Your problem is that the anecdotes are not what you are pushing what you are pushing is the assumption that those anecdotes arise from the magic you believe in. Otherwise all you would be presenting is the anecdote and drawing no conclusion from it.
You are quite clearly producing a strawman here.
I have consistently argued that anecdotes / personal observations / whatever-you-want-to-call-them are the foundation of a great deal of our personal and collective lives. Go look if you are going to challenge this.
It is everyone else (including you) who is constantly insisting that you can explain (away) these anecdotes (and utterly failing to).
And in regards to the "psychoanalyst" comment - the psychiatric profession is now well aware of fallibility of memory and how recollections can be polluted by the very act of trying to recall the memory.
…so because it has been circumstantially (do you know what that word means?) established that in-some-cases memories are fallible and recollections can be ‘polluted’ (whatever that means)… it is scientifically valid to conclude that every single one of the hundreds of millions of reported cases can be thus dismissed.
This despite the indisputable fact that science actually has no ability to directly adjudicate the phenomenon (meaning…no more circumstantial BS).
Please find me a scientist who would agree with this absurd scenario!
Not to mention…that if you are going to insist that ALL these specific events (hundreds of millions of them) have thus been conclusively rendered invalid on this specific basis…you will have to then question every single memory that anyone ever has anytime.
If you are going to insist on such an assertion then you are going to have to back it up with a bit more than your opinion.
…nice to see you’ve finally admitted that personal observations have evidentiary validity.
annnnoid isn't just willing to accept very low-quality evidence as proof--he's willing to destroy the entire scientific enterpirse to do so!
…stawman. I have, repeatedly and consistently, insisted that anecdotes (meaning…personal observations / descriptions / opinions…whatever-the-hell-you-or-anyone-else-wants-to-call-it-when-you-describe-your-experiences) have evidentiary value.
I never said they have unconditional evidentiary value (though in our everyday interactions this is very often exactly the case: we trust ourselves and each IOW). It was frequently, and consistently, asserted that anecdotes (or whatever-they-are-called) have NO evidentiary value.
The absurdity of this position cannot be overstated. Not least of all because a half-million practicing psychoanalysts would flat out dispute it.
Not to mention…that you have generated an opinion of me exclusively based on my own personal observations as presented on this thread. If these personal observations have NO evidentiary value (as so many have argued)…how is it you have come to the conclusions you have come to?
I actually did agree with you that anecdotal evidence can be reasonably considered evidence. That, in the larger picture, it's trumped by more objective evidence where available doesn't change that.
Either way, thank you for retracting your prior claim.
It has been. With that said, though, it seems like the more common claim is that it's very weak evidence, in and of itself, not that it has no value at all.
Well halleluiah! Someone else who agrees anecdotes (or whatever) have evidentiary value.
That has been the whole point of this stupid exercise. To establish some kind of probability that can be compared to the probability of alien life.
If we have hundreds of millions of ‘anecdotal’ reports of a phenomena, then this has some, possibly quantifiable, evidentiary value.
…unless someone can conclusively establish that there is some other kind of explanation for the phenomena (conclusively…you don’t dismiss hundreds of millions of events with circumstantial evidence).
So far, all we’ve got is assertions, conjecture, and hand waving.
Depends on what you think love is.
Because 'love' is so fungible, it's a great way to seem to make a point and yet not have to.
Nobody knows what ‘love’ is. Only extensively. Which…is…the…point (one of them anyway). Just cause we have some words that make some attempt to explain / describe it does not mean it is understood (it is trivially easy to establish that it is not, and cannot be with the current level of scientific undersanding). But (and this is a very important 'but'), that also does not mean it is not anecdotally understood (within our own personal observation / experience).