REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

The answer to Evolution vs. Intelligent Design

POSTED BY: BADGERSHAT
UPDATED: Tuesday, April 25, 2006 12:38
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Friday, August 12, 2005 8:37 PM

SERGEANTX


I dunno, HK. Maybe I'm just arguing semantics here. But it seems like a lot of people want to have it both ways. They want to say something is real, but if you try to treat it like it is, they tell you it's 'supernatural'.

Now, I'm not dismissing anything in particular here, least of all your personal experiences. I'm just trying to figure out what people mean by 'supernatural'. Because in my mind, if it's real, it's natural. Maybe not common, or even comprehensible to our minds, but part of the whole of reality and at least approachable by science.

I say that with the recognition that for many things science may not be the best way to understand them. Emotions are the best example, you can describe 'love' with all the psychology books in the world at your disposal, but until you experience it, you never really understand it.

I am curious though, how would you characterize the experiences you mentioned, were they 'supernatural'? If so, what does that mean to you?


SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Friday, August 12, 2005 9:13 PM

HKCAVALIER


Calling something "supernatural" to me is just like puting quotes around it--the meaning is "this here thing is questionable." I'm happier with the term "paranormal." Also, "non-ordinary" is nice.

Science is best at dealing with dead things, physical things; things that remain the same when you take them out of their natural context; things that can't change their minds on a whim; things that aren't conscious. I would go so far as to say that anything to do with consciousness is very unlikely to yield to scientific study because of the phenomenon of volition.

Emotions are an aspect of consciousness. They come and go by their own rules. It is very hard to "measure" them. Laboratory results can be scetchy because people have emotional reactions to the laboratory experience itself. The act of analysis changes the kind of data produced. Psychic phenomena are exactly the same way, only more so. Why should people therefore make the leap to "THEY DON'T EXIST?" Laziness? What people call the "supernatural" is a catch-all for these beings and experiences that I would term phenomenologically "shy;" they only appear under certain conditions--conditions which science has heretofore been unable to quantify.

Rupert Sheldrake is making headway though with his morphic field theory. You should check him out.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Saturday, August 13, 2005 1:00 AM

GROUNDED


HKCavalier: The reason people make the leap to 'psychic phenomena don't exist' is not out of laziness, but out of logic. People claim to have been abducted by aliens, but for someone outside the experience there is no reason to believe this is true. The same is true of paranormal phenomena - they may indeed be real, but there is currently no reason to believe they are.

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Saturday, August 13, 2005 7:44 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Grounded:
HKCavalier: The reason people make the leap to 'psychic phenomena don't exist' is not out of laziness, but out of logic. People claim to have been abducted by aliens, but for someone outside the experience there is no reason to believe this is true. The same is true of paranormal phenomena - they may indeed be real, but there is currently no reason to believe they are.



That's some strange, arid, inhumane logic that discounts the testimony of millions of people over the course of decades, the vast majority of whom have absolutely nothing to gain from lying other than the eternal scorn of folks like you. Sure they may not have all the details right after suffering such trauma, they may be entirely wrong in their analyses, but to presume that all of these folks over the years experience nothing out of the ordinary defies credulity. Is it all just a conspiracy of publicity hounds?

There's all kind of reason to believe people when you haven't experienced what they have--it's called gaining an education. I'm not certain of this, but I'd bet that you're pretty selective indeed with this logic of yours; I'll bet you regularly and without thinking accept the existence of phenomena without personal experience thereof because you respect the source and because it doesn't challenge your cherished beliefs. That you have such far-reaching disrespect for so many of your fellow humans looks a lot more like arrogance than logic to me.

And please, spare me if you will the typical misanthropic pseudo-justifications of the "humans are stupid animals" and "humans are like squalling babies who'll do anything for attention" variety.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Saturday, August 13, 2005 7:55 AM

SERGEANTX


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Rupert Sheldrake is making headway though with his morphic field theory. You should check him out.



I'll look him up. Maybe I've just constructed an artificially narrow definition of 'supernatural' for myself. What you're talking about seems to be very much a part of the 'natural' world, just not something that lends itself to traditional scientific investigation. Is that a fair assessment?

SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Saturday, August 13, 2005 9:45 AM

CITIZEN


Quote:

Originally posted by Grounded:
HKCavalier: The reason people make the leap to 'psychic phenomena don't exist' is not out of laziness, but out of logic.


No, Its out of shortsightedness. Quantum Mechanics allows for some pretty strange things to happen, farseeing, telepathy etc. Theres no reason to assume that some day what we presently call supernatural will one day be natural and explained by science.
Once even the rising and the setting of the Sun was a supernatural event, the changing of the seasons were controlled by gods, but now they are simply scientifically explained natural phenomena.

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Sunday, August 21, 2005 2:58 PM

TRUTH


Quote:

Originally posted by BadgersHat:

(which is still expanding,...)




Not just expanding, but contrary to popular belief...accelerating. That's true too and you can look that up as well.



--Jefé The Hat

***************************
Brilliant, no?



10 out of 10 people statistically die in their lifetime.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 12:36 AM

GROUNDED


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Quote:

Originally posted by Grounded:
HKCavalier: The reason people make the leap to 'psychic phenomena don't exist' is not out of laziness, but out of logic. People claim to have been abducted by aliens, but for someone outside the experience there is no reason to believe this is true. The same is true of paranormal phenomena - they may indeed be real, but there is currently no reason to believe they are.



That's some strange, arid, inhumane logic that discounts the testimony of millions of people over the course of decades, the vast majority of whom have absolutely nothing to gain from lying other than the eternal scorn of folks like you. Sure they may not have all the details right after suffering such trauma, they may be entirely wrong in their analyses, but to presume that all of these folks over the years experience nothing out of the ordinary defies credulity. Is it all just a conspiracy of publicity hounds?

There's all kind of reason to believe people when you haven't experienced what they have--it's called gaining an education. I'm not certain of this, but I'd bet that you're pretty selective indeed with this logic of yours; I'll bet you regularly and without thinking accept the existence of phenomena without personal experience thereof because you respect the source and because it doesn't challenge your cherished beliefs. That you have such far-reaching disrespect for so many of your fellow humans looks a lot more like arrogance than logic to me.

And please, spare me if you will the typical misanthropic pseudo-justifications of the "humans are stupid animals" and "humans are like squalling babies who'll do anything for attention" variety.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.



If you re-read my post you should see that I was careful to word it in a manner that I hoped would not offend you, since you'd mentioned previously to have had experiences of the paranormal. I'd appreciate it if you offered me the same courtesy and didn't make sweeping - and offensive - assumptions about my character.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 1:33 AM

FANTASTICLAUGHINGFAIRY


Well, if I do believe in God (which at the moment I'm not altogether sure about - I'm still forming opinions on that point) I certainly think he did it by starting off the Big Bang - knowing what would happen. Although this does completely destroy ANY credibility in Genesis really. But I disagree with it completely anyway - it was written by some random men who had no idea how God created the universe and thought they'd make themselves more powerful by villifying women - anyway, I'm not going to go into a whole frminist rant, but I just dislike Genesis anyway.
So yeah - if there's a God - I think he started the Big Bang.

Thoughtful FLF(well ish)

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Monday, August 22, 2005 1:46 AM

CITIZEN


God and the universe may not be seperate of course. Theres nothing to say that God is not the universe and therfore the universe is infact god...
As for Genesis I agree. I believe as I always have that religous texts are stories that give you a guide as to how to live your life, not a literal explination of the beginnings/workings/endings of the universe.

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 7:35 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Grounded:
If you re-read my post you should see that I was careful to word it in a manner that I hoped would not offend you, since you'd mentioned previously to have had experiences of the paranormal. I'd appreciate it if you offered me the same courtesy and didn't make sweeping - and offensive - assumptions about my character.



Hey, Grounded, I appreciate you writing me, even though I was rude to you. I see that you did not intend to offend me with your post. Only problem is, you really did. On the one hand you seem to credit that I have had paranormal experiences () and yet in your previous post you said that it is not logical to believe people who make such claims (). I presumed that you consider yourself a logical person, so what you were saying in essence, after sifting through your nonconfrontational abstractions of "people" this and "people" that, is that you think it's logical to disbelieve me. So after several thoughtful posts explaining the logic of my position, I didn't take your dismissal very kindly. I certainly could have been more diplomatic about it, but I was feeling a little besieged.

You know, if you have to carefully word a post not to offend someone, chances are they'll know what you're doing, and feel offended anyway.

Getting back to the very intelligent and yet evolving conversation at hand (sorry, couldn't help myself): to me it is perfectly logical to believe folks that claim to be abducted by aliens because of the obvious traumatic nature of these experiences which they describe. I've talked to some people who "claim" to be abducted and it's not cool or pretty or a badge of honor, it's a really disgusting and disturbing memory that they dearly wish were not true. I've worked with ordinary rape survivors as well (I am one), and the experiences seem to have a lot in common. People do not tend to make up rape stories. Certainly, some do, but such antisocial individuals are in the extreme minority of rape cases. These kinds of experiences scar a person; the last thing a rape survivor wants is to be a rape survivor. It would be illogical for me to dismiss their claims without very good reason.

In my experience, people don't lie unless there's something to be gained by lying. Those people who make up outrageous adventures to amaze their friends and members of the press are usually pretty easy to spot.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 8:21 AM

SERGEANTX


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
In my experience, people don't lie unless there's something to be gained by lying. Those people who make up outrageous adventures to amaze their friends and members of the press are usually pretty easy to spot.



So, not to be flippant or a smart-ass, but how do you spot them?

Or, more generally, what kinds of stories would you be unlikely to believe? Are we unreasonable to ever disbelieve claims of the paranormal?

Again, I'm not trying to poke at you here, HK, but I'm curious where you draw the line. You seem to be offended that people doubt claims of the paranormal in general. I'm not sure that's fair.

Granted, if you've experienced something that people will discount on the face of it, I can see how that would be very frustrating. But can you really blame people for assuming such claims are likely to have naturalistic explanation?

SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Monday, August 22, 2005 10:16 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by SergeantX:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
In my experience, people don't lie unless there's something to be gained by lying. Those people who make up outrageous adventures to amaze their friends and members of the press are usually pretty easy to spot.



So, not to be flippant or a smart-ass, but how do you spot them?


Couple things: Sergeant, hey, I can tell you're sincere and curious about something of which you don't have a thorough-going understanding. First of all, 'cause you say so. More than once. You're direct. Mostly consistent, but not overly so. It's stuff like that which tells me a person is being honest. Beyond that, I have found that I have a sensitivity to sound. This is more or less in the area of intuition, but lies often have an odd, telling "sound" to them.

Are you aware of the phenomenon of reversed speech? If you play a recording of a person's voice in a heightened state of emotion backwards, very often you will be able to discern very clear words and phrases, usually when they contradict what the forward speech is saying. I had a neighbor who was hugely into this stuff and he played some of Bill Clinton's testimony during the Monika Lewinsky scandal for me. I remember hearing Clinton's voice, utterly dejected and defeated saying, "I'm sorry." It was the saddest most pathetic "I'm sorry" I've ever heard. Interestingly, people have found that when you reverse the "speech" of preverbal children you will often get fully articulated sentences. I heard a recording of a child playing with his father while he took a bath. He was just making baby noises, but when it was played backwards I heard clear as a bell, "Get my ball, Robert." It was uncanny. One reversal I heard which was fascinating was a recording of a man yelling, "There's a fire!" in a dentist office where there was, you know, a fire. When the recording was reversed, the word "FIRE!" was repeated twice. Very interesting stuff.

I know, I know! It sounds really improbable, but I was there. Most of the time when you play a recorded voice backward, you get the meaningless backward sounds that you'd expect. But, apparently, in moments of intense emotion or dishonesty something of the truth is imprinted in the voice; something the subconscious mind hears. Sensitive people, children and animals seem to pick up on this stuff.

Quote:

Are we unreasonable to ever disbelieve claims of the paranormal?

Of course not. People make stuff up all the time.

Here's a thing: the enemy of intuition is desire. If you want something to be true, it's a lot harder to get any reliable intuitive information about it. That's why it's generally difficult for psychics to read themselves; there's too much at stake to get a clear picture most of the time. Belief systems have a lot to do with the desire of the believers. So if you don't want paranormal phenomena to be real, it will be harder to discern if any of it is. Conversely, if you do want paranormal phenomena to be real, that too will cloud your judgment. A lot of people I know dearly want this kind of stuff to be real, they dearly want it to happen to them and they will believe any damn thing.

In reality, everything has its upside and its downside. Nobody I know who really deals with nonhuman consciouses or clairvoyance or telepathy is getting high off the stuff. Like everything in life, it ain't all it's cracked up to be.

Quote:

Again, I'm not trying to poke at you here, HK, but I'm curious where you draw the line. You seem to be offended that people doubt claims of the paranormal in general. I'm not sure that's fair.

Whenever I have a really profound psychic insight, or experience a really intense manifestation like that thing that attacked my girlfriend, a part of my mind really thinks I must be going insane. The materialistic/literalist/logic-obsessed part of my mind that thinks it's the only thing keeping me alive and sane wants very badly to restructure these experiences into hallucination/bad dream/didn't happen. The night my girlfriend was attacked, I saw a shadowy, smokey thing that looked like a pair of arms and a squat torso jump out of a hedge and rake its claws across my girlfriend's legs, knocking her on her ass. There were three deep rents in the flesh of each leg just above the knee. She bled like crazy. The actual attack happened in maybe a tenth of a second; blink and I woulda missed it. So, the slavishly literal minded consensus reality junky in me started gibbering, "It didn't happen! You just thought it happened! Things like that don't exist! She fell is all! Scraped her knees! That's it! Etc." I had to ask myself, "But then, how could she have scraped her knees and fallen backward on her ass, without her knees ever touching the pavement?" Even so, I had to coax myself into mentioning it to her back at my appartment after we stopped the bleeding and she calmed down. When I did tell her, she burst into tears. "You saw it too???" she asked. This thing had been periodically attacking her since she was a child, but she had never before had a witness, so she thought she was insane. It's a lot of work to maintain my equilibrium during these moments. No matter how often this stuff happens, there's a part of me that clings to our conventional notions of what can and cannot be.

So you're right in a way, I shouldn't begrudge folks their skepticism. But I do. Because I have to suffer this kind of dismissal and insult pretty regularly in public. Imagine if you were sighted and everyone in your world was blind and told you you were making up all this "seeing" business. It's hard not to be a little unfair, when people start saying that parts of your perception--parts of you--don't exist.

Quote:

Granted, if you've experienced something that people will discount on the face of it, I can see how that would be very frustrating. But can you really blame people for assuming such claims are likely to have naturalistic explanation?

To my mind, all this stuff has naturalistic explanations; we just haven't come up with all of them yet. All this stuff is real and natural. However, there's a difference between a real, coherent naturalistic explanation and simply, self-servingly explaining something away.

Sergeant, thanks for your questions. Being an intuitive person, I tend not to put this stuff into words without provocation of some kind. I value the opportunity you have afforded me to put my thoughts in order.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 11:09 AM

CITIZEN


HK:
With your obvious knowledge of this subject I was wondering if I can run something by you.
I mentioned elsewhere in this thread I believe that I have had what would be considered supernatural experiences, although nothing on the scale you've experienced.
I've seen documentries where people have had dreams that have come true. They are almost exclusivly of the very open to interpretation type. I beleive one mans was along the lines of dogs running through the woods, which apparently predicted a plane crash (I saw the program sometime ago and my memory may not be perfect tho).
The dreams I have had, and continue to have are very different, they are precise, like memories of an event, but more vivid and before it actually happens. When I was younger the period of time was measured in years, but the interval between dream and event has shortened.
I remember one particular instance, where I had a dream of myself walking across a concreted area toward a group of people, and then I felt a strong pain on the side of my head, I didn't recognise the place or people, but somehow knew that it wasn't just a dream. Years later, after I had started secondary school, I was leaving a class room and walking across the concreted area of the playground toward some of the teachers at my school. I was then hit on the side of my head by a stray Basketball.
The big thing is that most of these 'premonitions' are of fairly mundane events, and that I can control, to a degree, my actions/thoughts during the dream itself, but not during the event.
I realise this doesn't lend anything to the discussion but I really never had the chance to speak to someone who has experinced something 'in the same vein' as this. I was wondering if you can shed any light on this at all, or at least point me in any directions, you know. Just interested is all...

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 12:20 PM

GROUNDED


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Hey, Grounded, I appreciate you writing me, even though I was rude to you. I see that you did not intend to offend me with your post. Only problem is, you really did. On the one hand you seem to credit that I have had paranormal experiences () and yet in your previous post you said that it is not logical to believe people who make such claims (). I presumed that you consider yourself a logical person, so what you were saying in essence, after sifting through your nonconfrontational abstractions of "people" this and "people" that, is that you think it's logical to disbelieve me. So after several thoughtful posts explaining the logic of my position, I didn't take your dismissal very kindly. I certainly could have been more diplomatic about it, but I was feeling a little besieged.



Ok I'll try and clarify by means of example. A friend of mine lives along the street and his father has a background in engineering. His father also claims to have seen a ghost. Now I've always respected him, and I still do, but I don't believe he saw a ghost. Whatever he saw, in that moment, I'm sure it felt totally and completely real to him for his brain to interpret things the way it did.

Now from what you're saying, you're telling me that, because I respect him, I should believe his claim to be the most likely explanation?

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Monday, August 22, 2005 1:31 PM

HKCAVALIER


(At this point I feel the need to politely apologize to BadgersHat for hijacking his thread. Please feel free, BH, to redirect the thread any time.)

Greetings Citizen! The kind of documentary you're talking about is all too common. Why these documentarians can't seem to find better subjects than they do, I've never understood.

All kinds of people I know have dreams like yours. I've had dreams like yours. That quality of memory that you mention really rings a bell; that odd feeling that you're remembering something that hasn't happened yet.

The apparent triviality of the typical premonition also rings true for me. I once was really downhearted about getting some shoes. I kinda hate the traditional male uniform of blues and browns and black; the ever-lovin' sameness of all menswear departments in this country. So I kinda hate shopping. Anyway, I needed some shoes and just wasn't finding what I wanted in any stores. So I had a dream where I went into a shoe store and they had all these bizarre moccasins with neon lights sewn into them that blinked and flashed. They were outrageous. Back in the corner of the store though, they had these other moccasins that were more like boots and they were plain and very well made with rubberized soles, kind of futuristic and primitive at once (kinda like me). Next day, I'm out shopping, there's a tiny shoe store with a huge going out of business sign (without the sign I would never have noticed it). It was their last day. Anyway, at the back of the store, in a big box that they were already packing things into I found a pair of the exact shoe from my dream. They were made by Nike, of all things! They were literally, the shoes of my dreams!

Of course, my first thought after buying them and leaving the store was, "How is it that I can manifest freakin' shoes, but the rest of my life is such a mess? Why can't I manifest a lasting relationship, or a good job, or a landlord that isn't a total nut?" Etc.

The best answer that I've come up with is that we order reality in some pretty erroneous ways. These premonitions, deja vu, that kind of thing aren't so subject intensive as we assume them to be; but are markers on the way, like landmarks that, for whatever reason, call attention to themselves to help us navigate through our lives. You know the drill, "Go fifty miles until you get to the tree that looks like it's got a big face on it." The tree itself may be fascinating but the traveler who knows where she's going is naturally more focused on the journey. Thing is, we've all but forgotten the road, our purpose and our goals, so when these psychic landmarks come into view, we tend not to have a clue what they mean. At least not on a conscious level.

On what I'd term a superconscious level, they're part of a feedback loop of some kind. These moments mark when we have realized some part of "the plan." These moments are on "the map." What I've taught myself to do at such moments is to be mindful of where my attention is, what thoughts occur the moment before; because the thoughts, what we're thinking, what our conscious purpose at that moment is--these things are cues to what we're really here for; these are moments when our superconscious purpose and our conscious lives resolve into a single reality.

You might be able to remember your train of thought as you crossed to those teachers, what you wanted to say to them, or what particular mission you were on that day, or how you felt. Sometimes we have a fleeting thought that triggers these moments and we lose it under all the incredulous noise our minds spew to cope with so much meaning (it's this constant white noise of disbelief in the face of meaning that keeps so many people from realizing their true destiny; the presence of nonhuman consciousness tends to make us all at least a little hysterical). These events are clues to our higher purpose, clues to where we're really headed in this life. Or so I've come to understand.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 1:49 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Grounded:
Ok I'll try and clarify by means of example. A friend of mine lives along the street and his father has a background in engineering. His father also claims to have seen a ghost. Now I've always respected him, and I still do, but I don't believe he saw a ghost. Whatever he saw, in that moment, I'm sure it felt totally and completely real to him for his brain to interpret things the way it did.

Now from what you're saying, you're telling me that, because I respect him, I should believe his claim to be the most likely explanation?


No, I'm not saying that you should believe your friend's dad, only that disbelieving him may not be the most logical reaction (of course, on the other hand, it might be).

Um, Grounded, we seem to be at cross purposes, you're certainly misunderstanding what I meant. You told me that disbelief is logical in and of itself. I was trying to refute that.

Your friend's father may or may not have seen a ghost. If you base your conclusion that he did not see one on an assumption that ghosts do not exist, then you're not dealing with logic, but with the limits of your belief system. If however, you base your conclusion on evidence that his dad was lying or confused by something, then you might have a logical argument. There are a lot of details to the story that you're leaving out. I get the feeling that you don't believe in ghosts. Do you?

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 2:04 PM

CHRISISALL


HK, once a few years back I had a kind of 'waking dream', where I was apparently awake, but with my eyes closed. And then the view of the room faded in; I was intrigued, you see, my eyes were still closed. I looked around the room, a little amused, thinking I must still be asleep, dreaming...until I opened my eyes fully awake, and was now seeing what I had already been seeing with my eyes closed. Weird. I closed my eyes and layed back down, and suddenly I was seeing, and feeling that I was standing in cold rain, my feet in mud to my ankles. I was standing next to what appeared to be a battering ram on wheels, or maybe on a big cart. My companions were Asian, in similar brown garb, like poor, dirty, rag-tag soldiers. The emotions of defeat and disgrace filled me. And a single thought flew through my mind, " Might never see home again".
I opened my eyes, fully awake. And somewhat unsettled.
I feel that I was experiencing a flash of a previous (and possibly partial) life my energy had been connected to.

No funny on this one, what do you think?

Chrisisall

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Monday, August 22, 2005 2:07 PM

CITIZEN


In a strange way a lot of what you've said makes alot of sense to me.
I can't remember my train of thought for any but the most recent of events, but the recent ones focus largly on where I am, where I'm going and sometimes, to a degree how this fits in with a group of people I met not to long ago. Which is why I say it makes sense to me as my train of thought at the time seems to be me thinking about where my life has come from, and where it is going.
My thought processes then move on to trying to consiously change what is happening half-way through the event, something I consitently fail to do I may add. Though I think that has more to do with my desire to see if I can change things, as I said I seem able to change things during my dreams, but not during the event.

Anyway, thanks HK for your reply, you have given me a great deal to think about and I will endeavour to look more into this subject.

I think that I see the supernatural in a different way to many people. For instance I would see your previous example with your girlfriend being attacked as maybe some rogue element of her own psyche manifesting something physical.
I assume the ussual interpretation could be that what attacked her was some sort of devil or evil spirit.
I dunno...

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Monday, August 22, 2005 2:29 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by fantasticlaughingfairy:
I'm not going to go into a whole feminist rant, but I just dislike Genesis anyway.

I sense the good in you, FLF. The Patriarchal Anglo-Saxon belief systems have not driven it from you fully...

Luke Chrisiswalker

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Monday, August 22, 2005 2:35 PM

CITIZEN


Princess Leia? I intend to but not until we've been properly introduced...

Sorry, couldn't resist...
*Returns to letting chrisisall do the funny*

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2005 12:56 AM

GROUNDED


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Your friend's father may or may not have seen a ghost. If you base your conclusion that he did not see one on an assumption that ghosts do not exist, then you're not dealing with logic, but with the limits of your belief system. If however, you base your conclusion on evidence that his dad was lying or confused by something, then you might have a logical argument. There are a lot of details to the story that you're leaving out. I get the feeling that you don't believe in ghosts. Do you?

HKCavalier



There's that phrase 'belief system' creeping in again where it doesn't belong. I'll try and be clearer still: if someone came up to me tomorrow with compelling and reasoned arguments that support the existence of ghosts/paranormal phenomena etc. and backed them up with evidence that was not purely anecdotal, then I'd be more than happy to believe them. I do not use the word 'believe' in the sense of having faith in someone or something. As I said before, I'm not stating categorically that paranormal phenomena don't exist.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2005 8:32 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:
In a strange way a lot of what you've said makes alot of sense to me.


One of the principles of my psychic work is that a psychic is unable to tell you anything that you don't already know is true; all we psychics do is confirm and bring out information that is already available to you. This is a built-in safeguard against charlatans, by the way; if what someone tells you doesn't ring true, it's probably not. On the other hand, you may not be particularly honest with yourself and so miss the truth of a thing--but still, you get to decide what to believe and what not to. We're only ready to hear what we're ready to hear (our readiness is the result of a whole developemental process which is unique to each individual). Be that as it may, on some level you know these things, we all know these things, but we have errected cyclopean systems of denial and self-distrust to keep this knowledge out of circulation. Why? Fear. Fear of our own power, to be precise. I think Nelson Mandela said it best:

Quote:

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It is not just in some of us; it is in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.

Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:
I think that I see the supernatural in a different way to many people. For instance I would see your previous example with your girlfriend being attacked as maybe some rogue element of her own psyche manifesting something physical.
I assume the ussual interpretation could be that what attacked her was some sort of devil or evil spirit.
I dunno...


Ah, but see, you do know, Citizen. For those "in the know" your opposing interpretations are both understood to be true at the same time. You can find this information in the primary Goëtic text, The Key of Solomon. (Goëtia is the branch of ritual magic principally concerned with demonology and demon control. Oh, my lordy, I'm footnoting--make it stop!) The inner western traditions have understood for centuries the phrase "as above, so below" to mean that the outside world is a mirror to our inner world, and vicy-vercy.

(Straying back to the original topic of the thread for a moment, the evident process of evolution is the external manifestation of the inner process we call creativity--hey, I just defined God: God is creativity.)

Put another way, demons can be thought of similarly to how we understand psychotropic drugs. We know that the only reason LSD etc. work is that they mimic existing brain chemistry so closely. Interestingly, in practice, demons tend to manifest physically or externally only when they are losing control and being expelled. Most of the time they function exactly like a personal psychological compulsions, so exactly in fact, that that is exactly what they are.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2005 4:21 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


HK,

I have a question for you, tho I realize the answer may be that I am not what I appear to be and think I am.

How is it that I make lights turn off? Parking-lot lights, street lights and the like. I walk close by and, bhhzzzzt, they go out. It happens most when I am concentrating on something from the day, usually a knotty technical or union problem, or a conflicted conversation. Sometimes I joke to myself - well, it's just the luminosity of my extremely pale skin reading as a bright light to the sensor. But I still wonder, why .... And I admit, it happens enough that it does perturb me somewhat.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2005 7:44 PM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
How is it that I make lights turn off? Parking-lot lights, street lights and the like. I walk close by and, bhhzzzzt, they go out. It happens most when I am concentrating on something from the day, usually a knotty technical or union problem, or a conflicted conversation.


Hey Rue,

That's an easy one (and you practically answered the question yourself, naturally). Anger. Highly focused yet powerfully suppressed anger. Anger shoved far far away and out. Which is not to imply that you don't also express your anger, just that you got a heck of a lot more of it than you might realize. (How's your blood pressure? Keep an eye on that for me, will ya?) Something to do with the electromagnetic field of the body, aka your aura. I know a couple women, good friends of mine, who have the same tendency. One of them tends to break electrical devices pretty regularly as well. For whatever reason this sort of thing is most common in women and it can be particularly intense in teenage girls (one of the paranormal side effects of patriarchal conditioning, perhaps). Much of what gets called poltergeist activity--stuff falling off of walls, lights suddenly going out, furniture thumping around, small objects being moved about the house--can be traced back to the suppressed fury of a teenage girl living in the house. It's actually not too far off from the demon-as-rogue-element-of-your-own-psyche that Citizen mentioned.

You ever see the film Olivier, Olivier? The daughter in that movie has this affect and the film goes a long way toward showing exactly how she developed it. Very remarkable film.

And Rue, I mean it about the blood pressure.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Friday, August 26, 2005 6:33 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Briefly excerpted: please note that the self-stated goal of the Discovery Institute (the machine behind ID) is to abolish science as we know it and replace it with traditional Christian beliefs.

http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/2437/wedge.html

The "Wedge Document"

NOTE FROM LENNY FLANK: The Wedge Document is an internal memorandum from the Discovery Institute (the leading proponent of Intelligent Designer "Theory") that was leaked to the Internet in 1999. The Discovery Institute later admitted to its authenticity. Since then, Discovery Institute hasn't talked very much about the document, or the strategy it outlines.

The Wedge Document is reproduced here, in full.

CENTER FOR THE RENEWAL OF SCIENCE & CULTURE

INTRODUCTION

The proposition that human beings are created in the image of God is one of the bedrock principles on which Western civilization was built. Yet a little over a century ago, this cardinal idea came under wholesale attack by intellectuals drawing on the discoveries of modern science. This materialistic conception of reality eventually infected virtually every area of our culture, from politics and economics to literature and art.

The cultural consequences of this triumph of materialism were devastating. Materialists denied the existence of objective moral standards ... undermined personal responsibility ... and spawned a virulent strain of utopianism.

Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture seeks nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies.


FIVE YEAR STRATEGIC PLAN SUMMARY


We are convinced that in order to defeat materialism, we must cut it off at its source. That source is scientific materialism.

Phase I is the essential component of everything that comes afterward. In Phase I we are supporting vital witting (writing ?) and research at the sites most likely to crack the materialist edifice.


Phase II. We seek to cultivate and convince influential individuals in pnnt and broadcast media, as well as think tank leaders, scientists and academics, congressional staff, talk show hosts, college and seminary presidents and faculty, future talent and potential academic allies. (The) combination of scientific and scholarly expertise and media and political connections makes the Wedge unique, and also prevents it from being "merely academic." Alongside a focus on influential opinion-makers, we also seek to build up a popular base of support among our natural constituency, namely, Chnstians.

Phase III. Once our research and writing have had time to mature, and the public prepared for the reception of design theory, we will move toward direct confrontation with the advocates of materialist science through challenge conferences in significant academic settings. We will also pursue possible legal assistance in response to resistance to the integration of design theory into public school science curricula.

GOALS

* To defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural and political legacies.

* To replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and hurnan beings are created by God.



******
NOTE THAT THERE IS NOTHING HERE FOR THOSE WHO WANT TO EXPAND SCIENCE INTO AN INQUIRY OF THE RARELY OBSERVED. IT IS NOT AN ATTEMPT TO EXPAND SCIENCE, BUT TO ABOLISH IT AND REPLACE IT WITH CHRISTIANTIY.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Friday, August 26, 2005 6:52 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


These are generally lengthy articles from which I culled short excerpts. They may not be active anymore, you might find secondary sources by searching on extended quotes.


While some scientists (even rarer prominent ones) believe in God, they rarely confuse religion with science:


http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/23/national/23believers.html

Scientists Speak Up on Mix of God and Science
By CORNELIA DEAN

"It (faith) should not be a taboo subject, but frankly it often is in scientific circles," said Francis S. Collins, who directs the National Human Genome Research Institute and who speaks freely about his Christian faith.

Although some scientists embrace religious faith, they also embrace science as it has been defined for centuries. ... This belief in science - that scientific ideas must be provisional and capable of being overturned by evidence - sets them apart from those who endorse creationism or its doctrinal cousin, intelligent design, both of which depend on the existence of a supernatural force.

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company


ID proponents attack what they think are weaknesses in evolutionary theory, but the theory is far more fruitful than ID, which so far has failed to advance ANY testable proposals:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/22/national/22design.html?th&emc=th

In Explaining Life's Complexity, Darwinists and Doubters Clash
By KENNETH CHANG

The proponents of intelligent design, a school of thought that some have argued should be taught alongside evolution in the nation's schools, say that the complexity and diversity of life go beyond what evolution can explain.

It is an argument that appeals to many Americans of faith.

But mainstream scientists say that the claims of intelligent design run counter to a century of research supporting the explanatory and predictive power of Darwinian evolution.

The theory has unlocked many of the mysteries of the natural world. For example, by studying the skeletons of whales, evolutionary scientists have been able to trace the history of their descent from small-hoofed land mammals. They made predictions about what the earliest water-dwelling whales might look like. And, in 1994, paleontologists reported discovering two such species, with many of the anatomical features that scientists had predicted.

But nowhere has evolution been more powerful than in its prediction that there must be a means to pass on information from one generation to another. Darwin did not know the biological mechanism of inheritance, but the theory of evolution required one.

The discovery of DNA, the sequencing of the human genome, the pinpointing of genetic diseases and the discovery that a continuum of life from a single cell to a human brain can be detected in DNA are all a result of evolutionary theory.
........

Dr. Behe (ID proponent) said that if he was correct, then the E. coli in Dr. Lenski's lab would evolve in small ways but never change in such a way that the bacteria would develop entirely new abilities.

In fact, such an ability seems to have developed.
Dr. Lenski said his experiment was not intended to explore this aspect of evolution, but nonetheless, "We have recently discovered a pretty dramatic exception, one where a new and surprising function has evolved," he said.


ID has been more successful as a well-funded political movement of conservative Christians than it has been as a science:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/21/national/21evolve.html?th&emc=th


Politicized Scholars Put Evolution on the Defensive
By JODI WILGOREN
SEATTLE - When President Bush plunged into the debate over the teaching of evolution this month, saying, "both sides ought to be properly taught," he seemed to be reading from the playbook of the Discovery Institute, the conservative think tank here that is at the helm of this newly volatile frontier in the nation's culture wars.

Mainstream scientists reject the notion that any controversy over evolution even exists. But Mr. Bush embraced the institute's talking points by suggesting that alternative theories and criticism should be included in biology curriculums "so people can understand what the debate is about."

Like a well-tooled electoral campaign, the Discovery Institute has a carefully crafted, poll-tested message, lively Web logs - and millions of dollars from foundations run by prominent conservatives. The institute opened an office in Washington last fall and in January hired the same Beltway public relations firm that promoted the Contract With America in 1994.

Discovery leaders have been at the heart of the highest-profile developments: helping a Roman Catholic cardinal place an opinion article in The New York Times in which he sought to distance the church from evolution; showing its film promoting design and purpose in the universe at the Smithsonian; and lobbying the Kansas Board of Education in May to require criticism of evolution.

These successes follow a path laid in a 1999 Discovery manifesto known as the Wedge Document, which sought "nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies" in favor of a "broadly theistic understanding of nature."

The institute would not provide details about its backers "because they get harassed," Mr. Chapman said. But a review of tax documents on www.guidestar.org, a Web site that collects data on foundations, showed its grants and gifts jumped to $4.1 million in 2003 from $1.4 million in 1997, the most recent and oldest years available. The records show financial support from 22 foundations, at least two-thirds of them with explicitly religious missions.

(There are those who do not support the Institute.) Denis Hayes, director of the Bullitt Foundation, described Discovery in an e-mail message as "the institutional love child of Ayn Rand and Jerry Falwell," saying, "I can think of no circumstances in which the Bullitt Foundation would fund anything at Discovery today."

Charles L. Harper Jr., the senior vice president of the Templeton Foundation, said he had rejected the institute's entreaties since providing $75,000 in 1999 for a conference in which intelligent design proponents confronted critics. "They're political - that for us is problematic," Mr. Harper said. While Discovery has "always claimed to be focused on the science," he added, "what I see is much more focused on public policy, on public persuasion, on educational advocacy and so forth."

Philip Gold, a former fellow who left in 2002, said the institute had grown increasingly religious. "It evolved from a policy institute that had a religious focus to an organization whose primary mission is Christian conservatism," he said.

And finally, Dr Frist, who famously diagnosed cognition in a person without a brain, has put his considerable credibility behind ID:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/20/politics/20frist.html?th&emc=th

Frist Urges 2 Teachings on Life Origin
By DAVID STOUT
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 - Senator Bill Frist of Tennessee, the Republican leader, aligned himself with President Bush on Friday when he said that the theory of intelligent design as well as evolution should be taught in public schools.



Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Friday, August 26, 2005 8:34 PM

SIGMANUNKI


Didn't have time to read the entire thread, it's too late here. Couple comments.

@CITIZEN:
"""Quantum Mechanics allows for some pretty strange things to happen, farseeing, telepathy etc"""

QM says no such thing.


@HK:
People don't believe in ghosts, etc because it isn't a repeatable event nor has it been documented in any reliable way. If that changes, so will peoples minds.

Please note that I'm not saying that these things, don't exist nor am I saying that they do. I'm just saying that current documentation states that there is nor reasonable evidence for stated that they do exist. Also, I have had a couple "experiences" in my day. But, I do accept the possibility that there is another explination for them.

And yes, the Aboriginal religion is quite pretty. I enjoyed learning about it in my world religion course.


And now, sleep.

----
"Canada being mad at you is like Mr. Rogers throwing a brick through your window." -Jon Stewart, The Daily Show

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 6:51 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Thanks for the links Rue. If there is consistency about right-wing arguments, it is:

They are not open-minded. Don't imagine for a second that the right wing is interested in an exchange of views. Arguments are always part of a larger strategy.

They are not spontaneous, grass-roots movements. While they may take advantage of "popular" notions (like the widespread gullibility of the US population) they're initiated from the top.

They're well-funded. Corportations like Coors spent a fortune setting up right-wing think-tanks twenty years ago, and this is the result.



One of the reasons why I'm "all science all the time" - and pretty harsh about religion- is because the US never really hears the "other side". They get religion from the pulpit, and they get "Touched by God" or "Ghost Whisperer" from TV, or some sort of "moderate" scientist apologizing that while he performs science he ALSO believes in God. The US is so unused to the notion of testing ideas against reality that they are vulnerable to snake-oil salesmen of every stripe, including corporations, Bush&Co, and televangelists. It's no accident that in this nation where religiosity exceeds all other developed nations and matches that of the Middle East, brand-name loyality is also highest. All of this stems from a severe lack of critical thinking. So while I respect and enjoy our open-minded discussions here, I also think the left-of-center hasn't a CLUE about how the right-wing operates. The left wants to respect and understand reality. The right really doesn't give a crap about the truth- all they want is control. By the way, I think the only thing that's pretty freakin obvious about Badgershat's opener is its fatal logical flaw.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 7:41 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


I'm surprised you got the gist so well with what I quoted. As I mentioned, the articles were much longer, filled with convincing detail.

And the sum is this: 'Intelligent design' is not the issue. It's merely one tool - a wedge - the religious right has selected for their war on civil society.






Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 9:11 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


As to the larger question of the role of religion, I don't have a good answer.

Personally, religion stopped making sense for me at a young age - if there were, are and will be multitudes of religions claiming to be 'the one and only', it's less likely that only one is right, than that all are right or all are wrong.

About 5 years ago I literally dreamed an ethic of 'just enough', which makes sense to me as a real principle of life that can free the heart of anxiety and greed, secure life, and heal our planet.

It also doesn't depend on a(the) god(s) reward and punishment for motivation. I suppose it is closer to Confuscionism - right thought leading to right action and right outcome, except the right thought is "just enough".

In between there were literally decades of pragmatic living - striving for financial security while at the same time treating others ethically, and expecting ethical treatment in return. (Which BTW can be a mistake if adopted as an invariant rule, as there will be the occasional sociopath who, in this society, cannot be treated like everyone else.)

I've met three people in my life whose personal dignity, integrity, and tolerance seemed to be enhanced by formal western religion. And there are many on this board who seek spirituality outside of standard western religion. Perhaps my dream was the culmination of some silent search for meaning.


What I think you are reacting to is religion as a manipulative tool of those who seek power over you. These people want to turn your sense of cooperation and interest in others well being and happiness against you. They want to use your own best feelings against you and twist you inside. If you had accepted their religion, their war on you would be over - you would be waging it on yourself inside every minute of every day for the rest of your life.

So in the landscape, I see rare examples of those enhanced by religion, those who seek spirituality outside of 'mainstream' religion, and those who parted with religion. On the other side I see a vast majority for whom religion rationalizes their own worst impulses (those of greed, power, hate, fear etc) and those who cynically manipulate those impulses in the name of god.

Who will be reached by your message against religion? I don't see it having a large effect on people, except those who share your vision of religion as a destructive tool.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 9:51 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


First of ALL religions AFAIK contain three components to a greater or lesser degree: A system of ethics (a list of rules or precepts), an impulse to control the uncontrollable (disease; sun, rain, and game) and a system of beliefs- a reference to the unproveable and unknowable (spirits and gods).

It's systems of belief that I have an issue with. When you get down to it, ALL belief systems are equal. While some are more socially acceptable than others, Moloch is just as valid as Santa Claus because you CANNOT- by the very definition of belief- test or prove either one. (If you could it wouldn't be belief.) Religion forces people to be intellectually dishonest. On the one hand, they are forced to acknowledge the existance of reality every day. If they don't, they cancel out themselves- and their beliefs-pretty quickly. (In fact, I know someone who believed so strongly in spiritual light as nourishment that she was found starving and hallucinating near the Seattle bus terminal and had be to forcibly fed.) But then on the other hand, they turn around and deny the material world. They pray to God for blessing, which has a far lower success rate than flicking on a light. They live mentally divided lives... it's socially promoted craziness.

I know that you're right. Most people will never adopt a strictly material view of the universe. And there are people who actually seem to make religion attractive: you and HK, for instance, who seem to be perhaps more deeply or inutitively in touch with reality than I- you both reach very deep insights that generally rather escape me.

But hey, you know, SOMEBODY'S gotta hold down this end of the discussion spectrum!

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 10:21 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Hi SignyM

I appreciate the kudos. I feel however that HK is insightful, you are logical, and I am pragmatic.

I get that belief is defined as intrinsically what you are left with absent physical tesing. And that belief in the non-real is an insanity that divides people's minds - on the one hand they must live in the physical world, on the other hand they must deny it.

I can't speak for HK, but I think that HK's world is more complicated than mine and perhaps yours as well. (My experiences of the unexplainable have been exceedingly rare - except for the 'lights' thing.) And so HK has to go beyond explanations based on the simply testable.

As for myself, I'm not religious. My paradigm is (what I think is) an inevitable outcome of one concept.

So out of the ethics/control/belief triad, I have my ethic, control is a matter for science and technology, and belief doesn't enter into the equation.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 10:43 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Perhaps one of the (but certainly not the only) failures of science is that it blocks insight, inspiration, vision. Science is a very "rejecting" process. As we have discussed, it can only disprove hypotheses. It doesn't offer any reliable forward-looking path, but depends on that mysterious AHA!!! moment when observations gel to insight.

To get to that moment one must be in an accepting, waiting, still frame of mind. You need to let the universe speak to you. As your signature says, you can see anything with the right filters. Science is a rigorous filter that screens out what is "not" (at least by current thinking) but it can't point out the possibilities.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 10:59 AM

CITIZEN


Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
[B]@CITIZEN:
"""Quantum Mechanics allows for some pretty strange things to happen, farseeing, telepathy etc"""

QM says no such thing.


Erm no, your right, no where in Quantum Mechanics does it say, farseeing telepathy etc are explained by this or that...
I didn't say it did either.
What I said is it allows for some pretty strange things, that, given a mechanism for our brains picking them up, could explain farseeing, telepathy etc.
QM has shown that information can be transmitted between particles with no 'physical' link faster than the speed of light, for instance.

I didn't say QM says anything.

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 11:02 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


When I was pre-teen to early teen I used to dream poems, parables and chants. Here are a few examples:

(the picture is the world in space, the voice is a woman's gentle voice with the depth of the voice you hear in your head)
Spin yourself some magic
That you can call your own.
Spin yourself a dream,
And the world can spin alone.

(the picture is an arid, rocky sun-drenched Middle-East setting, the voice is a medium-register neutral man's voice)
A man looked upon the world and its various ways, and became confused.
He asked his god - what way am I to follow that's good?
And his god asked him - do you till your field? The man answered - yes.
And his god asked him - do you know your field? And the man answered - yes.
Then his god said - I say to you, you do not know your field. You must go into your field and turn stones, until you know the shape snd shuttle of each stone.
And the man was content from that day.

(the picture is a ridge top with some dead grasses and a bent, twisted evergreen with snow blowing on it, and a dreary sky; the chanting voice is that of an old, old woman)
Snow blows over the hill,
Wind hits cold against my back.
Long as it's winter, I won't look back.
Oh mercy me -
the Joshua tree.

My days be gone,
My friends be dead.
Wrinkled, dry, without a tear.
Here I am, and I won't look back,
Oh lonesome me -
The Joshua tree.

Wind blows over the hill,
Snow hits cold gainst my back,
I don't see far,
But I won't look back.
Oh mercy me -
The Joshua tree.

Since then, these dreams have gotten rarer, but longer, more complete and more freighted with meaning and insight. And they culminated (I feel) in the 'just enough' dream.

I have always wondered where those dreams came from.




Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 11:06 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Wow. Your last poem kinda wants to make me cry. If you promise to post your "just enough" dream. I'll post my "sanyagoing" one. Or maybe my nomads one. Or maybe the one that begins "When we were young we tussled like puppies playing in the tent."

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 11:29 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


I'm not sure that my 'just enough' dream is readily understandable. It didn't have events, it was a setting. I think understanding the setting depends on being able to truly envision a better world. Without that basic act the dream itself loses its essence.

But there is something about the "When we were young ..." beginning that intrigues me. Could you post that anyway? The language, the wording, the image - I see Middle East nomad.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:01 PM

SIGMANUNKI


Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:
Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
[B]@CITIZEN:
"""Quantum Mechanics allows for some pretty strange things to happen, farseeing, telepathy etc"""

QM says no such thing.


Erm no, your right, no where in Quantum Mechanics does it say, farseeing telepathy etc are explained by this or that...
I didn't say it did either.
What I said is it allows for some pretty strange things, that, given a mechanism for our brains picking them up, could explain farseeing, telepathy etc.
QM has shown that information can be transmitted between particles with no 'physical' link faster than the speed of light, for instance.

I didn't say QM says anything.

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.



You're going to have to re-iterate what you are saying as your use of grammer is preventing me from getting that.


"""
QM has shown that information can be transmitted between particles with no 'physical' link faster than the speed of light, for instance.
"""
And this is just plain wrong. QM says that information can not travel faster than the speed of light. If you want to get into details, I can post an excerpt from a QM book I have (if you understand LaTeX that is).

----
"We're in a giant car heading into a brick wall at 100 miles/hr and everybody's arguing about where they want to sit."
-David Suzuki

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:22 PM

CITIZEN


Sorry about the poor grammer, my Brain tends to work quicker than my typing and I'm dyslexic, so things can get a little, *ahem* hard for people to understand sometimes.

My point was:
If there is a mechanism for our brains to exploit them QM allows the possibllity for farseeing and telepathy.

Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
"""
QM has shown that information can be transmitted between particles with no 'physical' link faster than the speed of light, for instance.
"""
And this is just plain wrong. QM says that information can not travel faster than the speed of light. If you want to get into details, I can post an excerpt from a QM book I have (if you understand LaTeX that is).


Nope, your thinking of special relativity. Special relativity says that the speed of light is the 'speed limit' to the universe. QM as far as I know says nothing about maximum speeds of information, at least.
As a side not General Relativity does allow something to travel between two points in less time than a ray of light would take.

Now as for information traveling faster than the speed of light in QM, I refer you to entanglement. Information about the particle states is being transmitted, although 'classical' infomation can't be transmitted.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qt-entangle/

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:22 PM

MIKEYMO


Actually, I had thought the same thing - that so-called "paired" quarks could (theoretically) be separated by large distances, yet when the spin of one of the quarks is altered, the other switches instantaneously. Of course, it's been 5+ years since I've read any QM, and I could be a bit fuzzy.

"Be ashamed to die before you have scored some victory for humanity." -- Horace Mann

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:33 PM

CITIZEN


Entangled pairs can know about each others states instantaneously irrespective of distance. This has been proven in the lab.
You can't send meaningful data, as far as I know, but it does open interesting questions as to the nature of this link, and whether it could be harnessed in some way?

Or you could get in to some more bizarre stuff like the EPR bridge (wormholes)...

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:37 PM

SIGMANUNKI


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:

And the sum is this: 'Intelligent design' is not the issue. It's merely one tool - a wedge - the religious right has selected for their war on civil society.



Wow... That's just the perfect way of putting it! You do definitely have a way with words



Onto the religion thing.

I think that when I look at religion, I must always draw a line between the religion and its implementation.

I noticed something about religions while I studied a number of them. They all have basically the same moral/ethical standards (ie indiscriminant killing is wrong, etc), but they go about getting people to behave "properly" differently.

For instance, using the killing issue above, Christanity puts fear into you by saying, if you do it then you'll burn forever in eternal damnation. The Wiccan rede on the other hand states, "An Ye Harm None, Do What Ye Will" coupled with the law of three. Both don't want you to kill, but one uses fear and the other just states the consequences of the actions and you make the choice.

Now as for implementation, Wicca is rather the same as its religion as it is mostly solitary practitioners or small groups.

Christanity is in large groups with a definite figure head that yearns for more and more control.

For these reasons, I don't take issue with religion. I take issue with organized religion.

----
"We're in a giant car heading into a brick wall at 100 miles/hr and everybody's arguing about where they want to sit."
-David Suzuki

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:57 PM

CITIZEN


I agree entirely Sigma...
Our views on religion are almost identical .

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 3:34 PM

SIGMANUNKI


If I've missed any point you've made, let me know.

Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:

Sorry about the poor grammer, my Brain tends to work quicker than my typing and I'm dyslexic, so things can get a little, *ahem* hard for people to understand sometimes.



I do it to sometimes (though the wife thinks it more than I do).


Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:

My point was:
If there is a mechanism for our brains to exploit them QM allows the possibllity for farseeing and telepathy.



If/then. You can't just state an if/then, without some sort of evidence/proof. Just because you say it's true, doesn't make it so.


Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:

Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
"""
QM has shown that information can be transmitted between particles with no 'physical' link faster than the speed of light, for instance.
"""
And this is just plain wrong. QM says that information can not travel faster than the speed of light. If you want to get into details, I can post an excerpt from a QM book I have (if you understand LaTeX that is).



Nope, your thinking of special relativity. Special relativity says that the speed of light is the 'speed limit' to the universe. QM as far as I know says nothing about maximum speeds of information, at least
As a side not General Relativity does allow something to travel between two points in less time than a ray of light would take.

Now as for information traveling faster than the speed of light in QM, I refer you to entanglement. Information about the particle states is being transmitted, although 'classical' infomation can't be transmitted.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qt-entangle/



Sorry dude, it's time to bring out the wife (Theoretical Physicist in Quantum Information Theory).

"""
You're right that the 'speed limit' comes from SR and not QM. Note, though, that the speed of light is not a universial speed limit. It just means that you cannot accelerate something beyond the speed of light. In principle, things can move beyond the speed of light.

But, new research in QM confirms that information cannot be transmitted faster than the speed of light. If you think of the experiments called teleportation, there's always a classical information channel included which requires information transfer at sub-luminal velocity.

Now for entanglement. This is quite tricky and any attempt to describe it in plain english will probably lead to misunderstandings. If you read the wikipedia entry carefully though, you will not find the statement that "Information about the particle states is being transmitted" since this is exactly not what is happening. Entanglement tells you something about the information you can extract from a system by measurement on one of its parts. But, to assume that, triggered by the measurement, information is transmitted to another part of the system is not justified. This is usually caused by thinking classically about a quantum system.

Concerning your "my point was...", QM does not exclude farseeing and telepathy. But, it does not predict them either. And there are other parts of our physical/scientific worldview that do not exactly support these things. However, it's a valid wild speculation. It reminds me of Penrose who thinks that since we don't understand the brain, and Quantum Gravity, both must be somehow connected. Interesting, but a little far fetched.
"""

I add: Just because two things aren't understood, doesn't mean they are correlated.

----
"We're in a giant car heading into a brick wall at 100 miles/hr and everybody's arguing about where they want to sit."
-David Suzuki

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Saturday, August 27, 2005 3:38 PM

SIGMANUNKI


Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:
I agree entirely Sigma...
Our views on religion are almost identical .

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.


At least we agree on something

----
"We're in a giant car heading into a brick wall at 100 miles/hr and everybody's arguing about where they want to sit."
-David Suzuki

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Sunday, August 28, 2005 2:29 AM

CITIZEN


Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
If/then. You can't just state an if/then, without some sort of evidence/proof. Just because you say it's true, doesn't make it so.


Okay, I see what your saying, but your taking my statement out of context. It was a rebuke to the assumption that these things cannot possibly happen because science says so. QM says no such thing, as is stated later in your post, and to my knowledge neither does any other current theory. I go on to say:
"Once even the rising and the setting of the Sun was a supernatural event, the changing of the seasons were controlled by gods, but now they are simply scientifically explained natural phenomena."
Which puts my point a little better no?
Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
You're right that the 'speed limit' comes from SR and not QM. Note, though, that the speed of light is not a universial speed limit. It just means that you cannot accelerate something beyond the speed of light. In principle, things can move beyond the speed of light.


Yep thats why I put speed limit in quote . You probably know this already but I'll state it for others:
You can't accelerate anything with a finite rest mass beyond the speed of light because of the mass/energy coefficent. When a body accelerates to relatavistic speeds its mass increases, requiring more and more energy to continue accelerating it, and at some point this energy becomes infinte.
In order for a body to travel FTL wouldn't it require that body to have a negative rest mass? Isn't that the basis for the theoretical Tachyon?
As I said General Relativity allows for FTL, as it does not prevent objects from moving between two points in space in less time than it would take a ray of light. The Alcubierre warp takes adavantage of this for instance.
Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
But, new research in QM confirms that information cannot be transmitted faster than the speed of light. If you think of the experiments called teleportation, there's always a classical information channel included which requires information transfer at sub-luminal velocity.


Yep I know about Quantum Teleportation, and I noted in my post classical information cannot be sent.
Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
Now for entanglement. This is quite tricky and any attempt to describe it in plain english will probably lead to misunderstandings. If you read the wikipedia entry carefully though, you will not find the statement that "Information about the particle states is being transmitted" since this is exactly not what is happening. Entanglement tells you something about the information you can extract from a system by measurement on one of its parts. But, to assume that, triggered by the measurement, information is transmitted to another part of the system is not justified. This is usually caused by thinking classically about a quantum system.


As I understood it the Bell Lab had distingiushed that it was not a 'local variable' that allowed the correlations to exist. This led me to believe that there must be some form of information sharing existing between entangled pairs about each others states. If this is wrong I stand corrected, my knowledge of QM is far more 'in passing'.
Quote:

Originally posted by SigmaNunki:
Concerning your "my point was...", QM does not exclude farseeing and telepathy. But, it does not predict them either. And there are other parts of our physical/scientific worldview that do not exactly support these things. However, it's a valid wild speculation. It reminds me of Penrose who thinks that since we don't understand the brain, and Quantum Gravity, both must be somehow connected. Interesting, but a little far fetched.


I see the point on farseeing, but not necessarilly telepathy. If I may digress for a moment:
The brain kicks out EM radiation, we can pick it up on ECG, so its scientifically proven that it exists, no? Why couldn't someone elses brain pickup the EM signals from anothers brain, and whats to say these 'signals' don't carry information on the mental and emotional states of an individual?
Theres our current knowledge of 'Mirror Neurons' in the frontal lobes. They are instrumental in allowing us to guess the actions, thoughts and feelings of other individuals, but what if theres more to it than that? I'm proposing questions rather than answers here simply because the discovery of Mirror Neurons is relativly recent, and research and understanding of their 'job' and mechanisms are at relative infancy.

I've not (as far as I can remember) come across any scientific reason as to why telepathy or farseeing is prohibited, or unlikely.

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Sunday, August 28, 2005 12:40 PM

AUXBOY25


I just wish the whole discussion would be left out of public schools, I don't see it having any real bearing on a students career life outside of being a handy icebreaker topic at the water cooler.
Let parents teach creation if they choose and let professors or someone teach the evolution.

Aux

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Sunday, August 28, 2005 1:46 PM

CITIZEN


HOW DARE YOU BRING US BACK ON TOPIC!

only joking... yeah, not sure you'll find much opposition to that, how could anyone see ID as a science that should be taught?

But then I'm biased...

Really I see our present understanding as a step... the thing is 'most' religous people see their opinion as absolute...

Q: What do you have when you are holding two little green balls in your hand.
A: Kermit's undivided attention.

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Tuesday, April 18, 2006 3:51 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/04/060406231032.htm

Using new techniques for resurrecting ancient genes, scientists have for the first time reconstructed the Darwinian evolution of an apparently "irreducibly complex" molecular system.

How natural selection can drive the evolution of complex molecular systems -- those in which the function of each part depends on its interactions with the other parts--has been an unsolved issue in evolutionary biology. Advocates of Intelligent Design argue that such systems are "irreducibly complex" and thus incompatible with gradual evolution by natural selection.

"Our work demonstrates a fundamental error in the current challenges to Darwinism," said Thornton. "New techniques allowed us to see how ancient genes and their functions evolved hundreds of millions of years ago. We found that complexity evolved piecemeal through a process of Molecular Exploitation -- old genes, constrained by selection for entirely different functions, have been recruited by evolution to participate in new interactions and new functions."





Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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