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New PSI forum

JustGeoff said:
So why do you think I have decided to go to University to study a joint Cognitive Science and Philosophy degree? :D

I was talking about discovering the truth behind the reality of paranormal phenomena. How will your study help you finding out about levitation?

JustGeoff said:
If you are constantly surprised by this attitude, have you considered the possibility that you don't fully understand where it comes from?

I am learning more and more each day, but I have to admit that I don't understand why people want to take a back seat to this.

JustGeoff said:
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?

Not really. I don't consider philosophy a science, and the benefits are not all that obvious. Philosophy seems more like an intellectual and semantical game.

JustGeoff said:
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.

Get that degree first, and show some results, before you boast of doing more than me. So far, you have done nothing.

JustGeoff said:
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.

That would contradict what we know now: These phenomena are harnessed even today, without any explanations whatsoever. Dowsers find water, psychics talk to dead people, even find missing children, astrologers predict the future, and healers cure cancer. I'd call that "harnessing these phenomena".

JustGeoff said:
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.

Actually, I don't think so. And I find it downright scary that you seem to think that your experiences were real - nothing will persuade you otherwise.

JustGeoff said:
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.

I do think that you are terrified of having your fantasies destroyed, and your post just verified that. You have apparently reached a point of no return: Nothing can change your mind, you will continue believe.

JustGeoff said:
Well, I am also quite familiar with what a bad acid trip is like, and it just isn't on the same scale.

Oh? Are you that much of a hands-on expert on how hallucinogens works? Is it possible - somewhere, somehow - that what you experienced were a hallucination?

JustGeoff said:
No, and no. There is a kernel of truth here, but the examples you have given are poor ones.

Then give examples that are not.

JustGeoff said:
Unknown. Apart from being unable to create something which is inherently illogical, I do not know what the limits are. That is a question I would also like to see answers to.

Exactly how are you going to find those answers?

JustGeoff said:
And actually, if you read the opening post of this thread you will see that Lucianarchy also wants answers of this sort.

No. He does not. He wants to brag about his skills, but he doesn't want to find out for real if he has them or not.

JustGeoff said:
Unfortunately we cannot get off of square one until the skeptics acknowledge that there is something to investigate!

Then show us!

JustGeoff said:
It is not people like me and Luci who are preventing progress on this. It is people who claim that all paranormalists are liars, frauds and incompetents, and claim that there is no bias whatsoever within the skeptical community. Progress will come when both sides stop the trench warfare and start trying to understand the other side.

Oh, please! All we need is one piece of evidence! Why is that so hard to provide?

JustGeoff said:
Except you have discounted the possibility that it has already been discovered, and that the skeptics are failing to acknowledge the evidence.

Then, where is it? Can we see it? You are not holding back, so why don't you just shove it in our faces and be done with it?

JustGeoff said:
But you don't think that the skeptics are likely to be at all biased because of the (already discussed) fact that acknowledging the existence of paranormal phenomena would shatter their own belief system?

That's where you are wrong. Skeptics seek actively evidence of paranormal phenomena. Does that indicate a fear of being wrong? I don't think so. Perhaps you could - since you are so interested in cognitive sciences and philosophy - explain a bit about why skeptics would do such a self-destructive thing?

JustGeoff said:
Come on folks, the argument that the skeptics are completely unbiased and that parapsychology is peopled entirely by frauds and jokers doesn't convince anyone but those people already in total agreement with the so-called "skeptics". I don't think you are doing yourself any favours by taking such an extreme and one-sided position. One might have thought that the hardliners here might have learned something from the whole ludicrous "brights" movement thing, which flew like a lead balloon last year.

It all comes down to evidence. Bias or not bias, it's all about evidence.

JustGeoff said:
Oh good. Write off the whole field. I can see your impartiality shining like a beacon of fair-mindedness. :)

Hey, can I see just one piece of evidence in just one small part of the field?

JustGeoff said:
All parapsychologists are woo-woos, therefore any result they produce can safely be discounted, therefore there is no evidence to back up their claims, therefore all parasychologists are woo-woos. Super!

No, you got it upside down: There are claims, but no evidence. Despite of lack of evidence, people still believe in it.

JustGeoff said:
I say again : do you actually think you are doing anything but preaching to the choir? :rolleyes:

Judging from people here, who have expressed sentiments that they have been helped, I would say that we are actually doing something to help dispel the darkness.

What, exactly, have you been doing, except getting high?
 
CFLarsen said:


That would contradict what we know now: These phenomena are harnessed even today, without any explanations whatsoever. Dowsers find water, psychics talk to dead people, even find missing children, astrologers predict the future, and healers cure cancer. I'd call that "harnessing these phenomena".


Those aren't examples of "harnessing" anything, Claus. The closest analogy I can think of is riding a wild stallion, unless you are a 'horse whisperer' the results can be entirely unpredictable (sic).
 
CFLarsen said:


No. He does not. He wants to brag about his skills, but he doesn't want to find out for real if he has them or not.


Then why did I undergo tests for the Koestler Inst? Why am I one of the only people here who is prepared to take exploratory tests with fellow skeptcs, right here? Do you still think I was just 'lucky' with my 'ladybrook' example in my opening post in the thread 'Lucianarchy and Remote Viewing'?
 
Lucianarchy said:
Those aren't examples of "harnessing" anything, Claus. The closest analogy I can think of is riding a wild stallion, unless you are a 'horse whisperer' the results can be entirely unpredictable (sic).

Nobody is saying anything about these phenomena having to work every time, but they are working enough of the times to have a lot of people making a living from it.

That's harnessing a phenomenon.

Lucianarchy said:
Then why did I undergo tests for the Koestler Inst? Why am I one of the only people here who is prepared to take exploratory tests with fellow skeptcs, right here? Do you still think I was just 'lucky' with my 'ladybrook' example in my opening post in the thread 'Lucianarchy and Remote Viewing'?

Yes. And your subsequent lying and deception prove that you are a fake.

As for your "tests" at the Koestler Institute, we still have only your word for it. You have refused to allow us to check that claim. We can only wonder why that is.
 
CFLarsen said:


And your subsequent lying and deception prove that you are a fake.

.

Claus, that is completely untrue. We have moved onto more positive ways of discussing things on the new forum. Please refrain from making such outrageous claims unless you provide proof yourself.
 
CFLarsen said:
I was talking about discovering the truth behind the reality of paranormal phenomena. How will your study help you finding out about levitation?

The whole field of paranormal phenomena is rooted in the issues covered by cognitive science, psychology and metaphysics. It is no use just singling out individual phenomena and trying to "debunk" them. That will not lead you to the truth about paranormal phenomena. Trying to understand these issues without an understanding of the philosophical issues which underpin them is a complete waste of time.

I am learning more and more each day, but I have to admit that I don't understand why people want to take a back seat to this.

I am not really "taking a back seat". When I initially encountered this stuff what I wanted more than anything was more rationalists on board. Rather like yourself, it was clear to me that the field was populated largely by people trying to make money or people who were just plain crazy. When I first began to understand what had been incorrect about my previous views, and when I first began to experience the phenomena, all I wanted was to get more rationalists alongside me so I did not have to walk through looked like very swampy ground all on my own. I had failed to understand the significance of what was happening to me. Trying to get others to follow me was NOT what I was supposed to be doing. Instead, it was neccesary for me to walk the swamp on my own, to find my own answers, to find my own path to the truth. Now I believe that this is always the way it must be. It is NO USE trying to force other people to follow. They must choose that path for themselves. I am not "taking a back seat". I am waiting for you to catch up.


Not really. I don't consider philosophy a science, and the benefits are not all that obvious.

No, they are not obvious. That does not mean they are not there. You think philosophy is irrelevant? If they stopped teaching it, you would change your mind.

Philosophy seems more like an intellectual and semantical game.

That is part of philosophy, and in incredibly important part. You see, all of us are tricked by our own use of language. Only by analysing very carefully our own use of language do we begin to understand how our views about the nature of reality and life are shaped by the way we construct our arguments. Without the semantic analysis of philosophy, we remain prisoners of "semantic spooks".


That would contradict what we know now: These phenomena are harnessed even today, without any explanations whatsoever. Dowsers find water, psychics talk to dead people, even find missing children, astrologers predict the future, and healers cure cancer. I'd call that "harnessing these phenomena".

The trouble is that the people who are making money out of these supposed powers aren't usually harnessing the phenomena at all. They are leeches. They deserve to be exposed as such. REAL paranormal phenomena are not there to be made money out of. They serve a very different purpose, as both myself and Luci have repeatedly tried to explain. I dislike the Uri Gellers of this world even more than you do. All they do is make a mockery of the whole field and continually re-inforce the beliefs of people like you that all parapsychology is worthless. They serve nobody but themselves.

Actually, I don't think so. And I find it downright scary that you seem to think that your experiences were real - nothing will persuade you otherwise.

You think that is downright scary? How friggin' scary do you think it would be if you are wrong, and the phenomena are real? Just how scary would that be, CFLarsen? Can't you see how much more scary the REALITY would be than the destruction of a mere fantasy? Can you imagine what you would feel like if your own skepticism was blown to pieces by experiencing phenomena that you previously could never even begun to imagine existed? It is a whole different league. It makes you feel very small very quickly indeed.

I do think that you are terrified of having your fantasies destroyed, and your post just verified that. You have apparently reached a point of no return: Nothing can change your mind, you will continue believe.

I have indeed passed a rubicon. There can be no going back from where I am, and that is a characteristic others in my position will identify with. Luci talked about "the ultimate form of personal responsibility". She was not wrong. This is not a game.

Oh? Are you that much of a hands-on expert on how hallucinogens works? Is it possible - somewhere, somehow - that what you experienced were a hallucination?

No, that is what I am saying. In my younger years I have experienced the whole gamut of hallucinogens, up to and including DMT. It is not possible that what I was experiencing was a hallucination, because many times I tried to deny it was happening, just as a person on a bad acid trip repeats to themselves "This is only a trip, it is not real". The trouble was that it was real, and the harder I tried to run away from it the more powerful became the effects. In the end, I was forced to accept that what I was experiencing was real, because that was the only way to escape the existential situation I found myself in. That is why I cannot return to where I came from. I didn't know it at the time, but I bought a one-way ticket.

Then give examples that are not.

We have already been through this. If I give you an example of something which is not actually illogical, you will simply ask me for proof the it exists, which is not the same as it not being illogical. You don't want examples of logically coherent paranormal phenomena. You wan't examples of logically coherent paranormal phenomena you can also apply scientific testing to.

Exactly how are you going to find those answers?

By learning as much as I can about ALL the related disciplines and trying to make sense of the whole picture. Science forms part of this picture, but never the totality.




Then show us!

Oh, please! All we need is one piece of evidence! Why is that so hard to provide?

Then, where is it? Can we see it? You are not holding back, so why don't you just shove it in our faces and be done with it?

Sometimes I wonder if I am talking to myself here. :(

I have gone to great lengths to explain why you can't see it. To me it feels like you keep trying to drag the debate back to where you are comfortable with your understanding, instead of trying to understand what the other side are trying to explain to you. I think you want a target to shoot down with tools you know how to use. I don't think you are interested in developing a more holistic understanding of the deeper issues that are relevant.

That's where you are wrong. Skeptics seek actively evidence of paranormal phenomena. Does that indicate a fear of being wrong? I don't think so.

I did not actually say "fear of being wrong". You do not fear being wrong because you are completely confident that you are right. I said that in order to accept that you were wrong would imply a complete reversal of your belief system, and it is true, isn't it?

Perhaps you could - since you are so interested in cognitive sciences and philosophy - explain a bit about why skeptics would do such a self-destructive thing?

Because according to their own way of understanding this, what they are doing does not risk any self-destruction. Because of the whole way you approach the issue it is pre-determined that you will never find what you are supposedly looking for. You are not looking for paranormal phenomena at all. You are trying to demonstrate to people that no such phenomena exist. Some honesty please? So long as you retain the same belief system and do not look to critically at the flaws in that belief system, you are not at risk of having your belief system destoyed. As destruction of belief systems, sometimes it is a neccesary process, because sometimes you need to take a few steps back in order to be able to go forwards. There must be a fire in order for there to be a phoenix. Indeed I believe the current discussion concerns the original meaning behind that myth, and many other familiar myths which share the same theme.

It all comes down to evidence. Bias or not bias, it's all about evidence.

That is your opinion. I would personally say that there is no subsitute for direct personal experience. That, for me, was the only evidence which was good enough.

Hey, can I see just one piece of evidence in just one small part of the field?

You have. You used Occams Razor to discard it on the grounds that experimental error was far more likely than it being genuine evidence of PSI. Beyond that sort of level of evidence science is not going to go any time soon.

No, you got it upside down: There are claims, but no evidence. Despite of lack of evidence, people still believe in it.

And some of those people believe it because it actually happened to them. This eventuality seems to be completely missing from your assessment of the possible truths of this situation - you have eliminated it as a 0% chance. You simply don't believe it, so you don't believe it is possible that some of the people who make these claims are actually telling the truth. But that does not mean that you are correct, so you cannot claim that people believe it because of lack of evidence. You want to know why people study philosophy? It is precisely so they do not keep making the same mistakes in their reasoning over and over again. They have to deconstruct their own thinking and realise that some of their initial assumptions are driving their way through their whole analysis of a situation and coming out the other end looking like a conclusion when they are in fact built into the thought process from start to finish. People study philosophy so that their belief system is stripped down to its component parts and rebuilt again without so many defects in it. That is why people study philosophy, and that it is why it matters.
 
Lucianarchy said:
Claus, that is completely untrue. We have moved onto more positive ways of discussing things on the new forum. Please refrain from making such outrageous claims unless you provide proof yourself.

Although we have "moved on" doesn't mean that your previous behavior is forgotten.

Now, can we check that you were tested at the Koestler Institute, yes or no?

And can we see your test results, yes or no?
 
Lucianarchy said:


Those aren't examples of "harnessing" anything, Claus. The closest analogy I can think of is riding a wild stallion, unless you are a 'horse whisperer' the results can be entirely unpredictable (sic).

I have a T-Shirt which reads :

"I whisper. But my horse doesn't listen."

;)
 
CFLarsen said:


Although we have "moved on" doesn't mean that your previous behavior is forgotten.

Now, can we check that you were tested at the Koestler Institute, yes or no?

And can we see your test results, yes or no?

No, that would mean giving you my personal details. I'm not bothered if you believe me or not. But please do not make outrageous and unsubstantiated claims about me again as being a 'proven' "fake" or "liar" (I am not) it is clearly against the guidelines of civility. You can have an opinion, I don't mind, but please don't make claims about "proven".
 
Just a quick question for JustGeoff.

Are you trying to say that there is no way that you can be foolled? That you are incapable of being mistaken about what you percieve? Impossible to be self deluded? Your eyes have never played tricks on you?

quote by JustGeoff

No, that is what I am saying. In my younger years I have experienced the whole gamut of hallucinogens, up to and including DMT. It is not possible that what I was experiencing was a hallucination, because many times I tried to deny it was happening, just as a person on a bad acid trip repeats to themselves "This is only a trip, it is not real". The trouble was that it was real, and the harder I tried to run away from it the more powerful became the effects. In the end, I was forced to accept that what I was experiencing was real, because that was the only way to escape the existential situation I found myself in. That is why I cannot return to where I came from. I didn't know it at the time, but I bought a one-way ticket

end quote.

There are all kinds of hallucinations. Those induced by drugs can be drasticly differant from those induced by trauma or psychological dissorders. Just because a person experiences a hallucination, doesn't mean they are crazy. It could be a sign that something is wrong, but it can also be triggered by less harmfull reasons.

A couple of books you might find interesting are Why People Believe Weird Things by Michael Shermer , and The Demon-Haunted World by Carl Sagan. Both are excellant books.

JPK
 
JustGeoff said:
The whole field of paranormal phenomena is rooted in the issues covered by cognitive science, psychology and metaphysics. It is no use just singling out individual phenomena and trying to "debunk" them. That will not lead you to the truth about paranormal phenomena. Trying to understand these issues without an understanding of the philosophical issues which underpin them is a complete waste of time.

At some point, you have to look at just one phenomenon and investigate it. Simply backing down from this will certainly not lead you to the truth about paranormal phenomena.

I see no reason to understand any philosophical issues - all we have to look at is the evidence. Where is it? After we have seen it, we can discuss the philosophical implications.

JustGeoff said:
I am not really "taking a back seat". When I initially encountered this stuff what I wanted more than anything was more rationalists on board. Rather like yourself, it was clear to me that the field was populated largely by people trying to make money or people who were just plain crazy.

I don't necessarily consider people who believe in paranormal phenomena crazy. Lucianarchy is clearly insane, but it is not my general impression that believers are nuts.

JustGeoff said:
When I first began to understand what had been incorrect about my previous views, and when I first began to experience the phenomena, all I wanted was to get more rationalists alongside me so I did not have to walk through looked like very swampy ground all on my own. I had failed to understand the significance of what was happening to me. Trying to get others to follow me was NOT what I was supposed to be doing. Instead, it was neccesary for me to walk the swamp on my own, to find my own answers, to find my own path to the truth. Now I believe that this is always the way it must be. It is NO USE trying to force other people to follow. They must choose that path for themselves. I am not "taking a back seat". I am waiting for you to catch up.

Spare me the condescending "I know more than you do" attitude. You are doing nothing yourself, and your arguments are falling flat.

JustGeoff said:
No, they are not obvious. That does not mean they are not there. You think philosophy is irrelevant? If they stopped teaching it, you would change your mind.

That may be so. However, this thread is not for a discussion of philosophical benefits.

JustGeoff said:
That is part of philosophy, and in incredibly important part. You see, all of us are tricked by our own use of language. Only by analysing very carefully our own use of language do we begin to understand how our views about the nature of reality and life are shaped by the way we construct our arguments. Without the semantic analysis of philosophy, we remain prisoners of "semantic spooks".

Yes, thank you, I'm aware of Wittgenstein. FWIW, I don't consider myself a prisoner of my language(s).

JustGeoff said:
The trouble is that the people who are making money out of these supposed powers aren't usually harnessing the phenomena at all. They are leeches. They deserve to be exposed as such. REAL paranormal phenomena are not there to be made money out of. They serve a very different purpose, as both myself and Luci have repeatedly tried to explain. I dislike the Uri Gellers of this world even more than you do. All they do is make a mockery of the whole field and continually re-inforce the beliefs of people like you that all parapsychology is worthless. They serve nobody but themselves.

Stop right here. How do you know that they are not really speaking to dead people? Is it a belief of yours, or do you know it as a fact?

JustGeoff said:
You think that is downright scary? How friggin' scary do you think it would be if you are wrong, and the phenomena are real? Just how scary would that be, CFLarsen? Can't you see how much more scary the REALITY would be than the destruction of a mere fantasy? Can you imagine what you would feel like if your own skepticism was blown to pieces by experiencing phenomena that you previously could never even begun to imagine existed? It is a whole different league. It makes you feel very small very quickly indeed.

If I want to feel very small very quickly, I simply go outside and look at the stars. I don't find occult beliefs expanding, I find them extremely confining.

JustGeoff said:
I have indeed passed a rubicon. There can be no going back from where I am, and that is a characteristic others in my position will identify with. Luci talked about "the ultimate form of personal responsibility". She was not wrong. This is not a game.

Indeed it isn't, which is why I keep emphasizing the need to know what this is about. I take it that nothing will ever persuade you that you could be wrong. That is the mindset of a true fanatic.

JustGeoff said:
No, that is what I am saying. In my younger years I have experienced the whole gamut of hallucinogens, up to and including DMT. It is not possible that what I was experiencing was a hallucination, because many times I tried to deny it was happening, just as a person on a bad acid trip repeats to themselves "This is only a trip, it is not real". The trouble was that it was real, and the harder I tried to run away from it the more powerful became the effects. In the end, I was forced to accept that what I was experiencing was real, because that was the only way to escape the existential situation I found myself in. That is why I cannot return to where I came from. I didn't know it at the time, but I bought a one-way ticket.

Spoken like a true dopehead. You have fried your brain with all sorts of hard drugs, and you want us to believe that what you experienced was real? What, exactly, did you experience, that could not have been drugs?

JustGeoff said:
We have already been through this. If I give you an example of something which is not actually illogical, you will simply ask me for proof the it exists, which is not the same as it not being illogical. You don't want examples of logically coherent paranormal phenomena. You wan't examples of logically coherent paranormal phenomena you can also apply scientific testing to.

I want some evidence, that's all. Is that so hard to understand? Why should I believe you, and not Sylvia Browne?

JustGeoff said:
By learning as much as I can about ALL the related disciplines and trying to make sense of the whole picture. Science forms part of this picture, but never the totality.

But what "disciplines" are related? Since Quantum Mechanics are also included in parapsychological explanations, are you going to study at CERN as well?

How have you determined what "disciplines" are related? Can you give me a complete list?

JustGeoff said:
Sometimes I wonder if I am talking to myself here. :(

No, it's really the voices in your head. I'm a drug-induced hallucination.

JustGeoff said:
I have gone to great lengths to explain why you can't see it. To me it feels like you keep trying to drag the debate back to where you are comfortable with your understanding, instead of trying to understand what the other side are trying to explain to you. I think you want a target to shoot down with tools you know how to use. I don't think you are interested in developing a more holistic understanding of the deeper issues that are relevant.

No, I want to see some evidence. You want me to take your word for it, and I won't.

JustGeoff said:
I did not actually say "fear of being wrong". You do not fear being wrong because you are completely confident that you are right. I said that in order to accept that you were wrong would imply a complete reversal of your belief system, and it is true, isn't it?

It would certainly mean one of the most fundamental discoveries of mankind. But since I'm looking for evidence, I can't be all that scared, can I?

JustGeoff said:
Because according to their own way of understanding this, what they are doing does not risk any self-destruction. Because of the whole way you approach the issue it is pre-determined that you will never find what you are supposedly looking for. You are not looking for paranormal phenomena at all. You are trying to demonstrate to people that no such phenomena exist. Some honesty please? So long as you retain the same belief system and do not look to critically at the flaws in that belief system, you are not at risk of having your belief system destoyed. As destruction of belief systems, sometimes it is a neccesary process, because sometimes you need to take a few steps back in order to be able to go forwards. There must be a fire in order for there to be a phoenix. Indeed I believe the current discussion concerns the original meaning behind that myth, and many other familiar myths which share the same theme.

I am brutally honest with you, there is no need to accuse me of dishonesty, just because I don't agree with you. And you are most welcome to point out the flaws in skepticism. Do something, instead of merely talking about doing something.

JustGeoff said:
That is your opinion. I would personally say that there is no subsitute for direct personal experience. That, for me, was the only evidence which was good enough.

And that is why I say that you are taking the back seat. If there is no substitute for direct personal experience, then you have no need for modern scientific advances. Go to a healer, he will cure you of cancer.

JustGeoff said:
You have. You used Occams Razor to discard it on the grounds that experimental error was far more likely than it being genuine evidence of PSI. Beyond that sort of level of evidence science is not going to go any time soon.

But what is most likely, and in correspondance with what we know of the universe? That it is due to experimental error (which hardly are unknown to paranormal research), or that it is due to PSI? (What is PSI, anyway?)

You choose the paranormal answer, because it fits with your beliefs. I choose the non-paranormal answer, because no evidence is there.

JustGeoff said:
And some of those people believe it because it actually happened to them. This eventuality seems to be completely missing from your assessment of the possible truths of this situation - you have eliminated it as a 0% chance. You simply don't believe it, so you don't believe it is possible that some of the people who make these claims are actually telling the truth. But that does not mean that you are correct, so you cannot claim that people believe it because of lack of evidence.

I know it does not mean that I am correct, but I am pointing to the weakness of personal testimonials. Why should we attach significance to these people, and not those who tell stories of other phenomena, which you don't believe in?

That is the key question, which you skirt: Why you, Geoff? What makes your experience so compelling, that we don't merely have to discard scientific discoveries, but also place our faith in you alone? Why are you so special?

JustGeoff said:
You want to know why people study philosophy? It is precisely so they do not keep making the same mistakes in their reasoning over and over again. They have to deconstruct their own thinking and realise that some of their initial assumptions are driving their way through their whole analysis of a situation and coming out the other end looking like a conclusion when they are in fact built into the thought process from start to finish. People study philosophy so that their belief system is stripped down to its component parts and rebuilt again without so many defects in it. That is why people study philosophy, and that it is why it matters.

That may be, but what does this have to do with dowsing, mediumship and healing?
 
Lucianarchy said:
No, that would mean giving you my personal details. I'm not bothered if you believe me or not.

If you are not prepared to have your claim checked, then don't make it. Here, we check claims. Here, we point out if claims are unsubstantiated. Your claim of being tested and getting significant results at Koestler is one such claim.

Lucianarchy said:
But please do not make outrageous and unsubstantiated claims about me again as being a 'proven' "fake" or "liar" (I am not) it is clearly against the guidelines of civility. You can have an opinion, I don't mind, but please don't make claims about "proven".

Sorry, but you have been proven a liar, a cheat and a fake. End of story.

Now, can we move on? Got any evidence? Some studies you want to discuss?
 
JPK said:
Are you trying to say that there is no way that you can be foolled? That you are incapable of being mistaken about what you percieve? Impossible to be self deluded? Your eyes have never played tricks on you?

Hello JPK

No, I am not saying that this is generally the case, but that you have to use particular judgements in particular situations. There some cases where it is reasonable to conclude that you may have been tricked, and other cases where you cannot reasonably reach the same conclusion.

There are all kinds of hallucinations. Those induced by drugs can be drasticly differant from those induced by trauma or psychological dissorders. Just because a person experiences a hallucination, doesn't mean they are crazy. It could be a sign that something is wrong, but it can also be triggered by less harmfull reasons.

And it could also have not been an hallucination. :)

A couple of books you might find interesting are Why People Believe Weird Things by Michael Shermer , and The Demon-Haunted World by Carl Sagan. Both are excellant books.

Both are written by people who think like I used to think. I am familiar with their contents. I know precisely how they come to the conclusions they do, because I spent most of my life thinking like they do and reaching precisely the same conclusions. The title of the first is a bit of a giveaway. Like most of the people in this thread, he simply does not believe that paranormal phenomena could be real, and so he writes a book called "Why People Believe Weird Things.", blissfully unaware of the fact that some of the people who believe weird things do so simply because weird things actually happen to them! :D
 
JustGeoff said:
The title of the first is a bit of a giveaway. Like most of the people in this thread, he simply does not believe that paranormal phenomena could be real, and so he writes a book called "Why People Believe Weird Things.", blissfully unaware of the fact that some of the people who believe weird things do so simply because weird things actually happen to them! :D

How do you distinguish between a real phenomenon and a hallucination?
 
CFLarsen said:


Sorry, but you have been proven a liar, a cheat and a fake. End of story.

Claus, please. I don't mind what you think or believe about me, but making those sorts of unproven claims about people is insulting and clearly go against the new guidelines on civility. We have a good thing going here, please don't drag things back to the gutter.
 
CFLarsen said:


At some point, you have to look at just one phenomenon and investigate it. Simply backing down from this will certainly not lead you to the truth about paranormal phenomena.

I see no reason to understand any philosophical issues - all we have to look at is the evidence. Where is it? After we have seen it, we can discuss the philosophical implications.

{snip}
[modu]This post has been reported for uncivil behavior.

Let's try to keep cool heads. Claus, if you make blanket statements about someone, please be prepared to back them up. Everyone else, if you don't agree with something Claus (or anyone) says, challenge him on it.

The civility guidelines are meant to keep the forum viable, not protect posters from every confrontation.[/modu]
 
Lucianarchy said:
Claus, please. I don't mind what you think or believe about me, but making those sorts of unproven claims about people is insulting and clearly go against the new guidelines on civility. We have a good thing going here, please don't drag things back to the gutter.

I'm sorry if you, in the past, have not been able to refrain from this, but it doesn't change the fact that evidence has been shown. When someone lies, it is not dragging things in the gutter to point it out.

You cannot abuse the new rules to make your previous actions disappear.

Upchurch said:
[modu]Let's try to keep cool heads. Claus, if you make blanket statements about someone, please be prepared to back them up. [/modu]

Of course. Especially if challenged.

Upchurch said:
[modu]The civility guidelines are meant to keep the forum viable, not protect posters from every confrontation.[/modu]

Quite agree.
 
Upchurch said:
[modu]This post has been reported for uncivil behavior.

Let's try to keep cool heads. Claus, if you make blanket statements about someone, please be prepared to back them up. Everyone else, if you don't agree with something Claus (or anyone) says, challenge him on it.

The civility guidelines are meant to keep the forum viable, not protect posters from every confrontation.[/modu]

Of course, I personally, do not mind about dealing with confrontation. I have no problems about other people's beliefs or opinions, they are healthy. However, I do object though, to be called "clearly insane". "liar" "fake" or "fraud".
 

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