Waterman
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2008
- Messages
- 251
In both cases, my detractors were wrong.
I saw 'something', that was made to look exactly as my memory captured it. I saw the Hope Diamond, and some surrounding stones.
That my 5-6 year old eyes and memory 'captured' that accurately, was and is astonishing to me.
I HAD written it off, simply because it should have been impossible, that I saw what I did. That diamond has been in the Smithsonian, and well beyond arms reach for some time.
That my memory was 'confirmed', NOT debunked, is my observation.
It was NOT a fiction, dream, or hallucination.
That a 5 or 6 year old was unable to recognize a 'fake' is hardly relevant.
Actually this is exactly the point I was trying to make earlier. Separting interpretations of the event from the events themselves. While you were there I am sure that you were accompanied by one or more adults and they probalby were discussing the collection and in that conversation I am sure that it came up that it was a 'display only' and that it would be OK for kids to handle. You memory of the event is not perfect enough to include that conversation (unless the adults were playing up tht it was ral for the effect on the kids). As the memory of the event comes back you have only partial recollection and "knew" that she handled the actual Hope Diamond. OK so the visual took place but your interpetation of it was false and was demonstrationed to be false as the diamond was fake.
That was what people are trying to say, you witnessed something in the past and that memory of that event cannot be complete or perfect. You have extrapolated from what was observed to imply more than what you actually witnessed. Lights moving in a funny way does NOT equal intelligently piloted craft.