Slowvehicle
Membership Drive , Co-Ordinator,, Russell's Antin
Is your brain like a radio tuner, Ed? Who is sending the signals it is picking up if you believe so?
"What's the frequency, Kenneth?"
Is your brain like a radio tuner, Ed? Who is sending the signals it is picking up if you believe so?
Do you want that to be true? I'd be interested to know why? Do you think it would be an improvement on reality? But if it were true, it would in itself be reality, wouldn't it?
ETA: This is one of the most interesting threads I've ever seen on JREF.
The thing is, Quantum Field Theory, the theory that lets us rule out these paranormal claims, is exactly that same theory that allows engineers to design and build devices like the iPhone. Quantum Field Theory is the intersection of Quantum Mechanics and Special Relativity, and the iPhone depends on both.What I'm fascinated by is the claim in the video. I don't want to discard it, but I can't ignore my own experiences of reality either. You're free to, though!
I'm just frustrated because I just watched (a few hours ago) a fifty-minute lecture of something I didn't get any of, and then with five minutes left I'm informed that this is how we know there is no life after death. It just seemed to me that there was nothing there in support of that claim.
I'm not saying there is nothing in quantum field theory that supports ruling out astrology, reincarnation and black magic, I just didn't really get how the impossibility of introducing new particles, fields or laws means that the supernatural cannot exist. Exactly why can't it exist within the limits of the Standard Model? That's not a rhetorical question, BTW.
First of all, glad you're back!
Second, what if it's not our minds that "transfer" to a mystic plane, but a duplicate that doesn't leave an imprint in the physical universe? Our life experiences would then still be governed by the laws of physics, but a "backup" version of us would retain the memories and then be able to exist in a different reality with completely different laws, if any.
Two responses to that:I don't think astrology is about the planets influencing our lives. Rather, the events in people's lives correspond with the movements of the planets, which doesn't require any type of field. It's like the airtime of the final episode of Game of Thrones corresponding to your girlfriends yoga class. One doesn't affect the other. They clashing is just a lucky coincidence that means she won't be there to ask annoying questions.
Neither of these happens, and neither is possible.Psychic abilities and past life memories is just information revealing itself on schedule.
But on this one we agree completely.Homeopathy is still snake oil.
Depends on who is using the term. If it's a layman, that might well be true. If it's a scientist, they'd probably use more specific terms like "stochastic" or "acausal" or "indeterminate", because we have mapped things out and found that they truly are stochastic, acausal, or indeterminate.Whenever the term randomness is used to fill in the gaps, you can be pretty sure the part where we spend our lives hasn't been fully mapped out. To a rabbit crossing a railroad track, the appearance of a train is random.
Is your brain like a radio tuner, Ed? Who is sending the signals it is picking up if you believe so?
That is precisely the example Dr Carroll uses in his lecture, the hypothetical "Xilbot" particle. If there were such a signal, we would know.
I consider the teapot every day, my friend.
Okay. I've avoided the question of evidence, because we all know that song and dance a little too well. There are things I consider evidence within the field known as parapsychology, or consciousness studies, but I respect that the scientific community, and you skeptics, are not convinced by that evidence. It convinces me, but not you. I have to respect that, I feel.
What I'm fascinated by is the claim in the video. I don't want to discard it, but I can't ignore my own experiences of reality either. You're free to, though!
BTW, you don't wanna know what's living in my garage.
I'll tell you a secret: All woos base their beliefs on belief. Then they try to make it sound plausible, whether with science or other people agreeing with them.
Don't judge us. We experience things that we can't explain.
You probably could, though, if it happened to you. Just look at Sam Harris and his mystic experiences that he just blows off and explains away. It works for him, but it doesn't work for everyone.
Love us anyway.
The thing is, Quantum Field Theory, the theory that lets us rule out these paranormal claims, is exactly that same theory that allows engineers to design and build devices like the iPhone. Quantum Field Theory is the intersection of Quantum Mechanics and Special Relativity, and the iPhone depends on both.
That means that if iPhones exist, there's no astrology, no homeopathy, no life after death.
iPhones exist.
I'll tell you a secret: All woos base their beliefs on belief. Then they try to make it sound plausible, whether with science or other people agreeing with them.
Don't judge us. We experience things that we can't explain.
You probably could, though, if it happened to you. Just look at Sam Harris and his mystic experiences that he just blows off and explains away. It works for him, but it doesn't work for everyone.
Love us anyway.
You don't need to understand atomic physics to do biology.Surely, your iPhone argument would be a little more convincing had you been talking about Warp speed space ships or Star Trek-like teleportation. I'm sure the people who built the first steam engine felt like gods. Doesn't mean much. Also wasn't there something in the video about how we don't need to understand smaller stuff than the atom to understand the atom? Something like that? So to build a computer, we hardly need to understand all of reality, right?
Two responses to that:
One, events in people's lives do not correspond with the movements of the planets. Except Earth, because we have seasons.
Two, there would not be any correspondence if there were no cause.
I'm sorry about the special pleading. My bad. Here's some more.
To state that what we experience while alive comes to an end when we die is a huge assumption for which there is no evidence.
Unless it's all in the mind?
Okay. I've avoided the question of evidence, because we all know that song and dance a little too well.
There are things I consider evidence within the field known as parapsychology, or consciousness studies, but I respect that the scientific community, and you skeptics, are not convinced by that evidence. It convinces me, but not you. I have to respect that, I feel.
What I'm fascinated by is the claim in the video. I don't want to discard it, but I can't ignore my own experiences of reality either. You're free to, though!
If you can't detect it, why would you think it exists?Why would there have to be a machine and why would we have to be able to detect it?
Neither of these [reincarnation and psychic ability] happens, and neither is possible.
That's the sad thing about not being a physicist, or a scientist of any kind. The logic doesn't add up. That's why I find the proposition interesting, that we now know (almost) all about the material world (here on Earth) so there can't be any new major discoveries, like what we're talking about right now.
At the same time, when your own experience of reality differs from the reality the physicists describe, and you don't want to deny any part of reality, you just want the truth, then it becomes impossible to merge the ideas presented in the video with experience.
Well, I've pretty much known that all my life, but it's only in more recent years that I dotted the i's and crossed the t's.I'll tell you a secret: All woos base their beliefs on belief. Then they try to make it sound plausible, whether with science or other people agreeing with them.
Whatever you experience, its interpretation takes place in your brain and the conclusion you come to is based on the information and ideas your brain already contains, isn't it? If any of the explanations you decide on comes under a heading of 'woo - not possible', then it should temporarily be put under the 'don't know' heading until further noticeDon't judge us. We experience things that we can't explain.
I've looked at the lot - palmistry, astrology, revisionist history, flying saucers, etc but always with the question 'Is this TRUE?' running alongside my reading. A couple of things took a time to rationalise, but when I learnt about how cold reading and memory work, then the very small question mark was no longer needed.You probably could, though, if it happened to you. Just look at Sam Harris and his mystic experiences that he just blows off and explains away. It works for him, but it doesn't work for everyone.
I'll tell you a secret: All woos base their beliefs on belief. Then they try to make it sound plausible, whether with science or other people agreeing with them.
Don't judge us. We experience things that we can't explain.
You probably could, though, if it happened to you. Just look at Sam Harris and his mystic experiences that he just blows off and explains away. It works for him, but it doesn't work for everyone.
Love us anyway.