requests for citations when, and about what?[=
Any of the various claims you've made.
I gave you Dr. Raymond Moody. He's written 11 books on that area.
Does
Raymond Moody, MD, have any peer-reviewed work? Does he have anything that has even been independently tested? I was really looking for something falsifiable. Something that we could chat about, not speculative conclusions from rare, selective observation. Is Moody your only source for your belief in NDE's?
If I were to google for some citations to give you, you would just go and google for some other citations that hopefully find against NDEs.
Sham argument. You probably won't find what I'm asking for by googling it. I'm asking you for some credible basis to your beliefs. That is something you read, other than an uncritical book, that contains verifiable/verified facts that give credence to your credo, not something you did a quick search for and determine that it fits superficially.
This is how bogus this standard lazy demand for citations is.
Bogus? It's the way scientists have been reviewing hypotheses and claims for centuries. Don't criticize what you don't know.
As if you'd go off to a University Library, find the relevant articles, read them, reflect on them, and get back to me with your considered conclusion. Stop pretending.
I'm not pretending to be willing to do anything until you've done your part. You arrived with claims so the onus is on you to provide us with support for your claims, even if it isn't what we would call evidence. If you believe that I'm going to take the time to research nebulous, unsupported claims from every loon who posts that this and that unverified phenomenon exists, they you'll believe anything. Is that what I'm going to take away from this? In my view there are two possible conclusions:
- You believe all this unverified stuff but you really haven't done enough due diligence to post what anyone would consider a list of underpinning literature of significant breadth or depth.
- You will not list the basis to your beliefs because you already know or suspect that they won't stand scrutiny. Books by Moody, Cayce, Nostradamus, God, vonDaniken, etc. are not considered authoritative because they don't include falsifiable events. You probably know that and won't cite them because that type of evidence is pathetic.
BTW, I'm not just blaming you, it's kind of a habit of a lot of people on here, particularly ones who haven't much to say.
Wrong again. I wish you could blame me for the exchange of citations among scholars and the rules of evidence. I would be truly honored if anyone thought I had come up with them, even if they were wrong, and they would be. This practice existed before you were born and will continue after you die. It's the best way to efficiently and exhaustively get to the facts of the matter at hand. It's also the best way to separate the learned from the idiot. That is, who's worth the time and who isn't.
How about you and me actually have a conversation, and express our opinions and ideas without this dishonest ploy of demanding academic references for everything?
No, thank you. You've given me nothing to respond to. We could talk about the beauty of the night sky but that would be a waste of my time as I already know it's beautiful. I have no time for your "grand observations" if you don't give me enough information to be able to agree or disagree substantively.
You have the right to believe anything you want. You don't have the right to expect others to follow suit unless you give them a compelling reason. You also don't have the right to waste anyone else's time if you have nothing to offer.