Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Sort Ascending - Printer Friendly - Home


Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?

Rich(bodhránai gan ciall) 13 Oct 00 - 11:53 PM
Skeptic 13 Oct 00 - 01:28 PM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 13 Oct 00 - 11:59 AM
Skeptic 13 Oct 00 - 11:25 AM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 13 Oct 00 - 08:39 AM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 13 Oct 00 - 08:37 AM
Wolfgang 13 Oct 00 - 05:53 AM
Amos 13 Oct 00 - 12:48 AM
Rich(bodhránai gan ciall) 13 Oct 00 - 12:05 AM
Troll 12 Oct 00 - 10:10 PM
Troll 12 Oct 00 - 10:08 PM
Skeptic 12 Oct 00 - 09:49 PM
GUEST,Uilleand 12 Oct 00 - 06:52 PM
mousethief 12 Oct 00 - 03:40 PM
Midchuck 12 Oct 00 - 02:54 PM
Biskit 12 Oct 00 - 02:08 PM
Skeptic 12 Oct 00 - 11:04 AM
Grab 12 Oct 00 - 10:22 AM
Skeptic 12 Oct 00 - 09:18 AM
Wolfgang 12 Oct 00 - 08:45 AM
Skeptic 12 Oct 00 - 07:59 AM
Wolfgang 12 Oct 00 - 05:54 AM
Bill D 11 Oct 00 - 03:56 PM
Bill D 11 Oct 00 - 03:52 PM
Ebbie 11 Oct 00 - 12:03 PM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 11 Oct 00 - 11:47 AM
Little Neophyte 11 Oct 00 - 10:14 AM
catspaw49 11 Oct 00 - 10:05 AM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 11 Oct 00 - 09:40 AM
Grab 11 Oct 00 - 09:36 AM
catspaw49 11 Oct 00 - 08:53 AM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 11 Oct 00 - 08:36 AM
Little Neophyte 11 Oct 00 - 08:04 AM
Amos 11 Oct 00 - 01:01 AM
Rich(bodhránai gan ciall) 10 Oct 00 - 11:31 PM
Bill D 10 Oct 00 - 11:29 PM
Little Neophyte 10 Oct 00 - 11:00 PM
Amos 10 Oct 00 - 10:42 PM
Rich(bodhránai gan ciall) 10 Oct 00 - 10:23 PM
Amos 10 Oct 00 - 10:13 PM
Amos 10 Oct 00 - 08:08 PM
Uncle_DaveO 10 Oct 00 - 06:03 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 05:23 PM
SINSULL 10 Oct 00 - 05:17 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 04:03 PM
annamill 10 Oct 00 - 04:00 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 03:37 PM
Bert 10 Oct 00 - 03:35 PM
annamill 10 Oct 00 - 03:32 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 03:26 PM
Little Neophyte 10 Oct 00 - 03:08 PM
annamill 10 Oct 00 - 03:07 PM
Ebbie 10 Oct 00 - 02:50 PM
GUEST,Amos 10 Oct 00 - 02:42 PM
Jim the Bart 10 Oct 00 - 01:52 PM
Grab 10 Oct 00 - 01:51 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 01:51 PM
annamill 10 Oct 00 - 01:47 PM
catspaw49 10 Oct 00 - 01:36 PM
annamill 10 Oct 00 - 01:34 PM
annamill 10 Oct 00 - 01:32 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 01:12 PM
GUEST,Amos 10 Oct 00 - 12:55 PM
Little Neophyte 10 Oct 00 - 12:37 PM
Ebbie 10 Oct 00 - 12:28 PM
mousethief 10 Oct 00 - 12:15 PM
Ebbie 10 Oct 00 - 12:07 PM
Penny S. 10 Oct 00 - 11:44 AM
GUEST,CLETUS 10 Oct 00 - 11:30 AM
GUEST,Fibula Mattock 10 Oct 00 - 10:57 AM
Grab 10 Oct 00 - 10:11 AM
Jim the Bart 10 Oct 00 - 09:52 AM
Little Neophyte 10 Oct 00 - 09:27 AM
Skeptic 10 Oct 00 - 08:55 AM
John P 10 Oct 00 - 08:16 AM
Amos 09 Oct 00 - 04:19 PM
sophocleese 09 Oct 00 - 04:08 PM
Bill D 09 Oct 00 - 04:06 PM
Ebbie 09 Oct 00 - 03:07 PM
Amos 09 Oct 00 - 02:56 PM
RichM 09 Oct 00 - 02:47 PM
Skeptic 09 Oct 00 - 02:29 PM
Jim the Bart 09 Oct 00 - 02:23 PM
Grab 09 Oct 00 - 02:03 PM
Skeptic 09 Oct 00 - 01:59 PM
hesperis 09 Oct 00 - 12:24 PM
Bill D 09 Oct 00 - 12:00 PM
WyoWoman 09 Oct 00 - 11:59 AM
Amos 09 Oct 00 - 11:52 AM
Bill D 09 Oct 00 - 11:48 AM
Rick Fielding 09 Oct 00 - 11:04 AM
Grab 09 Oct 00 - 10:38 AM
GUEST 09 Oct 00 - 10:26 AM
Kim C 09 Oct 00 - 10:20 AM
sophocleese 09 Oct 00 - 10:14 AM
paddymac 09 Oct 00 - 09:57 AM
John P 09 Oct 00 - 08:37 AM
Little Neophyte 09 Oct 00 - 07:47 AM
Amos 08 Oct 00 - 11:32 PM
WyoWoman 08 Oct 00 - 09:20 PM
Jon Freeman 07 Oct 00 - 11:04 PM
Sorcha 07 Oct 00 - 10:12 PM
Malcolm Douglas 07 Oct 00 - 09:23 PM
Allan C. 07 Oct 00 - 08:58 PM
Little Neophyte 07 Oct 00 - 08:55 PM
hesperis 07 Oct 00 - 08:39 PM
Peter K (Fionn) 07 Oct 00 - 08:23 PM
Barbara 07 Oct 00 - 08:16 PM
Helen 07 Oct 00 - 08:04 PM
Hotspur 07 Oct 00 - 08:02 PM
Allan C. 07 Oct 00 - 07:24 PM
Allan C. 07 Oct 00 - 07:19 PM
Sorcha 07 Oct 00 - 07:16 PM
Bill D 07 Oct 00 - 07:14 PM
Fmaj7 07 Oct 00 - 06:58 PM
Allan C. 07 Oct 00 - 06:52 PM
Fmaj7 07 Oct 00 - 06:46 PM
Jon Freeman 07 Oct 00 - 06:42 PM
Fmaj7 07 Oct 00 - 06:34 PM
Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:













Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Rich(bodhránai gan ciall)
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 11:53 PM

I believe this thread is getting long, but I don't believe I know how to make a blue clicky thing.

Rich


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 01:28 PM

Or anything is theoritical, possibly?

Going multicultural, I supose it could be argued that its all illusion anyway, so the door isn't really there. Or go with Xeno's paradox and agrue that the boat/skier would never reach the door to begin with.

Much more interesting, the thread on "The Prisoner" is diverged into Diana Rigg as Emma Peel. Truely worthy of more consideration

Regards John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 11:59 AM

WOW! The fourth dimension. I never thought of that. I was too restricted in my thinking...
so....anything IS possible. Theoretically. QED.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 11:25 AM

Or perhaps telekinesis to do the unclasping? And do we have to be content with a Euclidian, three dimensional revolving door? After all, this is about alternate beliefs, one of which is precognition, which presupposes time travel so:

A revolving door has four panels, A, B, C, D. The boat "E" and skier "S", approach the door. "E" enters between panels "A" and "B" which are rotating in our three dimensional world. As "S" approaches, Panels "B", )and "C" if needed), additionally rotate through time so that when "S" reaches where panel "B" or "S" would be in this space /time, they are actually "X" seconds in the past (where "X" would be determined by the distance to be covered, velocity of the boat, length of the tow rope and so on)

Wolfgang, thanks for the citation.

Amos,

Can I be a devout atheist and a devout Christian at the same time?

Overgeneralizing, skepticism requires proof, the three "c",s and so on. Belief structures do not. So what is the underlying criteria: When do I use skepticism, when don't I?. If there is no criteria beyond "In this case I think skepticism doesn't apply...." or "well, I'll use skepticism foo this part but not for the other", then (worst case) I would submit that what you have is a belief structure system that dresses up a belief system with the intermittent use of skepticism to validate the belief system. Again, I may be misreading where you are going with this, but this seems to me to be the implications of your argument.

As to remote seeing, it requires not just acceptance of the experience, but accepting (or rejecting) a lot of the fundamental theories of how reality works. And remember that one validation of some of these theories was that they were able to correctly predict a behavior before we had the techniques or ability to verify that behavior. Remote seeing involves, among other things, undetectable energy, would seem to imply that conservation of energy, inverse square and so on aren't.

By the way, photons, being quantum waves/particles, tend not to act repetitively. Or rather not always act the same way. Predictions of dust motes follow chaos theory . On the other hand, the EPR Paradox which Einstein claimed was impossible appears not to be. Unfortunately, that's on the quantum level and we aren't

Regards John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 08:39 AM

Mind you, despite having solved the mysteries of the universe, I still can't manage to close an italics tag properly. One thing at a time, eh?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 08:37 AM

Not to detract in any way from the serious discussion going on here, but furthering the research into the waterskiing hypothesis...
If "anything is possible except waterskiing through a revolving door" then we shall have to consider Skeptic's dematerialization theory. However, we don't want to rely on it too greatly as it seems a bit of a cop-out and the other sceptics will start to complain as they are wont to do, so how about it if the bikini clasp dematerializes? (Stop me if this bothers you Bonnie, this is purely in the interest of science, and as a fellow female (is that an oxymoron?) I am fascinated by the reasoning behind the theory and not the actual bikini top removal.) This removes Amos from the equation, neatly avoiding the reflex and unfastening time, thus freeing up more seconds for the trick of passing through the revolving door. Here, as well, I have made an important discovery while carrying out important scientific research (under the guise of shopping) - those doors don't have to be divided into quarters! You can get revolving doors which merely split the door in two! This gives us a much better chance of dispproving the original hypothesis, therefore it may be perfectly feasible to waterski through a revolving door, therefore anything's possible, therefore we have the universe compltetly sussed, and those infinite number of monkeys with typewriters are holding a book signing as we speak. Not bad for a Friday morning.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Wolfgang
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 05:53 AM

Perhaps this is the Maslow citation from that book:
"...to enlarge the conception of science so as to make it more capable of dealing with persons, especially fully developed and fully human persons."

This (or similar) citation(s) is(are) often found in transpersonal, esoteric, humanistic psychology...writings. From the context I gather that the persons citing Maslow take the words as an advice to leave the scientific method of enquiry. I read it as an advice to apply it to more fields it has not been applied yet such as personal experiences. But you may have read the opposition I got when I applied scienctific concepts or results to personal experiences reported by others in these threads.

Even if the issue was clearly not the experience as such but its interpretation (to borrow the clear words of Skeptic on this difference).

Wolfgang


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 12:48 AM

Well, you could be right -- my knuckles aren't as deft as they once were back the last time I practiced the one-handed lift-off technique. !!

As for the brain mind argument, why no extraordinary proof is required. There are plenty of documented cases of people seeing imagery (mind-objects) for which the "owning" brain is far absent; this especially happens when very high affection exists, or when a close connection is under duress. There's plenty of experimenting that can be done within the bounds of ordinary experience. If you wanted really extraordinary proof, you would have to take a human being and do something really weird to him, like force him act repetitive in the same way that dustmotes and photons usually do -- talk about unnatural -- or expose him to conditions that undermine the phenomena you are trying to study. Weird, man. Or, something extraordinary in civilized circles, anyway, get him to reveal his most intimate perceptions and intuitive awarenesses, and then beat him up on the point, telling him he couldn't "possibly" be right. That's extraordinary.

Interesting, John, to think that two segments of the spectrum should seem mutually exclusive -- like two sound frequencies that just happen to nullify each other, or colors combining to vanish. I think that, in the range of human conditions ranging from stoner-dead to more alive than life, you encounter a lot of different "ways of knowing", some of which are direct, some of which are firmly locked behind mysteries and magic symbols, some which require solid efforts to bring about knowing (I'll belief it when I can pound it), and so on. It isn't just beliefs versus hard evidence. Anyway, the day is long and I am bound to retire for a brief turn on the other side of that wall over there.... :>)).

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Rich(bodhránai gan ciall)
Date: 13 Oct 00 - 12:05 AM

I don't believe Amos could snap Bonnie's bikini top off as she went by. Some things you can go by on faith, but that one I'll have to see to believe!

I'm gonna get smacked if I post this but the temptation is just too strong.
Submit Message
Clear Entries
Submit Message
Clear Entries
Submit Message
Clear Entries
Submit Message
Clear Entries
CLICK!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Troll
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 10:10 PM

About that bikini top...

troll


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Troll
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 10:08 PM

About that bikini top...

troll


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 09:49 PM

Uilleand,

I'll take your word on the Maslow quote but want to add that Maslow, at least in trying to validate his theories, was an exacting experimenter. His revisions to the scientific method involved, I believe, cross-disciplinary studies (still not all that common) and not elevating experiences to a higher level of truth.

I believe in my experiences too. Its the interpretation of meaning that's issue.

Amos You seem to be looking for a middle ground. It may not exist. It would seem to me that the two ways of knowing are mutually exclusive.

Regards John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Uilleand
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 06:52 PM

I believe in what I've experienced. For everything else, I keep an open mind and allow for the possibility. So many people, so many different experiences and perspectives on life. To steal a concept from Douglas Adams I have found valid in exploring alternatives including the one mentioned: Astrology is like graphite when you try to find what someone had written on the sheet of a note pad. The original note is gone, but by using graphite and sprinkling it over the note paper underneath, the writing from the top is revealed. We all are trying to find what was written. The graphite is not important, it could be charcoal, it just reveals what is underneath. So all of astrology, religion, and other methods of explaining life, are just about people thinking about people. If it makes us happier, more loving, and empowered people, who cares whether it is or isn't part of someone else's reality. Even Abraham Maslow said in 'Toward a Psychology of Being' that the scientific method was not adequate to explain personal experience. But instead of invalidating experience he feels that we need to revise and expand the scientific method, not deny the existence of anything that doesn't fit. So, yeah, I believe in distance healing, astrology, and past lives, I allow for the possibility of alien abductions, but don't really believe in them as part of my reality.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 03:40 PM

Peter:

Yes. For one thing, Jesus (to use the most common Anglicized version of his name which was probably close to Yeshua or Yoshua) apparently had a far less self-serving lifestyle than Elvis. Nor has Elvis founded a religion that beyond all odds became the official religion of a huge empire (indeed, it's not at all clear that Elvis, nor any of his followers, founded a religion at all). And above all, to his eternal credit, Jesus never sang "In the Ghetto."

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Midchuck
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 02:54 PM

Why does it make more sense to believe that Jesu ben Joseph was a human incarnation of God than to believe that Elvis Presley was? (Leaving out as utterly irrelevant the fact that more people have believed the former for longer.)

Peter.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Biskit
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 02:08 PM

All this longwindedlargewordedstuff,is really great for philosophy majors,....I want'a get back to lil' Neo's Bikini top!-Biskit-


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 11:04 AM

Grab,

Exactly. And point made far betetr than I could (and did in another thread).

Regards and Thanks

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Grab
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 10:22 AM

Fib, carrying 3 isn't too bad, if they're small. I run out of carrying room after 5 or 6 though. My maths teacher once asked me to carry a thousand, and I strained myself.

A sceptic (I'm sticking to the English version, and nuts to the rest of you! ;-) is someone who asks for convincing proof b4 they're prepared to believe something. If you give them incontrovertable proof and they still don't believe, they're not a sceptic, they're a believer in science, the same way that alternative folk may be believers in UFOs or astrology. And note that this is often "science as they were taught it" or "it stands to reason", not any version that accepts the universe is still full of stuff we don't know about.

As John says, sometimes you need a better class of sceptic (brilliant line! :-)

Grab.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 09:18 AM

Wolfgang,

Thanks.

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Wolfgang
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 08:45 AM

helping John's memory: 'Making Monsters', by Richard Ofshe and Ethan Waters.

Wolfgang


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 07:59 AM

In keeping with the spirit of the thread, the solution to the waterski problem seems obvious. De-materialization. It avoids the need for messy mathematics or Gibralter sized revolving ddors.

Amos,

The body of evidence dealing with how memory works is extensive. Intersting stat is that 70% of the general public and over 50% of practionioners believe just that.

It is very true that you can remember detailed minutae. I remember distinctly the wallpaper in my bedroom when I was 4.(verified by my mother) What I don't remember is more interesting. Was there a rug? What did anything else in the house look like?

Current theory of how the brain works (sorry, its very mundane and based on the principal that brain and mind are the same thing). And it is a theory. Gets back to the preponderance of the evidence. The book "Making Monsters" covers this concisely. (sorry, don't remember the author). Ot would appear (and there are some pretty good experiments, that what we remember has less to do with what happened and more with what we want to believe happened. Tee "A" , "A Pime" arguement brings to mind the old dictum that extraordinary ideas should require extraordinary prrof. Hope I ma not misinterpreting what you're saying, but it sounds like the brain/mind arguement. (or spirit if you prefer). To move it from the realm of pure belief would require extraordinary proof. And that seems lacking. Though I'd be interested in citations demonstrating such.

Ebbie,

My point was that, if you accept the current models of how the brain and memory work, what you "remember" from 5 minutes ago in in serious doubt, let alone 15 years. Because you "know" it happened doesn't mean a lot to anyone other than you. And consider the implications of remote sensing. (somehow "remote smelling" sounded a little to silly). Soem form of undetectable energy, that seems to go against some of the basic "laws of nature" that (so far) work from the quantum to the marcocosmic level. And posit that the human brain can sense such an energy. And that it isn't detectable by any other means at our disposal. That inverse square, conservation of energy and so on are special cases, and (apparently) universal.

As to your specific experience, the back door question is, Okay, 2 calls out of how many over 15 years. Did either of you make soem casual comment that would have lead you to guess something was cooking? What time of day? How do you get chocolate chip cookies out of waffles? (Please understand my culinary ability is limited to heating up things in the microwave. Or Pizza Hut delivery)

And finally a skeptic who refuses to look at the unknown, discuss and consider the possibilites, isn't worthy of the name. You need to associate with a better class of skeptics.

Regards

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Wolfgang
Date: 12 Oct 00 - 05:54 AM

Sorry, I'm coming late to this thread and I'd like to revolve it back for a moment:

Ebbie writes skeptics will often lay it to whatever turns them on- whether it's suggestibility, ignorance of 'science', hallucination, stupidity.. Ebbie, I'd be sad if you'd only remember the bits that sound offending from sceptics arguments. Imagine you cut a lemon in two halves, squeeze one half slightly and lick at the open side. What do you feel? I'm safe to bet you produce more saliva than in the seonds before the thought and even smell or taste that lemon. You smell it from your memory of how it smells and I can assure you that the very same neurons are involved in your head as in real smelling. My picture was enough to evoke these percepts without any real lemon being involved. Nothing unusual with that.

And there's perception without awareness. It means that you have processed some information by your usual senses but this information has not entered your consciousness. Nevertheless this information may influence later actions by or feelings of you. Like if you hear a very slight change in the inflexion of the voice of a friend (or a different timing of the word flow) and you get a hunch that something has happened or will happen without ever knowing what the sensory origin of that hunch was. In my present opinion: Special ability? Yes. Supernatural ability? No. Just trying to show that not all sceptic explanations are offending.

The original question of this thread is poorly worded: If you mean, Fmaj7, whether there is a higher probability for a believer in astrology also to believe in reincarnation and supernatural explanations of crop circles (compared to a person drawn randomly from the population) the unequivocal response from several surveys is: yes. If you mean as implied in your actual question whether all persons believing in astrology also believe in...the obvious answer is: no, as shown in many responses. People are very variable as individuals, but nevertheless there is a pattern if you average across many individuals.

Wolfgang


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 03:56 PM

(the preceeding is why I majored in Philosophy...them math courses wanted exact answers...not clever rhetoric)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 03:52 PM

lessee.....half of 12 is 7, then you carry the square root...hmmmm...I give it 1023 chance...

(half of XII IS VII.....look...XII)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Ebbie
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 12:03 PM

Alternatively, I believe that Little Neo could balance herself on the water ski and Amos could rush at her from behind with the revolving door. Given that A. could reugulate his speed of closure, it sounds easier done.

Ebbie


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 11:47 AM

Hmm, getting the speedboat through the door required a bigger door, but yes, the "letting go" thing might work...
Bonnie, the worry now is that you need to slow down enough to engage Amos' reflex bikini contact, and also so you don't hit the glass of the revolving door as they tend to move at a much slower speed.
Is there a mathematician in the house????


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 10:14 AM

I'm not that big you know. Getting me through the door should be a breeze.
I don't mind sinking after that whole thing is over. My built in flotations will bring me back up to the surface.

Bonnie


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: catspaw49
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 10:05 AM

Huge improvement in this thread!!!

Spaw


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 09:40 AM

That's where my reasoning fell down! I wasn't considering a large enough scale! (And I forgot to carry the 3.)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Grab
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 09:36 AM

Re waterskiing through revolving doors, have we finally found a trick they've not showed on James Bond?!

There's certain practical problems here. A speedboat is fairly wide, so either Bonnie would have to ski close to the side where Amos was stood, or Amos would have to be hanging by his knees from the top of the doorframe and reach down. Alternatively, Bonny could drop the ski handle on one side of the door and skid through the door under momentum, although she'd sink shortly after the door.

Of course, no-one specified the size of the door. If it was a revolving door 1/4 mile, there's no problems.

Grab.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: catspaw49
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 08:53 AM

Your math is probably OK Fib, but you keep getting hung up on "c" and forget to carry the 3.

Spaw


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 08:36 AM

Perhaps this should fit in the maths thread.
Given that "anything is possible, with the exception of waterskiing through a revolving door", we aim to use scientific method to calculate the actual probability of said occurence. It is presumed, for these purposes, that there is nothing strange in finding a revolving door in the middle of an expanse of water used for recreational sporting activities. Now, lets calculate:
a) the speed of the revolving door
b) the speed of the tow boat
c) the fastening of Bonnie's bikini (clasp or knot?)
d) the speed of Amos' reaction
e) the prevalent atmospheric conditions (e.g. tide, windspeed, current etc.


I'm working on the equation. My maths is terrible.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 08:04 AM

Amos, how did you know I was a D-positive?
You must be clairoyant or something.

Love Bonnie who would not want to see you lose your arm and not be able to play the beautiful music you create.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 11 Oct 00 - 01:01 AM

Bonnie, much as I admire the insight you offer, imagine the consequences if you did such a thing, while I held the revolving door with one hand and tried (in the few milliseconds available) to intercept the back of your bikini top. In the next instant I would lose my arm as you slammed into the next panel of the revolving door (or your tow boat did) and your would transubstantiate from D-positive to C-negative. No, not your blood type, either!

Love,

Amos


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Rich(bodhránai gan ciall)
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 11:31 PM

I believe this thread could get more interesting real soon;->

Rich


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 11:29 PM

ooohhh...dangerous thread creep...*big grin*


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 11:00 PM

That is because Amos wants to unsnap the back of my bikini top when I fly by.


Little Neo


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 10:42 PM

That's alright. I'm a gentleman and I will hold the revolving door for her while she skis through it....um....er....

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Rich(bodhránai gan ciall)
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 10:23 PM

OK, I believe that it's possible to waterski through a revolving door,and I believe that Allan C and Amos and Little Neo respectively could each ski through your own revolving doors but I dont' think Little Neo could follow Amos through the SAME revolving door. No way. Huh-huh.

Rich


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 10:13 PM

Anna:

Personally I think you exercised an ability to broadcast an intention with great clarity, and the universe sorta fell in along with it. That's my opinion. But that sort of ability in most people I've seen tends to be sporadic, just as you describe, and can easily be self-suppressed if you feel it is going to cause harm. It's that native "goodness" in ya coming forard.

(I think they had it coming, myself! :>))

Love,

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 08:08 PM

Sure, a lot of people are motivated to enforce unreality because they cannot stand reality. But there are probably as many who are more interested in expanding "reality" and find broader insights, than they are in just refuting it.

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Uncle_DaveO
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 06:03 PM

First, let me identify myself so that what I say can be taken in context.

I, too, am a skeptic (thank you for pointing out the spelling, WyoWoman.) (And a pedant too.) Take everything I say with that in mind.

I don't say that all believers in astrology-cropcircles- UFOs-pyramids-crystals and what have you fit into this, but it is my observation that some people have an ABSOLUTE HUNGER for mystery, for marvels, for conspiracy theories, and so forth, and as such rush to embrace lines of thought (if such it may be called) that are strange just because they are strange, and latch onto them with an iron grip--not tentatively, not provisionally, but as home ground that must be defended.

Dave Oesterreich


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 05:23 PM

"Feeling Good" (the book) is a great thing. I still needed the meds and I still had to work through a ton of other things that were not related to faulty inner scripting (or whatever the term was), but it did help a great deal.

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: SINSULL
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 05:17 PM

hesperis,
The Feeling Good Handbook was a basic part of my initial therapy. I was assigned the task of reading it and doing the quizes for the first few sessions. Then my therapist asked "What do you think?" I told her I was stopping my therapy and going to see Dr. Burns. In every case study, he claims that after "One or two more sessions" his patient was well on his way to "normal". I on the other hand was still a mess after two months with my therapist.
His list of pitfalls and explanation of how to identify and correct your misinterpretation of a situation is still my bible. His ego annoys the hell out of me. At times, I wanted to smack him. Be forewarned.
Mary, grateful to the good doctor but able to see his "misinterpretations" too.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 04:03 PM

I loved that song! It had a life before the Muppets, of course. We fogeys sang it as we drove through Menominee, Wisconsin. The young'uns hadn't never heard of it, of course!

Menominee, beep beeeeee ba-deepy....

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: annamill
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 04:00 PM

Thank you, Nonny. That reminds me of that song on the muppets- meno-min-nah -dada da dada ;-)

I'm feeling silly - I think the pressure is getting to me.

L.A.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 03:37 PM

Alas I was right, I spelled it wrong.

Main Entry: nu·mi·nous
Pronunciation: 'nü-m&-n&s, 'nyü-
Function: adjective
Etymology: Latin numin-, numen numen
Date: 1647
1 : SUPERNATURAL, MYSTERIOUS

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bert
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 03:35 PM

Nah! I think you must be a witch *tee hee*


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: annamill
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 03:32 PM

Neo, they happened so long ago and so far apart, I have to credit them to coincidence... they just make me wonder...know what I mean..

..numenous.. ??

Love, annamill


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 03:26 PM

Oh no, not me! No sir! I mean ma'am!

Remember the rede: "an it harm none..."

I'd hate to have my first numenous (sp?) experience be a painful one!

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 03:08 PM

anamill, those are amazing stories.
So do you ever now become concerned that when you are mad, your thoughts might make something happen?

Remember Ghost Busters when the guy was not supposed to think about anything, so he thought about marshmallows and manifested the Marshmallow Monster stomping down mainstreet?

Little Neo


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: annamill
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 03:07 PM

MT, were you makin funname? Hadn't realized..hmmm...

Amos, sorry I wrecked the conversation. Please continue. It was fascinating. Seriously. I was just pointing out how circumstances could mess up your resolve.

Grab, my ex always says I'm a witch. ;-)

L.A.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Ebbie
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 02:50 PM

Ah, but, Bartholomew, with a 6 foot one he can...

Ebbie


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Amos
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 02:42 PM

Aw, and here we wuz havin a seeryus conversashun.

Wal, ya nivver know whatcha can do til ya try.

Wun time ah decided to git ma truck up to a hunnert an twenny, and evvyone sed No Way, Hosay, cuz its a '68 with shellacked carbs,an'o springs to speek of... but Ah jes _knew_ ah could so Ah took out on the Gulfport road and got up to ninety; and I said, "Ah KNOW Ah kin dooit" and started down the long grade tuh the Misszipi bridge and got up to 104, but Ah wasnt gonna settle fer thet. Annyway, Ah knew Ah could do one-twenny. An' jess as Ah got tuh the bridge the left front retread come off and Ah went over the bluff which is 'bout two hunnert feet up fum the water...by accident, you wuld think... and by the time thet truck hit the river she was for sure doin one-twenny cuz the officer on the case tole me it wuz so. Weeeird, huh??? Scairy tuh think!

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Jim the Bart
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:52 PM

Watch it, Spaw, she might tell you to "F*ck yerself" and then you'd end up in the Guiness Book.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Grab
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:51 PM

Well, if you can, then it presumes either that you subconsciously know the future, or that you can control the weather and cause other people to do things. An individual controlling weather and people - unlikely. And knowing the future is equally unlikely since we can't rewind time.

So either you're some immensely powerful sorceress, or it's coincidence... :-)

Grab.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:51 PM

Annamill, I'm REALLY SORRY about the limericks I wrote making fun of you yesterday. I apologize sincerely and whole-heartedly and I'll never do it again.

Please don't zorch me!

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: annamill
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:47 PM

Sorry 'spaw. Evidently it would take a great deal of negative emotion and the only emotion I can get up for you is love. So all I can say is 'GET LOVED 'SPAW'.

;-) L,A.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: catspaw49
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:36 PM

Say anna.......Would it be too much to ask if you could tell me to "Get fucked?"

Just wonderin'.......and kinda' hopeful...........

Spaw


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: annamill
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:34 PM

Oh, and whats this about the bunny rabbit??? What do you mean he doesn't exist???

;-)

L,A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: annamill
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:32 PM

I'm not a religious person, and I tend to be very skeptical in other subjects as well. Even the discussion of crop circles seems silly to me. There are just too many other ways these things could have been done to justify an decision that it was aliens. I haven't decided yet about 'beings from another planet' because I haven't seen all the data.

I read my astrology reading almost every day and sometimes it's right on the money, sometimes it's not. I read it for fun to see how close it comes today. But I'm not about to let it dictate how my life is run.

I'm not religious, so I don't believe in ghosts, etc.

I have, however, had some really strange experiences that lead me to believe that my mind might possible have a strength unknown to me. Let me give you a couple of 'for instances'.

One day, many years ago, before I went to college, I was sitting in my kitchen with my baby girl, watching the boob tube. I stopped for a second, and said outloud to myself, 'I wish something would happen to this stupid TV so I'd have to get up off my A** and dooo something'. I must mention here that the day was beautiful, clear, warm and not a cloud in the sky. My neighbor was out in back with her baby girl hanging clothes.

A few minutes later, maybe a half an hour, there was a loud, shattering sound of lightning and a blast of bright light and everything in the house went off and there was smoke rising out of my TV. A little black cloud had passed over and released a bolt. My neighbor and her daughter were still outside, but now the mother had her daughter in her arms and was running for the house.

I must say that I was more than a little surprised. My TV never worked again and a hall light that had never worked now did.

Did I do that?????

Another time, almost as frightning, caused injury to another lady and scared the hell out of me, so to speak.

She used me by asking me to go out for an evening of just we girls. She told her husband we were going out and while we were out she met a man she had obviously set up a date with and left me without even telling me she was going. Boy, was I angry. I worked with this woman as a waitress and the next day at work she and I had a terrible argument and I told her that I hoped she would break her neck and spend all the money she made on medicine. Wellll, I quit because I couldn't stand being near her. A week later I met someone who also worked there and she told me this woman was walking into the kitchen with a tray on her shoulder and someone pushed open the door, forcing the tray into her neck breaking a collarbone. She was now at home till she recovered.

Did I do that????

Coincidence you say (me too), but was it, or was it me?

Love, annamill


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 01:12 PM

Eb-

I say, "man if that ever happened to me I think I'd faint dead away."

But reports from others are quite different from something happening to oneself, because they are always filtered through that person's belief system -slash- worldview, which never precisely coincides with one's own.

One need not be delusional to be mistaken, or to misinterpret what one experiences. Of course if such things happened to me, and I were to tell you about them, then *I* would be the one interpreting and filtering. So I do not judge others when they tell me their tales; I don't necessarily agree with them or believe their interpretatin of their experience, however. But I don't discount or dismiss it because it doesn't fit with my worldview (if in fact it doesn't in any particular case), either. Thus I usually refer to myself as "agnostic" on these things. I just don't know.

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Amos
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 12:55 PM

1. No, people do not remember everything correctly, not even as far back as breakfast in some cases. The ability to recall actual versus "dubbed in" or mangled realities is largely a function of the degree to which the individual is in good shape as a "viewer" -- meaning not overburdened with unresolved "stuff" of various kinds which add up to an unwillingness to see.

2. Serious trials in detecting original memory-recordings from under the layers of overlay, imposed ignoral and other strange beasts of the mind have been done, but not in a process that would satisfy strict disciplinarian clinicians. Despite this, the general tendency of the ones I have studied is that under circumstances where the individual is unthreatened and motivated to do so, accurate original memories of the most silly detailed moments from any past point in time are in fact available. This is debatable because as far as I know no-one has figured out how to do a rigorous clinical trial series in which the highly variable needs for communication, encouragement, and a non-challenging environment is provided while meeting the intentionally skeptical premises of what most people consider to be scientific methodology; it gets even trickier if you want to adhere to the tradition of a single-event, single-framework test pattern (like most physics lab tests) being imposed on the volatile and sensitive and often non-repeatable qualities of human thought itself. They really are fundamentally incompatible premises, these two poles. So p'raps we aren't going to solve it with a physics-based experimental approach.

As for the distinction between experience and the interpretation of experience, there's a lot to be said about it; from one perspective there is a baseline of immediate perception of immediate experience which is actually available without the interposition of judgement, extraneous meanings, etc. From another perspective the whole source of experience IS interpretative in the first instance. Ther eis some truth on both sides. Must folks are a blended compromise between the two extremes.

THis is anothe rproblem with "scientific" procedures approaching this turf: experience of physical objects is measureable and can be translated through meters. Experience is only measurable from the body out. But the delta between set "a" of neural inputs (pressure, light, temperature, sound) and sent "A-prime" of the experience of those inputs is highly significant and results in a huge additional variable which approaches the purely subjective. So who ya gonna call?

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 12:37 PM

Ebbie, why I think you are onto something here about some people being uncomfortable with the unknown.

Does Cletus exist? Absolutely, I can smell him way over here.

Little Neo


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Ebbie
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 12:28 PM

Ah ha! Mouse Thief, (Do you steal mice or cheese??) an experience reported to you by someone you trust is, in my book, something that happened to you. So- what do you do at that point? Do you say to yourself, Man, I had no idea that s/he was so delusional or do you tell yourself, Man, there's a lot I don't know...

Ebbie


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: mousethief
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 12:15 PM

I am afraid I must disagree with Ebbie, at least as to the universality of the statement "these things do happnen." I have never had anything even remotely "rum" (to use the British word) happen to me. My mom had poltergeist experiences, I have friends who have had near-death experiences, friends who claim past-life-type memories, know people who claim to have experienced angels, disembodied voices, etc. etc. but none of these things ever seem to happen to me. It's not for my being all that skeptical. Although I am somewhat empirical (to use a less laden word), I am also a religious person, although I have never experienced anything which you might call "mysterious" or "noumenous" or what-have-you.

I think if an angel, or a saint, or a ghost, or a god, or whatever, were to approach me, I'd probably drop into a dead faint. Perhaps that's why they don't -- they're being polite, not wishing to harm me.

Alex
O..O
=o=


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Ebbie
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 12:07 PM

I agree with youk Paddymac, when you say: First, many people(s) seem to be most uncomfortable accepting the existance of something unknown. Such difficulty might flow from any number of sources. Whatever its origin, it creates some degree of angst, and the simplest way to resolve that angst is to create an "explanation" for the unknown, thereby converting it to "known". But do you agree that that that statement applies equally to both sides?

Skeptic, I'm sorry, I was being a bit flippant when I used 'turned on'. What I was implying is that even explanations tend to be trendy. As more information is gathered, explanations change.

But when you say: As a skeptic, I would look at your experience, ask a series of questions, see if there was a way to reproduce the experience, maybe suggest a way to test it. Look at how the various explanations fit with the rest of what is known about the nature of reality.what are you saying? Are you saying that my experiences on the telephone (about 15 years apart) are repeatable/testable/explainable?

I think that one reason that 'skeptics' so often charge gullibility, bad memory, suggestibility, whatever turns you on *BG*, to the people who report these things is because skeptics are uncomfortable with the unknown, that they may never have investigated, never allowed themselves to think about, the odd things that have happened to themselves personally. Because if we're open and aware, these things do happen.

Ebbie


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Penny S.
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 11:44 AM

I didn't notice that sign! Too busy looking at the geology and wondering how anyone with eyes could miss the situation!

Those of you in the other parts of the world, the village is called Happisburgh (don't know the pronounciation), and the cliffs are unconsolidated glacial slurp. There were some brilliant shots along the coast of the series of low headlands with great waves pounding at them, and the waves were heavy with the mud, all brown water on the brown cliffs.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,CLETUS
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 11:30 AM

I dunno whut ta beleev cuz I dun seen so many thangs that I dunno nuthin bowt. But them crop sirculs got moren wun way of splanin them. Like the time Paw fell asleep owt inna feeld and when he rolt over he ripped a biggun an flattened them beans all roundt him fer bowt 2 hunnert feet. Me na Buford figgert ta make a killin givin tours an all, but the smell wuz so bad fer dayz after thet nobuddy wud take the tour. Well it wuz that an the fact that some feller inna airplane took an overhead shot whut showed Paw layin rite in the center of that sircul uv flattened beans with the seat of his britches blown out so thet kinda put a dampur on the thang rite from the start. Wurze thang wuz thet we hadda pay ol man Timmons whut wuz the feller who oant the beans fur the damages sinz Paw dun killt the beanz.

I do know thet I kin be purty dowtfull uv stuff myself cuz on sum dayz I haint reely shur I exist.

CLETUS


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST,Fibula Mattock
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 10:57 AM

Bill D, "wet cement circles", that's what I'd like to see :o)
Now I'm not being flippant. Honestly. In fact, I've gone beyond sceptism and into a state of absolute apathy about such things. I mean, life's too short! (Or is it...) *BG*
Just one other thing. There was a documentary last night on BBC 1 about houses in peril (e.g. subsiding, falling into the sea). Well, at one house which was, quite tragically, about to topple off a cliff due to massive coastal erosion, the people who lived there were saying they had no idea when they moved there that such a thing would happen so quickly. Yet on the side of their van was painted an advertising sign saying "Clairvoyant"...


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Grab
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 10:11 AM

BillD, that's the problem. Of course, there's _always_ some footprints somewhere in a field, but showing that they were made by the blokes drawing the crop circle and not, say, by a couple of teenagers having it off the night before is difficult. I'm not defending UFOlogists - a lot are either cons or whackos - but I still believe it needs to be approached scientifically.

The further problem is that rejecting all this arbitrarily has several disadvantages. Firstly, we may actually be missing a trick - think of aspirin, derived from the willow-bark recommended as an old wives' tale, as a medical example of this. Do magnets affect health? Does acupuncture work? Scientific trials are the only way to test this out and give some kind of proof, or at least put some numbers to it. Note that explaining how it does it is not required - we still don't know exactly how aspirin does all that it does, but trials show that it does have these effects, so we can rely it to do that.

Secondly, and possibly more seriously, it perpetuates these spaced-out theories. How many "alternative" practicioners use phrases such as "science cannot explain it", "the establishment isn't prepared to listen to this startling new theory" or "hundreds of people have already benefited from this"? In most cases (the most notable being homeopathy which is a complete con), a properly conducted experiment will show that the treatment has no effect, and that the people who've claimed benefits from it may have other, more normal, explanations. In this case, the con artist can safely be told to shut up, go away and stop peddling his snake oil (under penalty of prosecution under the Trades Descriptions Act - UK anyway). If the test does NOT show this, then it's time to start looking more seriously at the theory and doing other tests to see whether (a) the first experiment was flawed, or (b) something's really going on.

Of course, no con merchant in their right mind would submit their "product" for impartial testing, and therein lies the problem. Personally, I'd ban anyone from making claims based on testimonials or lines like "it works for some people". If you really think it works, get it tested. If the tests show you may have something then fine, otherwise you should be shut down for the public good so you don't con anyone else.

Note that I'm not saying all alternative theories are bad. There's some strong circumstantial evidence for therapies such as acupuncture or Chinese herbal medicine. Some people have passed lie-detector tests when asked about UFOs, ESP, etc (although remember that a polygraph can be fooled). There's very little rigorous investigation been done and too many von Daeniken types involved, though, so scepticism is the ONLY rational approach.

Prove your case, and you've won. Fail to prove your case, and at least we know now. Don't have the nerve to prove your case, you're a con-artist.

Grab.

duplicate posting deleted
- elf/joeclone -


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Jim the Bart
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 09:52 AM

I have a problem with tieing "what is real (actual)" with "what can be proven". If you deny the existence of something until it can be demonstrated using the scientific method, you would have had to deny the existence of gravity until the law was written.

There is as difference between saying "We just don't know" and "that's not possible". And it is impossible logically to prove - and I mean PROVE - that something does not exist. Which creates a delicious little irony: People who "believe" in God could, by producing him, prove his existence; those who deny his existence can only take his non-existence on faith.

None of this is to say that you have to give creedence to every idea comes along. There are ways to make judgements on probabilities and improbabilities, and in most cases, the rules of our sciences hold true. But it is hubris of the worst sort to deny things that our rules can't (yet) prove. And the gods have a way of dealing with those who display that over-weening pride.

Just a few thought from your pal
Bart


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 09:27 AM

I have a difficult time with this discussion because if you have two people in a discussion; one person who has a particular belief in something and another person who is skeptical of that particular belief, what is there to talk about?
It is like two people in two different realities trying to understand each other but not willing to open up their reality so that they can truly understand each other.
If they both opened up their reality and let go of their limited perspectives, you would probably find the person with the particular belief and the skeptic dismantled of their thoughts and humbled by the truth.

Little Neo


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 08:55 AM

Amos,

I am troubled by the "use of experience" thing. It seems to me that what is being used is not the experience, but the individual's interpretation of that experience. There seems to be an unspoken assumption that people remember their experiences correctly. (that is, as the occurred, in the correct sequence and so on). Another assumption is that people have access to the memory of everything that has ever happen to them. You don't really forget, its all buried down their somewhere. And finally, there is the need to explain the why of things.

Given the above, (and for the first two there is enough experimental evidence to convince most people that neither assumption is correct), is a wonder that even the minimally skeptical would question fringe interpretations.

And I concur that belief is necessary. Its is the starting point for much, including science. I don't think it should be the ending point.

Ebbie,

I have read your postings with interest. I found your comment that "skeptics will often lay it to whatever turns them on" puzzling. The implication seems to be that skeptics create explanations that suit them out of what they want to believe. Which is our point about those who elevate "I know because I know" to the level fact. Maybe what I call skepticism isn't what you call it. Seems that there maybe a confusion/combination of skepticism with cynicism. As a cynic, I might use the various explanations you offered to "explain" your experience. My motives would be essentially ego gratification. As a skeptic, I would look at your experience, ask a series of questions, see if there was a way to reproduce the experience, maybe suggest a way to test it. Look at how the various explanations fit with the rest of what is known about the nature of reality.

Cynicism is as much a belief system as Christianity. Skepticism is a way of trying to understand things. It doesn't preclude the experiences you had but as a system of knowledge, it requires a higher proof. Cynicism disguised as skepticism is one of the 'dark side" things I talked about. If I fall into that trap, I hope to be called on it.

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: John P
Date: 10 Oct 00 - 08:16 AM

I read something in a book years ago that has stayed with me:

"Belief is an insult to the mind."

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 04:19 PM

Well, that's an excellent start. And if Adams supports it, I know I'm on the right track!

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: sophocleese
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 04:08 PM

Amos, I thought that the guy who ran the universe in Hitch Hikers guide to the Galaxy had achieved that state of divine non-paradigmness.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 04:06 PM

Grab....in response to

"But how do you tell them apart from the genuine ones, given that the so-called "experts" can't recognise a human-made one? "

I simply use Occam's Razor...if I know SOME circles are made with ropes and planks by practical jokers, why would I even suspect that the rest are made by alien ships that ALWAYS manage to get away unseen? Those 'experts' may be the same experts who pronounced Piltdown Man to be the missing link...they just don't LOOK hard!(the program I saw stated that there usually WERE some footprints near the crop circles, if one looked carefully, though the basic trick was to enter the field along the compressed rows the farmers use for tractor access, thus making prints rare and hard to see)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Ebbie
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 03:07 PM

Skeptic, when I say that I won't argue with what I know, I mean just that. I love science and follow it religiously *BG* but I suspect that science will be adding a great many components to its format as time goes on. And thank God *BG* for that. Science, being science, needs to continue to discover and ascertain. Human beings need to incorporate that information, and we will. Even skeptics will.

I would imagine that we all agree that there are more things that human beings know than there are human beings. No problem with that. The disagreement comes with particulars.

Among the things I know is that, on occasion, we human beings are able to utilize inanimate things for our own perceptions. For instance, I think we all agree that we can't smell things over the telephone. Right? It is not part of its physical makeup. How then to explain the couple of times that I have? And my daughter at the age of 9 once did the same thing.

In my own experience, the first time happened when I was talking on the phone to a girlfriend in a town 3 miles away. My feet were on a hassock and I was relaxed and lazy. At a certain point, unediting, I said, What do I smell? Boiled eggs? Taken aback, she faltered, Well, I boiled eggs for supper.

The second time I was talking to a girlfriend 5 blocks away. My 100-year-old home has odd odors at times- that's a different story- so I told my friend that I could smell my oven heating, and that, no doubt, soon I would smell cookies (biscuits) baking. If they are chocolate cookies, she said lightly, I'll be over. We continued talking and a couple of times I mentioned that the oven's getting hotter but no cookies yet. Finally she said, Well, I have to go- we're having waffles for supper. I said, Are you heating the waffle iron right now?! She said, Yes... I said, That is what I'm smelling.

As you can see, these events are totally non-consequential but because the information doesn't fit in with things they can explain, skeptics will often lay it to whatever turns them on- whether it's suggestibility, ignorance of 'science', hallucination, stupidity... Fine. Do that. But I do know it happened.

Ebbie


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 02:56 PM

You put your finger on the dark side of weak thinking, alright; fascism is only a few steps away from other sorts of obsessive authoritarian dependency. Over-associating and monotone importances and a failure to understand ramifications can lead to all kinds of hypnotic (not to mention psychotic) conduct like the mass participation in murderous oppression, witch-burning, obsessive parochial views, and so on.

There is risk in both extremes.

Any set of "data" that embraces only part of our total continuum has a boundary on the side of the unknown, and proceeding from the unknown to the partially known to the known about to the known is not a rigid or clinical process. It is more of an engineering process than a "scientific" one , using figures of merit, approximations, indirect estimations, and a deep affection for what seems to work.

The problem we are circling around in this thread is that a great deal of experiential data -- intuition, affection, the upper ends of Maslow's scale -- comes from near that boundary.

As long as we insist on using ONLY material-centric data in approaching the effort to understand thought we will not extend the boundary very much. Excluding experience is a pretty poor way to march into a scientific address of the unknown. On the other hand, accepting all experience as fact is equally dunderheaded especially given the high "creativity" factor with which people persuade themselves, the capacity for self-fulfilling prediction and self-realizing delusions, and so on. This is not a nice well-behaved zone of inquiry like the latent heat of frozen water or the acceleration caused by gravity. It is highly plastic.

The challenge is in sorting out which "datums" are more factual, and especially which datums are important, and why, in amongst a huge sea of opinions, fantasies, apparitions, legacy legends, and real events.

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: RichM
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 02:47 PM

What's the point in discussing esoteric matters with non believers? I would be skeptical too - IF some very strange things had not happened to me!.

I am happy in my personal understanding of these matters-because I have personal knowledge of them. I have no interest in "converting" people to my beliefs. Let them have their own revelations.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 02:29 PM

I'm the worst of both worlds. A skeptic with a healthy dose of cynicism on the side. I use the three "C"s a lot. And watch out for the fourth "C" - Complexity. Just because its complex, doesn't means its any less BS. Just because its wrapped in the superficial trappings of the scientific method, with lots of numbers to back it up, doesn't necessarily make it so.

I find it funny that people who believe in things for which there is no objective or verifiable proof, (The "I believe because I Know" argument) label skeptics as not being "open minded". Skeptics (or sceptics, The OED is clearly THE source. And I hear its going/is on-line), are fairly open minded. We just apply certain criteria to how we look at things. That criteria demands some proof, a semblance of consistency and congruency with other demonstrated facts. I liked the illustration about the Easter bunny and Easter eggs. I "know" the Easter Bunny brought my eggs, no matter what happened to the rest of the world.. What kind of criteria is that. That seems to be an underlying theme. That opinion can elevate any of the various can rise ologies, isms or pseudoscience to the status of the Theory of Special Relativity.

As I see it, reductio ad absurdum, if you provided proof, in the form of verifiable experiments, comprehensive theory and so on, that the Special Theory is wrong, then I'd accept that. If I provide the same level of proof to demonstrate that astrology (or whatever) doesn't even rise to the level of certainty of systems that pick winning lotto numbers, the likely response is "yes but..... And somehow skeptics are closed minded? Being a skeptic is a way of looking at the world, rather than a way to categorize it.

It is not the belief itself, so much as the underlying assumption that anecdotal evidence, fuzzy logic and the like, make something so. It teaches that scientific methodology is coequal with opinion-disguised-as-fact. Retreating into the "we just don't know enough yet" begs the question. The question should be, "what do we need to do to find the answers? And how?

What follows is NOT tolerant, understanding or nice. (Well for me it is), but it is an expression of a belief and concern It isn't an accusation directed at anyone.

Not to claim that one leads to the other, but IMHO, given that (fuzzy logic) standard for defining what is so, is there really a difference in kind between belief in astrology, alien abduction and other innocuous fringe beliefs, and the dark side of the fringe: eugenics, racial purity, purges and inquisitions? If we teach that anecdotal eviedence and sloppy thinking are acceptable tools for analyzing the world, the risk is real.

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Jim the Bart
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 02:23 PM

Amos - how many filters can you afford to do away with before the mind recoils in horror? Just wondering

We humans build our maps of reality and using them eke out a rather meager, but comfortable living. When those maps start to prove false, we get upset for a while. If we're lucky and smart and perceptive and lucky again, we quickly adjust our maps and move on. If not, we borrow other people's maps (therapy and religion) or just sit still for a while (drugs).

Mostly, we look at the connectedness of things and try to find other connections. Sometimes we are willing to invent connections where there aren't any, if we need to or if it looks like fun.

I am nowhere near smart enough or intuitive to know which connections are real and which are not. I like paddymac's "statistical concepts relating to causation". It helps in some cases to be able to apply the rationalist's litmus test to our "map making". Keeps us walking that rope between "open-mindedness" and "gullibility" or between "literalism" and "skepticism". It helps to remember that our perception of what's going on (our current map of reality) is not necessarily what is actually going on (reality itself).

The one thing that seems to throw me completely is the question of faith. Belief without proof, regardless of experience, is a completely different kind of map entirely. We tend to want things to follow a set of rules and have limits. Even when those rules and limits are not obvious to us, the thought that they exist is comforting, in some small way. Faith is the willingness to admit that there is something beyond the reach of any rules and limits that we can formulate. It makes my head hurt.

To respond to Fmaj7's original thought: I don't eliminate any possibility, simply because I have no proof in my experience to support it. But I don't avow anything that is beyond logical proof. Some things you just have to let sit there in the various "possible bins" - possible, but not likely/probable, but not proven/improbable, but wouldn't it be cool if.../possible, but beyond the realm of our experience


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Grab
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 02:03 PM

BillD, I missed that (although it may have been on in the US, in which case I wouldn't have seen it anyway). Maybe it coincided with the Santana interview. But there's been plenty enough progs, articles etc about crop circles anyway.

Maybe they didn't claim them all, but then they're only a couple of guys. Sure there's more out there. I love the idea of bog circles - respect for that! :-) Equally there may well be a few made by genuine spacecraft (devil's advocate!) But how do you tell them apart from the genuine ones, given that the so-called "experts" can't recognise a human-made one?

Amos, that's either called a genius or a nutcase (or both), depending on whether his whacked-out idea actually works. Paradigms are what keep everyone from having to develop everything from first principles - it's quicker to rely on someone else's research and use that as a stepping-stone to your next idea ("shoulders of giants" and all that). On the other hand, sometimes it is a good idea to reinvent the wheel - ask Mr. Dunlop! :-) I'd guess the mark of a genius is that he can look at his results and work back through his preconceptions until he finds whatever would solve the problem, however unlikely it may be. That spark is genius, everything after that is merely engineering and fine-tuning.

Grab.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Skeptic
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 01:59 PM

As to belief, I'm the worst of both worlds. A skeptic with a healthy dose of cynicism on the side. I use the three "C"s a lot. And watch out for the fourth "C" - Complexity. Just because its complex, doesn't means its any less BS. Just because its wrapped in the superficial trappings of the scientific method, with lots of numbers to back it up, doesn't necessarily make it so.

I find it funny that people who believe in things for which there is no objective or verifable proof, (The "I believe because I Know" arguement) label skeptics as not being "open minded". Skeptics (or sceptics, The QED is clearly THE souuce. And I hear its going/is on-line)IMHO, are fairly open minded. We just have a criteria we apply to the world. That criteria demands some proof, a semblance of consistancy and congruency with other demonstated facts. I liked the illustration about the easter bunny and easter eggs. I "know" the Easter Bunny brought my eggs, no matter what happened to the rest of the world. Or that any of the various can rise ologies, isms or the like are as valid as the Theory of Special Relativity.

As I see it, reductio ad absurdum, if you provided proof, in the form of varifiable experiments, comprehensive theory and so on, that the Special Theory is wrong, then I'd accept that. If I Provide the same level of proof to demonstate that astrology doesn't even rise to the level of certaintity of systems that pick winning lotto numbers the likely response is "yes but..... And somehow skeptics are closed minded? The mistake is that being a skeptic is a way of looking at the world, rather than a way to categorize it.

It is not the belief itself, so much as the underlying assumption that annecdotal evidence, fuzzy logic and the like, make it so. It teaches that facts are coequal with opinion-disguised-as-fact. Retreating into the "we just don't know enough yet" begs the question. The question should be, "what do we need to do to find the answers?

I don't think people who are enamoured of astrology, alien abduction, christianity, tarot,and the like, also believe in eugenics, racial purity/superiority or the dark side of pseudoscience. I do maintain that the type of thinking that allows either is similar in kind.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: hesperis
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 12:24 PM

About perception:

One doctor has treated several severely depressed individuals by showing them the logicall fallacies about themselves that they were believing as Truth.

The book about it is Feeling Good, by Dr. David Burns. I really recommend it.

I'll post more about it later, because I do think that it applies here.

Amos - yet again, beautifully done! I wish I'd said that!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 12:00 PM

confess, Amos...you used more than planks and ropes to write that, didn't you?...(just being awed and smart-alecy, honest!...as someone who 'nearly' finished a masters thesis on Alfred N. Whitehead's metaphysics, I do respect the level of analysis you achieve...now I'll go back and re-read it to see if I get all the implications)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: WyoWoman
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 11:59 AM

Sophocleese, I am abashed.

Rick Fielding -- I've been to Roswell. Trust me. There is nothing going on in Roswell. And Elvis does live because I saw a newspaper article about a BRAND-NEW FORD TRUCK FOUND ORBITING THE EARTH!!! And I just know the King is driving that truck. With coon dogs in the back in little jumsuits ...

Bill D -- that has a lovely sound to it. I want to see a meadow circle...

Oops. My egg timer has just twanged. Time to go work on a corporate newsletter. And get a paycheck. Now, THAT, I believe in ...

ww


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 11:52 AM

One exploration that is interesting along these lines is how we build the filters with which we allow certain structures of knowledge in and keep others out. The much-abused term "paradigm", as it was exposited in the original seminal book, The Nature of Scientific Revolutions provided a better handle than we had previously had on the mechanism. We erect over-arching modeling assumptions about the world. Data that contravenes the model often goes unobserved, or if observed gets readily rationalized as insignificant.

But this opens some interesting paths to consider. For example, what if there were in the individual a capacity for dispensing with the paradigmatic approach to reality? What if an individual could turn of all his paradigms and tolerate a wide open, raw-feed river of perception? What bands of frequencies would open up, and what dnamics would reveal themselves?

To put it another way, how much could we find out if we were not so deeply enmeshed in knowing what we already know?

Food for reflection, as the man said when he threw the hamhock at the mirror.

Regards,

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 11:48 AM

sounds like Grab saw the same program I did last night. Three blokes with ropes and planks who have for several years perfected the art of 'crop circles', and who allowed a 6 1/2 hour time-lapse photography film of them doing one...amazing how much they could do in one night!.....Did they lay claim to ALL the crop circles in the last 15 years?..nope...lots of room for alien crafts still, I suppose, and there will be those who simply WANT to believe, and would not change their minds if there WERE confessions about all crop circles...they would simply claim the confessions were hoaxes to ridicule this amazing mystery....and who knows, perhaps they are right.

(did you ever wonder why is is almost always 'crops'? Why not 'meadow' circles in grass?...or sand circles in the desert?..or bog circles?....Am I being too cynical to think that footprints are easier to disguise/hide in trampled grain?)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Rick Fielding
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 11:04 AM

Hell, I'm damned impressed that you know an "Fmaj7"! In bluegrass circles that's a pretty alternative belief.

LIke many things, I try to make my mind up on a case by case basis. For example:

Elvis lives...Nope, but if he DOES, I hope he's deep sixed the jump suit.

Roswell....I truly believe SOMETHING's going on there.

JFK, MLK,....Bet yer boots there are things we've never been told.

Crop Circles....If the farmers and "circle guides" weren't charging money, I'd be less skeptical.

Spirit worlds, re-incarnation, astrology...why not? They make our world more interesting.

The smartest people become our elected leaders? Now THERE's an alternative belief I can't support.

Rick


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Grab
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 10:38 AM

It comes down to: physical phenomena _are_. If you do something and it has a given effect, then you've got something to investigate. Next job is to find why and how it happens. For acupuncture/herbal medicine, it may be psychosomatic; alternatively it may be some effect in the human body which we don't yet understand. Maybe we don't yet have the skills or the technology to find how it works - to some extent, medicine still relies on prayer, just hoping that the body sorts it out itself! - but one day we may do. Incidentally, try this for a funny take on that.

Astrology is rather too subjective, though. If it said "This is going to happen at this time on this day", then it's provable. If it just says "Something bad's going to happen to you next year", well of course! The human brain is rather too good at pattern-matching, so after the event it's easy to pick evidence which matches the conclusions you want to draw.

Aliens, ESP, etc - well, if they happen, then prove it. Science is the art of putting formulae to physical phenomena (ooh, alliteration :-) so if you can show it happening and produce some statistics on how well it works (eg. ranges for ESP, through walls, etc), then that's good enough for any scientist. There's no need to say HOW it works - Faraday hadn't a clue about electrons and Newton didn't know relativity, but it didn't stop them producing a good first draft of what was going on. Conversely, if you can't demonstrate it, provide proof of it or give statistics on properly-run experiments, chances are you're peddling snake-oil and should be tarred, feathered and run out of town.

Trouble is, belief _cannot_ by definition be logical. Suppose you believed in Father Christmas and the Easter Bunny - really believed, like religiously. If we told you that it was just your parents, a true believer wouldn't change their mind. After all, they've got proof that they do exist, from the presents and Easter eggs! :-) Crop circles are a prime example of this. "Maybe everyone else's crop circles were fakes, but mine are real!" translates very well to "Maybe everyone else's parents put out Easter eggs, but the Easter Bunny did do mine!" Prove that the crop circle was made by an alien spaceship, not 2 blokes with a plank and a measuring tape (or produce a picture of a rabbit supplying chocolate eggs), and you're credible and should go and publish in "Nature". Find a crop circle which _probably_ couldn't have been made by 2 blokes with a plank, and you've got a good working hypothesis to try and find support for. Say that you "feel the energy, man" when it's been shown without doubt (complete with impartial photographic evidence) that the crop circle was done by 2 blokes with a plank, and you're merely a credulous kook.

Grab.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: GUEST
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 10:26 AM

Why shouldn't things be largely absurd, futile, and transitory? They are so, and we are so, and they and we go very well together. -- George Santayana

Once you see that everthing is unreal, you can't see why you should bother to prove it. -- E.M. Cioran

It really comes down to parsimony, economy of explanation. It is possible that your car engine is driven by psychokinetic energy, but if it looks like a petrol engine, smells like a petrol engine and performs exactly as well as a petrol engine, the sensible working hypothesis is that it is a petrol engine. -- Richard Dawkins

-Am9


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Kim C
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 10:20 AM

I keep an open mind about most things, because I know I don't know everything.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: sophocleese
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 10:14 AM

Umm Wyo Woman, From The Concise Oxford Dictionary - skepsis, skeptic see scepsis etc. (quick page turning exercise) sceptic, or skeptic.
I also believe in spelling and recognise that there is a difference between the English and American styles. Some people I know put all of their faith in Webster, or Random House but I'm a dyed in the wool Oxford fan. (Personally I'm highly sceptical about the usefulness of Websters...)

I like to read science fiction and fantasy novels so there are a lot of things that I think it would be great to believe in, but I'm suspicious of shortcuts.

In university I had a friend who was very much into Tarot cards, so I started reading more about it. When I became depressed and started seeing a psychiatrist I mentioned this interest. He immediately asked me if I had had my colours done as well. I looked at him as if he had just sprouted a second head. What the hell did the one thing have to do with the other? Nothing except they appealed to young women at that age.

I see different ideas come and go. I have a book about song writing where the first section is devoted to a practical use of the theory of left and right brain divisions. I'm still sceptical about it. The basic theory of the brain being divided into two halves with specific function residing in one half or the other may be all right. However the way that others have taken this tentative proposal and run wild with it so that now you can apparently compartmentalize your entire existence into right or left brain boxes, that you can judge people, or categorize them along these lines, makes me very wary. I wonder what theory about creativity will introduce, almost to the exclusion of all else, the next wave of song writing, drawing, or sculpting books.

So I'm interested less in belief than in the way that belief is used and promulgated.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: paddymac
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 09:57 AM

Fascinating topic with much food for thought. I see two phenomena at work in this area.

First, many people(s) seem to be most uncomfortable accepting the existance of something unknown. Such difficulty might flow from any number of sources. Whatever its origin, it creates some degree of angst, and the simplest way to resolve that angst is to create an "explanation" for the unknown, thereby converting it to "known". As but one example, consider the way in which many religions anthropomorphose their various conceptions of god(s). It seems that if we put a human face on a thing, it is easier to accept and embrace. A marketing person might call this the "familiarity factor."

Second, most people seem to be unfamiliar with statistical concepts relating to causation. I learned them as the three "Cs": coincidence; correlation; and causation. In the case of co-incidence, the fact that two things occur together simply means that they occurred together and does not imply causation. If those things occur together often enough they are said to be correlated, and when that correlation reaches a high enough level there is a basis for probable causation. When that correlation is absolute, such that A & B always occur together, then we can think of causation. Not necessarily that A "causes" B, but that they are causally linked.

The "three Cs" are a good filter mechanism for the rational skeptic.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: John P
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 08:37 AM

Fmaj7, in your original post you said that you didn't want to imply that your beliefs were more valid than anyone else's, but you didn't actually say what your beliefs are.

The way I have resolved all this for myself is to realize that human beings have the capacity for spiritual experience. I myself have had lots of spiritual experiences. But most attempts to explain them or to define them and (especially) to place them within the context of any human-made system/doctrine/structure causes them to not make much sense.

Things that don't make sense to me (and that seem quite similar) include astrology, palmistry, tarot, Christianity, and the casting of spells. I don't think these sort of things have much in common with alien abductions, crops circles and the lot, except that they also don't make sense. The various non-mainstream healing plans are in yet a third category, and again, some of them make sense and some don't. As you have noticed, nonsensical things are often believed in by credulous people. But the same could be said for many people who play the stock market or who think that Las Vegas can be a profitable place to go. There are lots people who believe in lots of things that don't stand up to critical analysis.

On the other hand, I know people who apparently think astrology makes perfect sense but who think aliens are out of this world, so to speak. So no, I don't think that belief in one unbelievable thing automativally means belief in others. I just think that if an already credulous person decides that one non-mainstream system works, they might easily decide that they all work.

On a slight tangent, I know a guy that does tarot readings and uses the cards as a focusing tool to bring his empathy and people reading skills to the fore. His readings work, which is a very different thing than saying the cards themselves delve into the psyche of the person being read. So -- I don't believe in the tarot because it doesn't make any sense, but I believe in empathy because I have seen and experienced many examples of it. I have had some very good results using the I Ching, but I don't think there is anything psychic involved with achieving those results -- I just think it's a brilliantly written book.

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 09 Oct 00 - 07:47 AM

Drats you beat me to it Amos! I was just about to post exactly what you said.

**major, major big grin on my face**

Little Neo who likes to trail behind Amos' big footsteps exploring the imprints he leaves.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Amos
Date: 08 Oct 00 - 11:32 PM

Well, it is a truism that the human mind is unboundedly plastic and can come up with any perception it wants to; in other words, BS is plenty cheap, kowabunga, and there can be an infinity of invented explanations for things. Anyone can claim their particular perceptions or convictions are based on some Cosmic Source, or Priveleged Awareness, or data inaccessible to the common man, or insights brought to them by (angels, Virgins, Venusians, Leprechauns, flying cheerios....choose your vehicle). There's an unlimited supply of bushwa out there, and assertion without discernment or discrimination is a common attribute.

At the same time, the notion that there is only the Newtonian set of phenomena, and EVERYthing else is delusory, is itself so assertive, and so extreme, and so exclusive of wide--spread phenomena itself, as to appear equally delusory. Either end of the spectrum leads to madness.

It is probably more rational to allow that there are different domains at work -- the material domain mostly sticks to pretty routyine mechanical laws like thermodynamics and such. Meanwhile the domain of personal imagination, intuition and perception seems pretty well to follow its own set of laws, not unknowable but no-where near as well docuumented as those of the material doomain.

Well, obviously -- the nature of the phsyical universe is that it is nothing if not repeatable, always acting the same way in dull repetition eternally bound. Not so the universe of thought, imagination, and possibly the psirit, where creativity seems to hold much greater sway, and consequently things are MUCH less predictable. That does NOT make them any the less true, no matter what the physics-heads among us say, but it sure as hell means that the are different.

Add to these two highly differed domains the third domain of social agreement, where all of us spend a good deal of time, building collective structures of consent to things like "how to act human" and "how to be polite" and "how to see things the way others do" -- a domain with a whole separate and extensive set of entanglements, confusions and conflicts, where things are sometimes repeatable and sometimes not, where people will present timeless Truths as God-given and invariable in one moment and act out wholly contradictory convictions five minutes later...well, is it any wonder these colliding domains get a bit confused and steamed up? It's enough to make you take up the bottle, the Church, or die-hard materialism, whichever comes first!

Regards,

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: WyoWoman
Date: 08 Oct 00 - 09:20 PM

SKeptics, people sKeptic. Skeptical.

I believe in spelling.

Other than that, I try not to hold many beliefs. But I do think a lot is interesting. And a lot is also not interesting at all.

I'm a dyed in the wool adherent to the Whatever Works School of Most Things. Acupuncture has worked amazingly well for me on certain stuff. Chiropractic has made those very same things worse. Ergo, I have a couple of acupuncture sessions when that particular stuff flares up. I do not try chiropractic any more at all. Western medicine has made a hash out of several different medical problems I had. Ergo, I only go to the doctor when it is utterly unavoidable. I do my best to stay healthy through other means - diet, exercise, vitamin supplements. Being happy. Forgiving. Practicing a spiritual discipline.

Crop circles are beautiful. I just love to look at them. I don't speculate much beyond that, except to admire whoever created them and to wonder, as I wonder with other cool stuff, how they DID that ...

Astrology is nothing I believe in -- except that I'm a textbook Libran. ;-}

But I have a friend who's an astrologer and I believe in her. She may use Tarot cards and astrology charts to access the wisdom she does, but whatever her method, I believe she is a wise woman and I take heavily into account what she offers in the way of insight and advice. My sister is an ordained Christian minister and I listen to her and seek her counsel as well because experience has taught me that she also is a wise woman and her insights are to be treasured.

There is much more we don't know about this remarkable universe than we do know, so I have a fairly large region in my brain and heart and psyche under the banner "Awaiting Further Light." I try to keep my attention focused fairly close to home, to the quality of my relationships and the work I do and let the other stuff sort itself out as it will. And to play as much as I possibly can, as often as I can.

But my animal medicine card says I'm Otter, which is playful female energy, so, well, I would ...

ww


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Jon Freeman
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 11:04 PM

No Fion, I was perhaps being paranoid but certainly had not intended coming over as welcoming. I thought that this thread may have been directed at a couple of posters and immediately thought "this is a troll". I then went back and had a look at the member name and saw that this was their first post.

It sort of reminded me of a member called Chef who had a similar one line writing style and basically started Camsco vs CDNow and has not been seen since and an earlier "Guest" who started Accounts at HearMe.

I'll go to bed now and hope I will sleep it off.

Jon


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Sorcha
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 10:12 PM

Awwwwwww, but I wanna think!! It's been so long since I even could........

Well, maybe I never could, but I tend to agree with all of the above. There are many things people alive now will never know, things our great grandchildren will never know, and things that perhaps humans never should know. Look at the differences in just the last 100 years.

Things we take for granted, our grandparents would never have believed, like talking to you on this computer. Some things, probably including re-incarnation, will always be matters of faith. I don't really consider re-incarnation to be an "alternative" belief. Millions of Buddhists, Hindi, etc. have believed in it for thousands of years. Alternative to what? Cold, hard fact? There is damn little of that, even in the Scientific World.

Apples are red, except for green Granny Smiths, yellow Delicious, etc.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Malcolm Douglas
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 09:23 PM

Fortean Times


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Allan C.
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:58 PM

...with the possible exception of waterskiing through a revolving door


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Little Neophyte
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:55 PM

I believe anything is possible

Little Neo


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: hesperis
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:39 PM

I would like to believe in several things, but I only believe in a few. Astrology, yes, it's a useful tool for understanding yourself. Aliens, yes, they probably exist, but are they going to come to Orillia and make circles on the ground? Highly doubtful. Past lives, sure, why not. Eternal youth and life? Maybe not eternal, but there are theories that if we could clear up any cell damage as soon as it happens and regenerate healthy new cells consistently, life could definitely be prolonged.

~*sirepseh*~


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Peter K (Fionn)
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:23 PM

I'm with Sorcha - it's all or nothing. In my case nothing. (Don't think, Sorcha - you'll spoil it.)

As for Jon, Fmaj7, I think he was just trying to say welcome, but it came out wrong. On his better days (when he's not droning on about how much better his banjo playing used to be) he is one of the more useful contributors to this virtual community.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Barbara
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:16 PM

A lot of the ideas you mentioned, I file in the "maybe" bin. I have no memory of any personal experience with alien beings, and crop circles are awfully easy to fake. I enjoy talking astrology for a while, and am intrigued by the times it correlates or confirms something I know about someone. I wouldn't go get a chart done to see if an endeavor was auspicious.
I've had some very clear pictures in my mind when I did past life regressions with someone once. In one, I was living out the end of my days on the prairie, and my teeth were worn down to nubs, and there was, and always had been sand/grit in everything and my clothes were all faded to the same shade of yellow grey from the sun. If I made that all up, I am surprised at the detail.
Still, it's not something I can know for sure about, so I put it in the box with all the other things that are beyond my knowing and control
. As a massage therapist I work with subtle body energies, and sometimes I can sense and get confirmation for changes that happen while I am working on someone. It took me a long time before I was willing to talk about any of the energy stuff, because I didn't want to be thought a kook.
Part of the problem is that as our society changes, what is acceptable to believe changes. I've been having knee trouble, and by the end of this summer I was hobbling and contemplating a cane. I went to a Naturopath, an MD, a massage/energy worker, and an Accupuncturist.
The Naturopath gave me a lot of vitamin and mineral supplements, the MD gave me Valium, The massage person did "tissue unwinding" and the Accupuncturist needled, massaged and Moxa'd me.
Didn't find a lot of change with the vitamins and minerals, but I'm being good and taking them.
The valium cleared up the stiffness immediately, put me to sleep every 4 hours, and left me with the sense that it is a very addictive drug. I cut my dose down to 1/4. The massage/energy work increased the tension/tightness.
The accupuncture has just about eliminated the problem in 3 treatments...
Of course it could just be the vitamins kicked in finally, or maybe that short time of taking the "muscle relaxant" valium gave me the healing time the joints needed.
So,I'd say the challenge is to remain semi-open-minded.
Perhaps it's just a GBS adjective conjugation situation: I am openminded, you are gullible, and he is a whacked out kook.
So, Fmaj7, what beliefs do you cling to that are unsupported by either science or the mainline of society? I'd be willing to bet you have some, just different than those you listed above. Are you religious? What about your political philosophy? or personal habits?
Blessings,
Barbara


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Helen
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:04 PM

Fmaj7,

Thanks for your question. I tend to be sceptical and seek logical explanations for things, but I also have had some psychic experiences which science has not yet explained in a satisfactory enough way for me to think that there is a non-psychic process happening. (I have been psychic all my life.)

I am in the process of checking out astrology, not as a practitioner, but as a user of the information, and at present I am being surprised at the relatively close correlation between astrological interpretations and the events in my life, and some of the people I know. I am therefore tending towards thinking that there may be something in it, although I would not go so far as to state categorically that it is 100% accurate or that it necessarily relates to the position of stars & planets. I stress that I am not referring to the generic astrological statements in newspapers but to information relating specifically to an individual's time & place of birth.

On the other hand, my own personal jury is still out, and has been for years, on whether there is anything valid in reincarnation. As for alien intervention to produce crop circles: I don't know much about that at all, but I would probably favour a simpler explanation until stronger evidence is shown.

I think that the use of Reiki to contribute to healing is well worth investigating, and the information I have gained so far makes me sway more in favour than against in my estimation of its usefulness. It may not heal necessarily but it seems to have a positive effect in a lot of cases I have heard about.

So, in answer to your question, I am one person who holds some opinions in favour and some against depending on the phenomenon in question and the information available to me.

Hope this helps.

Helen


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Hotspur
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 08:02 PM

As a believer in some alternative beliefs (is that redundant?) I figured I'd put my $0.02 in.

I believe, basically, that science does not and cannot explain all phenomena. Particularly where the mind is concerned, we have not even begun to plumb the depths of what living beings may be capable of. I also believe that we do not know all there is to know about the earth, life, space, time, etc., etc., and that to assume that we do or will is an act of hubris.

However, does this mean i belive in alien abductions? No. Do I think there might be intelligent life on other planets? Maybe. Crop circles? Are weird, i wouldn't presume to have an explanation for them. I do believe in ESP and things of that ilk, because, as i said before, the mind is capable of more than we know.

To sum up, I guess i would say that there are many things that people have experienced or observed which have no "rational" or "scientific" explanation, and I do not assume that everything can necessarily be explained by chemical reactions, mechanics, etc. Or, as Shakespeare said, much more neatly than I've done,

"There are more things in heaven and on earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Allan C.
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 07:24 PM

Speaking of such things...

When I first started hearing about "alternative" music, I truly thought they were using a euphemism for "folk".


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Allan C.
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 07:19 PM

I can only speak for myself. I enjoy examining alternatives but do not necessarily embrace them simply because they represent other than mainstream thought and/or methods. There are even a few rather mundane ideas and practices which I find quite appealing.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Sorcha
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 07:16 PM

I understand what you are asking, and given the subjects discussed here, don't think it is at all out of line. Requires some thought, tho........I think the answer is No. Even alternative beliefs, as you call them, need some kind of logic to support them, even if it is skewed logic. Lemme think some more, OK?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Bill D
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 07:14 PM

I presume that many people would simply consider themselves 'open' to alternative views and the more esoteric explanations. Just as you, (and as a matter of fact, I), 'tend' toward scepticism, others tend toward acceptance. It may simply be how we are wired...*shrug*. Many people don't claim that their views are proven, just that they have had experiences that they need to deal with.

I will admit that my worldview doesn't have nearly the variety in it...but there is still LOTS to learn and explore, even for a sceptic.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Fmaj7
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 06:58 PM

Allan,

You've touched on what I was trying to ask (however much Jon might not like it) is any alternative view immediately embraced?

Fmaj7


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Allan C.
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 06:52 PM

Alternative thinkers tend to hold some level of faith in alternatives.

I believe that pretty much covers it.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Fmaj7
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 06:46 PM

Yes I did.

It's something I'd like to discuss, and I think I asked the question as delicatly as I could.

I'm sorry that you disapprove.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Jon Freeman
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 06:42 PM

Did you really create a membership just to ask that?

Jon


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Alternative Beliefs - a pattern?
From: Fmaj7
Date: 07 Oct 00 - 06:34 PM

Firstly can I say that, I in no way wish to demean anyone's beliefs, upset anyone in any way or suggest that my beliefs are in anyway superior to anyone else's here.

OK, I'll ask me question now:

Over the past few months, and indeed years, threads have been started which discuss, to me, a fairly disparate range of topics:

astrology, alien abduction, reincarnation and past lives, remote healing, ESP, UFOs, crop circles etc, etc.

I am by nature pretty sceptical, and have difficulty in believing in any of the above.

My observation, and this is where I think I might upset some, is that people who believe in astrology, also seem to believe in reincarnation and alien explanations of crop circles.

So, finally, my question is: are there some people who believe in astrology who think crop circles are rubbish, believe in remote healing but think reincarnation is garbage?

I hope I've made my question clear, and would reiterate that this question is no way trying to 'get at' any catters whose beliefs I may have touched on.

Thank you for your time.

I look forward to your thoughts.

Fmaj7


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate
  Share Thread:
More...


You must be a member to post in non-music threads. Join here.


You must be a member to post in non-music threads. Join here.



Mudcat time: 24 September 3:25 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.