Dubious Dick
Muse
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2008
- Messages
- 515
Given that SaskMick has apparently beaten a retreat it is perhaps not surprising that this thread is in danger of getting derailed, and becoming an unseemly and somewhat unnecessary spat.
What remains true, and indisputable, is that SaskMick has failed miserably to provide any proof for his claims to be able to dowse. It is also clear that if he ever were a skeptic, he has lost those powers, or never really was in the first place.
As for the missing and found harp story, perhaps that deserves another thread with further investigation if desired by anyone?
I think Ladewig put it well when he wrote:
' Dowsing has been around for what, hundreds of years? thousands of years? In the past two hundred or so years electricity went from being a strange novelty that made dead frogs twitch to being a phenomenon so well understood that we can implant small electronic devices inside people to help regulate their heart rates.
Think for a moment about every single natural phenomena that already had a long history by 1863. Steam, friction, electricity, burning, gravity, motion, buoyancy, air pressure, etc. etc. In every single case humans have been able to quantify it and measure it to unheard of degrees. In almost every case, we have been able to and harness it or refine it or otherwise use it in some way to make life easier. Even folk remedies known 150 years ago have been turned into useful, measured doses that produce consistent results.
Yet dowsing always lies just beyond the reach of scientists. Science can put a man on the moon (and bring him back), yet science just can't quite catch anyone dowsing under controlled conditions. We are talking about a power that could change the very course of human events, but this power is very shy and never appears when scientists are watching. Don't get me wrong, as I said in a previous post, science does not know everything. But if you look at the things that were known but not understood 150 years ago, science has pretty much observed them very well and explained them almost as well. Except dowsing.'
What remains true, and indisputable, is that SaskMick has failed miserably to provide any proof for his claims to be able to dowse. It is also clear that if he ever were a skeptic, he has lost those powers, or never really was in the first place.
As for the missing and found harp story, perhaps that deserves another thread with further investigation if desired by anyone?
I think Ladewig put it well when he wrote:
' Dowsing has been around for what, hundreds of years? thousands of years? In the past two hundred or so years electricity went from being a strange novelty that made dead frogs twitch to being a phenomenon so well understood that we can implant small electronic devices inside people to help regulate their heart rates.
Think for a moment about every single natural phenomena that already had a long history by 1863. Steam, friction, electricity, burning, gravity, motion, buoyancy, air pressure, etc. etc. In every single case humans have been able to quantify it and measure it to unheard of degrees. In almost every case, we have been able to and harness it or refine it or otherwise use it in some way to make life easier. Even folk remedies known 150 years ago have been turned into useful, measured doses that produce consistent results.
Yet dowsing always lies just beyond the reach of scientists. Science can put a man on the moon (and bring him back), yet science just can't quite catch anyone dowsing under controlled conditions. We are talking about a power that could change the very course of human events, but this power is very shy and never appears when scientists are watching. Don't get me wrong, as I said in a previous post, science does not know everything. But if you look at the things that were known but not understood 150 years ago, science has pretty much observed them very well and explained them almost as well. Except dowsing.'