are true and accurate? If thats the case then your assessment is not honest.

IMpossible? NOt to a 100% level, no. However I consider it very highly unlikely, to the point that I treat it as an impossibility in my day-to-day decisions. In other words, I don't design computer security with a thought to preventing clairvoyant spying, or OBE snoops. I don't try to use ESP to see where I'm driving when in a car. I don't waste money for a psychic to tell me what to expect in the future. And even in general, I regard it as unproven and false, as I've yet to see evidence otherwise.

And how can you claim that is not honest? After all, aren't you the one saying that first-hand experience is our only knowledge?

And with that in mind, any conclusions you draw concerning things beyond your direct experiential knowledge [even if they're drawn from a source you trust] is based upon faith. This includes your beliefs concerning the possibility of OBEs or ESP.

I've yet to see any well-controlled studies to support most of these notions. I've seen a lot more studies that show no effect, and even more studies that show how much of the supposed paranormal can be expalined by perceptual and cognitive issues (which can be proven to exist). I'm open to evidence to the contrary, but that's exactly what it will take: evidence.

Hold the phone. On what basis are you designating which studies were "well controlled"? Is this based upon reports you've received concerning the studies in question or did you actually participate in them yourself? How do you know that your conclusion isn't an artifact of your admitted bias?

You're not the only participant in this discussion nor do all of my posts and arguments revolve around you and your responses. The above was a valid point addressed specifically to another poster and it just so happens to be one that should be taken into consideration by anyone discussing a topic like this. Quite frankly, I getting sick and tired of being wrongfully accused of the very same logical fallacies being committed by my accusers.

Okay, first off, I am not anyone else on this board. Their arguments are not mien unless I specifically claim them. I suppose I should change that from a straw man fallacy you commited to a hasty generalization. And the specific issue wasn't about dogma, it was about a point I'm going to make below.

You interjected in a point you knew I was making to another individual and requested that I elaborate on it. When I did so you claimed that the point it was addressing wasn't your argument and accused me of making a straw-man. I'm seeing a trend here...

The Newtonian model of physics was for centuries, and still is, a very well tested theory. However it was formulated upon many theoretical assumptions which turned out to be inaccurate or flatly false. It was eventually superseded by two other physical theories: General/Special Relativity, and Quantum Mechanics. Even so, it's still a useful tool and is applicable in limited range of problem scenarios. That is what all theories are; conceptual tools. Nothing more. Nothing less.

First, do you mean Newtonian mechanics or Newtonian Gravity? OR both? I'm going to assume Newton's 3 laws of motion and the law of gravity.
In either case, what Newton developed were Laws, not Theories. That's a point that actually works against your argument, and if you don't understand the difference between a Law and a Theory I can explain it to you.

Second, Newton's laws are highly accurate...they were not wrong so much as they were of limited scope or incomplete. Relativity simply expanded Newton's Gravity to make it applicable to a much larger domain. Likewise for newtonian mechanics. For the vast majority of things these are perfectly adequate. For almost everything that can be directly experienced they are accurate.

Okay, this is genuinely getting sad -- you're actually trying to make a weasel argument by technicality. Are you really trying to argue that Issac Newton [as in the father of classical physics] didn't formulate any physical theory -- none whatsoever?

"Well you see, Newton only formulated physical laws. I specifically asked you for a well established theory that had been over turned in science."

What was that you were saying earlier about dishonesty, Hellbound? :sulk:

As to Quantum Mechanics replacing something, can you be a bit more explicit there? Because I don't see that QM has anything to do with Newton's mechanics (unelss you're simply referring to the change from a deterministic view of the universe to a less-deterministic one).

I specifically stated that the two modern physical theories superseded Newton's, ya fork-tongued sophist :mad:

In any case, both of these still work against you.

Imagine that...

First, in none of these cases were the existing theories overturned, so much as expanded into new domains (GR extended Newton's gravity to work at high speeds and high masses, QM expanded into the micro-level..but that level came after Newton).

Couldja tap dance a little more...? :rolleyes:

And yes, theories are tools based upon the combined observations of large groups who study and observe phenomena in controlled ways. On the one hand, you want to elevate first-hand experience to the level of being unquestionable, yet on the other hand you discount theories which are based on the accumilation of these first-hand expereinces. I'm having trouble seeing how your viewpoint is logically consistent.

Ding-ding-ding! I think hes got it! Yes, theories are conceptual tools that are inferred from firsthand observations. Your inability to see how this logically ties into my point is... [how shall I put this?] ...not my failure.

As it so happens, the topic of contention in -this- discussion isn't so much a scientific conflict as it is a clash of metaphysical views. The fact of the matter is that there is nothing that we scientifically -know- which logically precludes the reality of the of kind experiences I, and many others, have reported. What does preclude them are strongly held metaphysical/ideological assumptions masquerading as scientific fact.

Actually, there are several things we know that contradict many things. Your experience in particular could not be explained by any of the current forces, and a new force would mean that several of the physical equations we currently use (very, very successfully) are incorrect. It would also mean that the abundant evidence of consicousness arising from the brain is wrong, fundamentally.

Oh, heavens forbid such a thing! Tell me, would you consider the wildly successful Standard Model of particle physics to be an infallible and complete model of reality? Would introducing entities not included in said model [like say -- I don't know -- maybe financial instruments, or pain] require "extraordinary" evidence? Even better -- Lets expand that little example to include all scientific models, theories, and principles. Would entities existing outside of said models render all of them null and void? Would science as a whole be invalidated? :rolleyes:

[BTW, what was that you were saying earlier about me making you look stupid? If you ask me you're doing that just fine on your own...]

And it really depends on the specific experiences...spirits in particualr cause issues with thermodynamics, for one. It does contradict the current understanding and evidence...it's not a nmetaphysical objection no matter how much you wish to believe so. And the level of evidence required to accept these would need to be at least equal to that required to accept, to use your examples above, General relativity. Present the theory, make a quantifiable prediciton that can be tested. Has not been done to date. And spirits, and mysticism in general, has had a lot longer to do so than GR took.

HB: "Formulate a theory I'm willing to accept or its not real."

AMM: "Roger, that."

As I've pointed out, there are numerous documented witness accounts and scientific studies which corroborate the kinds of experiences being discussed. The contention revolves your explicit bias towards discounting any and all accounts that to not mesh with your accepted world-view. I'm not claiming the special "privilege" of my own personal experience, but of firsthand experience in general. An individual's personal experience is not the only criteria of reality but it -is- the only definitive connection that any individual can have to it. Experience is the fundamental basis for all knowledge, all understanding, and all belief.

Show me a positive study, with good controls, that had a statistically significant sample size and that can be repeated.

Okay, I'll get right on it...

There aren't any.

...Oh-ho! You really had me going there. I almost thought you were open to honest investigation. Had me fooled for a sec ;)

The best of the lot in the parapsychology field rely on data-mining expeditions that show positive effects orders of magnitude below that reported byt eh everyday experience of supposed psychics and msytics. You keep talking about these positive studies...show me one. I don't reject them due to some metaphysical difference, I reject them due to a lack of sufficient rigor and a lack of evidence. To borrow a quote form you:
So you directly experience my motivations and intentions? Fascinating.

Yea, yea. I get it, I get it. You have all the answers and there is absolutely no evidence for me to present to the contrary because you just KNOW there isn't any. I'll leave ya to it then.
 
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I'm saying that the most compelling evidence a person can have of such experiences is to undergo them themselves.


And I would disagree with that statement. Many may find it compelling, but it would certainly not be the most compelling evidence a person can have. Much more compelling evidence would be independent confirmation that the experience represents something in the real world. We have had too many experiences with subjective experiences that do not correlate with real world occurrences for the experience itself to count as anything but a subjective experience.



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 truth/accuracy of such reports is seriously doubtful would be uninvolved third parties.


Independent corroboration is what makes the evidence of subjective experiences useful. Without independent corroboration, all we have are anecdotes; and subjective experiences -- anecdotes -- are not sufficient to promote a paradigm shift. It is that simple.

You can say -- hey, this is interesting, let's examine it. But that is as far as anyone should take such experiences. Suggesting the need for a major change in thought -- barring any independent corroboration -- is not warranted.
 
[BTW, I tested out your claim that your earlier color/font mishap was an artifact of "transferring" text from Word. I conducted an experiment of my own which produced negative results. Should I conclude that you're full of it?]

You can conclude whatever you want. I have no idea whay it appeared different to you. It looks normal on my browser. The transferrence was the only thing I did differently in that post...if that wasn't the case, then I have no idea.

Actually, I specifically seached for a short wiki article on the subject as I'd already read much about that specific topic, non-locality, and entanglement phenomena in general. The point was to demonstrate that, even within the confines of known physical theory, non-local distal influence akin to telepathy is considered possible. Its a bit silly and disparaging for you to automatically assume that disagreement with you on this topic implies incomprehension.

But it is NOT silly to understand that believing entanglement is a possibility to expalin telepathy on a macro-level is non-sensical and shows a lack of understanding of what entanglement is, or how difficult it is to create and/or maintain. Let's put it this way: while not technically impossible for two individuals to be entangled to some degree that allows communication, the odds of this happening are similar to the odds of a person quantum tunneling through a solid wall. You'd have to wait longer than the lifetime of the universe for a single instance to occur.

Okay, consider this:

I personally know a synesthete who experiences sounds visually. In his awareness, each human voice is a dynamic and unique array of shapes and colors. One person's voice is experienced as warm, pulsating orange ovals, another as purple circles, and mine he experiences as "red spinnie squares". There are many other synesthetes who have different subjective experiences of the world which can vary widely, yet they receive veridical information from their senses none the less -- some of which, their "normal" peers may not have access to.

Do you consider the senses of synesthetes faulty?

Yes. They are mis-routings of sense data. Sounds do NOT have color. If they tell me my voice is green, that is not correct. I would agree that they experience it as green, based on their say-so (we know synesthasia exists, and "seeing" sounds is not an unusual form).
If so, would you submit that they are not qualified to make valid scientific observations?

No, but I would say that their observations are only valid by understanding the limitations of their senses. Because they see a voice as a purple oval doesn't give the voice a shape or color. Personal perception is only valid to the individual.

If a given synesthete [with his/her own unique subjective makeup] has a perception that differs from what a well established scientific theory predicts they should is their perception "false", or is it indicative of a limitation in the theory?

It's an indication that their perception is altered. It would depend on the specific example. If a person detects bass notes as green, for example, then when they "see" a "green" sound I'd believe it was a bass note. I would not believe there was actually a green sound. And this is exactly the point we've been attempting to make. You're simply brushing aside the documented and solid evidence of the falliability of memory as if it doesn't apply. In any case, even by your own argument, your evidence only applies to you, andwe should not, in any way shape or form, accept it based on your word (as you stated, we have no direct experience of your consciousness).

Hold the phone. On what basis are you designating which studies were "well controlled"? Is this based upon reports you've received concerning the studies in question or did you actually participate in them yourself? How do you know that your conclusion isn't an artifact of your admitted bias?

Because scientific studies detail the experimental controls used and the methodology. You can examine this to find where opportunities for problems appeared. In various stories (as opposed to controlled conditions) and such, there simply isn't enough information available to know if there was no chance for non-paranormal inforation exchange or other possibilities. I'm not saying they are all false. I'm saying the studies have yet to provide positive proof and eliminate all non-paranormal explanations, and therefore can't be accepted as evidence of the paranormal. Disbelief is the default position; it's not on us to disprove the paranormal or experiences like yours (whether you want to call it paranormal or not). There should be positive evidence for it...yet that hasn't appeared.

You interjected in a point you knew I was making to another individual and requested that I elaborate on it. When I did so you claimed that the point it was addressing wasn't your argument and accused me of making a straw-man. I'm seeing a trend here...

I'll review and see if this is the case, and if so, I apologize. With days between posts and the speed of the thread, I do lose track.

Okay, this is genuinely getting sad -- you're actually trying to make a weasel argument by technicality. Are you really trying to argue that Issac Newton [as in the father of classical physics] didn't formulate any physical theory, none whatsoever?

I'm saying that, as far as I am aware, Newton had no Theory of Gravity (using theory in the scientific sense). Wiki is, well, wrong. What Newton had was a Law of Gravity. And understanding the difference between teh two will tell you why it does not support your arguments.

"Well you see, Newton only formulated physical
laws. I specifically asked you for a well established theory that had been over turned in science."

What was that you were saying earlier about dishonesty, Hellbound? :sulk:

And Newton wasn't overturned, just found not to be complete. In other words, GR did NOT suddenly invalidate the results of Newton's laws, except in the case of high speeds or large masses.

Ding-ding-ding! I think hes got it! Yes, theories are conceptual tools that are inferred from firsthand observations. Your inability to see how this logically ties into my point is... [how shall I put this?] ...not my failure.

Well, this is actually going pretty well for me. Your claim is that, essentially, personal observation is the ultimate authority for that individual. That if you personally experience something then that trumps whatever theories or studies are out there.

In science a theory is a description of and explanation for phenomena. It gives both a way to model an interaction and an explanation for how that occurs. GR, for example, explains gravitational force as a curvature of space and time, and makes specifc predictions based on this (such as gravitational lensing).

In science a Law (such as Newton's Gravity or his Laws of Motion) is a description of phenomena based on observation. It simply states "if you do this, that will happen".

Newton never offerred a theory of gravity. Newton's Law of Gravity, which you have said was found to be wrong, was based on his personal, direct experience. It's a good example to show why an individual's experience, even your own, is not to be taken as truth if it can't be examined.

Oh, heavens forbid such a thing! Tell me, would you considered the widly successful Standard Model of particle physics as an infallible and complete model of reality?

No, we know it isn't complete. Science tells us that.

Would introducing entities not included in said model [like say -- I don't know -- maybe financial instruments, or pain] require "extraordinary" evidence?

It depends on iof they contradict what's already there and known to be true. There ARE known limitations to what can be added to the Standard Model, and for it to still give us the correct results that it does.

Even better -- Lets expand that little example to include all scientific models, theories, and principles. Would entities existing outside of said models render all of them null and void? Would science as a whole be invalidated? :rolleyes:

If the current theories predict that nothing should be there, and having something there would change the results calculated using those theories, the results that have been experimentally verified, then yes.

HB: "Formulate a theory I'm willing to accept or its not real."

AMM: "Roger, that."

How about just formulate a theory? So far, that hasn't been done to any meaningful degree in paranormal research. But that isn't precisely what my comemnt stated. To have a theory accepted, it should have more evidence for it than the theory (or theories) it will be invalidating.

...Oh-ho! You really had me going there. I almost thought you were open to honest investigation. Had me fooled for a sec ;)

I am open to honest investigation. There are no studies that I am aware of that meat the criteria I listed. That was a challenge to you to put your money where your mouth is. The studies you posted to Pure Argent, which you mentioned earlier, have already been adddressed by him. These are simply retellings, collections of stories, and there were no controls in place to eliminate more normal explanations.

Yea, yea. I get it, I get it. You have all the answers and there is absolutely no evidence for me to present to the contrary because you just KNOW there isn't any. I'll leave ya to it then.

Where did I say anythign remotely like what you are implying? I've mentioned several times that there are none I'm aware of. You've yet to present any, I've yet to be made aware of any. I know I don't have all the answers, which is why I am so passionate about science. I believ it to be the best way to find the answers without getting dragged into a bunch of nonsense. It's not perfect, I think everyone here will admit that, but so far we've found nothing better.

How about this; instead of details, let's focus on something that might actually get somewhere, and clarify arguments on both sides (because I stil fail to see how solipsism is not the logical end-point of your views, as expressed here).

You calim that science needs to include the subjective. What specific changes should be made to do this? What do you mean by this? What should be accepted as evidence (and evidence for what) under your method as opposed to what is done now? You've spent a lot of time arguing about how scienc is missing out on something, yet then seem to change your argument to scientists being biased and ignoring proof that is already there. Can you calrify this a bit? Are you arguing that scientists are biased, or that the method needs to be changed?
 
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