PartSkeptic
Illuminator
How is who is and is not trustworthy determined?
How should this be assessed?
I asked you if you had anything you considered reliable. My guess would be that your answer would be "absolutely not because the paranormal does not exist"
I have come across a number of cases in popular myth, but nearly all are discredited, and I do not argue with the debunking. Here is one such article.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parapsychology
In 1938, the psychologist Joseph Jastrow wrote much of the evidence for extrasensory perception collected by Rhine and other parapsychologists was anecdotal, biased, dubious and the result of "faulty observation and familiar human frailties". Rhine's experiments were discredited due to the discovery that sensory leakage or cheating could account for all his results such as the subject being able to read the symbols from the back of the cards and being able to see and hear the experimenter to note subtle clues.
Illusionist Milbourne Christopher wrote years later that he felt "there are at least a dozen ways a subject who wished to cheat under the conditions Rhine described could deceive the investigator". When Rhine took precautions in response to criticisms of his methods, he was unable to find any high-scoring subjects. Another criticism, made by chemist Irving Langmuir, among others, was one of selective reporting. Langmuir stated that Rhine did not report scores of subjects that he suspected were intentionally guessing wrong, and that this, he felt, biased the statistical results higher than they should have been.
Does that mean that the supernatural does not exist, or that the supernatural is governed by an intelligence that does not wish evidence of its existence? The standard answer by a disbeliever is that this statement is a cop-out.
And what if we are in a computer simulation or dream of an intelligent being? If there is a possibility that might be, then there is a possibility that the statement might be true. Can you prove to me that we are not in a simulation or dream?
How many people like to believe that multiverses, cyclic universes and other dimensions are possible, despite the fact that proving any of these is harder than looking for glitches in reality?
And why do they? Because the belief that they might be possible lessens the chance of intelligent design which some argue is evidenced by fine tuning. Cosmologists acknowledge that our universe is like a pencil that stays balanced on its point.
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