CFLarsen said:
I am perpetually surprised at this attitude. You are quite content with reaping the benefits of science, but you will not lift a finger to help it progress.
So why do you think I have decided to go to University to study a joint Cognitive Science and Philosophy degree?
If you are constantly surprised by this attitude, have you considered the possibility that you don't fully understand where it comes from?
Science is just one tool for understanding these issues, but it does not exist in isolation. My interest lies in the border between science and metaphysics, and that is why I have chosen to study it. The University I am going to (Sussex) has one of the best Cognitive Science departments in Britain, but it is the first year they have offered a joint degree with philosophy. I am already fascinated by the interplay between the two departments I will be studying under. When I spoke to them, I felt like both tried to play down the relevance of the other. The Philosophers spoke about the cognitive science department as "a chance to brush up on my programming" (I am a software engineer). I probably don't need to tell you how the cognitive scientists view the philosophers. PROGRESS will come when these two groups of people start working more closely together, wouldn't you agree?
Given my situation, I rather resent the comment I am responding to. I think I am doing more to help the situation than you are.
In this field of interest, I would like to find answers to whether people really have paranormal powers. It would be an amazing discovery, so full of benefits for mankind.
Not neccesarily. It is entirely possible that these phenomena do exist, but they cannot be harnessed and put to work like normal physical phenomena do. Their role may be rather different.
You argue in favor of paranormal phenomena being true, but you are not really interested in finding out whether they are true or not. So, the question is: Do you really believe in paranormal phenomena, or is it merely something that makes you feel good inside, but you are afraid to have that fantasy shattered by reality?
CFL, I know you cannot accept it, but I do not have to ask this question any longer. I know perfectly well that paranormal phenomena exist, it is not a question of belief. I have seen more than enough to answer those questions for myself. It dominated much of the previous few years of my life. That does not mean I have no remaining questions, far from it. I have more questions than I did before, it's just they are different questions. I am more interested in the circumstances under which these phenomena manifest, how they are being driven, whether they can be trusted to be as they appear to be, how they have influenced the development of mankind, and a whole host of other related topics. But I do not have to find an answer as to whether they exist, because denying their existence and reality would be denying the most powerful and important experiences of my life. From your POV, you still have to ask questions about whether I was hallucinating or mistaken. From mine, those questions lie in the past. I know I was not hallucinating, and I am not mistaken, and if you were in my position,
so would you.
You seem to think I am scared of having my "fantasies destroyed". Fear of such things simply does not register with me any more. Some of the phenomena I experienced were absolutely terrifying. Indescribably terrifying to the point where I was a completely shattered and broken person, which in hindsight was the "purpose" of the phenomena - at that point I had to be broken. I had a very high breaking point, but these phenomena were being driven by forces so much more powerful than me that I was left like an ant before a bulldozer. I surrendered because I had no choice - my reality was collapsing in on me. That is
fear. Being scared of broken fantasies is not an issue for me.