Your most welcome my good friend. I don't know how they would respond to attempts to allow testimony of alleged past lives into admission, that is up to judge, lawyer, and jury. — Merkwurdichliebe
But . . . courts certainly permit: "a relatively high number of personal testimonies" . . . "Testimonies corroborated by other evidence, including documentary evidence and so on. And in these cases, testimonies are central." — Merkwurdichliebe
There is a lot of documentary and other evidence. But your response to the suggestion pretty well exactly illustrates the point. Right from the outset, you have simply presumed, and then asserted, that there could be no real evidence, because beliefs such as past-life memories ‘could not be scientifically supported’. So perhaps you might spell out, for our benefit, why you believe that. — Wayfarer
I believe so.
Because you think that it's impossible that he could have been duped?
— S
It’s not impossible, but he was not a dupe. He went to great lengths to rule out fraud. At the very least, the kinds of information he collated rule out anything but extremely sophisticated fraud or auto-suggestion. — Wayfarer
Yes, pig-chimp content. — Wallows
I think its been covered ya.
We could talk about the morality of doing drugs, since thats what this is actually about for Tim and other anyway... — DingoJones
The courts seem to do it. — Merkwurdichliebe
And everyone else who has made similar points are all also rationalising their own drug habits, too? Lol.
— S
Nope. — Wallows
Well done, mere-s. You fuck off too. Now we're at your level, in your pigpen. Is this where you want to be? Is this where you want us all to be? — tim wood
Haha, I'm not that stupid. You don't care about the destination of this thread, just endless rationalizations of your own drug habit, with tim serving as your punching bag. — Wallows
That's not the case. There are thousands of cases, and in many of them, there is testimony concerning specific items of information for which there is no explanation as to how the individual concerned could know. All you're saying is that it is accepted that Stevenson's research has been discredited - you know it must have been, right? There's no way it could have been true, right? — Wayfarer
Testimonies corroborated by other evidence, including documentary evidence and so on. And in these cases, testimonies are central. — Wayfarer
The 'alternative explanation' can only be that these cases didn't remember any such things, and Stevenson was duped into accepting falsehoods presumably by his own confirmation bias and sloppy research methods. — Wayfarer
Yeah; but, you take joy in seeing him argue with you. — Wallows
Tim, you do realize that his behavior is no different than that of a troll at this point? — Wallows
There we go. :clap: — Shamshir
A question if I may:
Are you suggesting that YOU get to decide who the "stuid and gullible" are?
If not...how will that be decided? — Frank Apisa
So every question you can't or don't want to answer is stupid, vague and loaded, huh? :chin: — Shamshir
And counter question: let's suppose you-all are right: that breaking the law is not immoral in any way in itself, then what happens to the law? — tim wood
But don't you suppose that topic, having nothing to do with this topic, deserves its own thread? — tim wood
Fuck off, mere-S. This adds nothing to the discussion. You're wasting my time and everyone else's time. — tim wood
But in those remaining, there were many instances of children recalling specific items of information that could not plausibly have been ascertained by another means. — Wayfarer
But even despite the criticisms that can be made, many of the cases present compelling evidence for the proposition that these children really did recall previous lives. — Wayfarer
Stevenson’s research was just such an attempt. Others are claiming that these efforts ‘were discredited’ without saying by whom, or how. They reject the idea in advance on the grounds that belief in rebirth is like belief in ghosts or other such nonsense. Pointing this out, however, is evidence of bias and prejudice, and of not understanding science. — Wayfarer
It hasn’t. It’s not as if the cases were re-examined and alternative explanations found for them. If was mainly simply ignored by mainstream science, for the reasons I’ve indicated. Most people will simply be content with the conclusion that the research must have been faulty. — Wayfarer
I call the side that outweighs as the correct moral choice. Despite our MASSIVE disagreement on semantics, I am not sure our views on morality are that opposed. — ZhouBoTong
How are you contributing to this discussion? — tim wood
Fuck off, mere S. You contribute nothing and you're a waste of time and energy. And I suspect you enjoy replies like this. Get used to it because you will see a lot of it when you contribute nothing. And I'm going to enjoy making them because my heart will be light with the justice of having finally learned the correct response to your destructive non-sense. — tim wood
And counter question: let's suppose you-all are right: that breaking the law is not immoral in any way in itself, then what happens to the law? — tim wood
There'd be little gained if I overcame my limitations and was finally able to speak the N word with greater comfort. It offers me one less area to get myself into trouble at least. — Hanover
Everyone pretty much is. — Hanover
I'm more comfortable not using it, so I don't. Some people don't say Fuck for the same reason. I say Fuck, but not the N word. — Hanover
The argument you presented is a ridiculous solution to the white quest to use it anyway. That quest needs no solution. It's just a handful of white people being laughable. If they aren't actually trying to get a laugh, they're just stupid. — frank
...but I wouldn't want mention of it against the rules here either. — Baden
I agree it's a matter of etiquette, and I agree it's not always right to insist on being able to mention it. But it might be important to insist on it sometimes. I insist on being able to do it here, for example. — jamalrob
It's worth pointing out that mention is not racist, but insisting on mention because it's not racist misses some nuance here. — Baden
This process of a group of people co-opting a word originally intended as derogatory of that group as a badge of honour is a very common process. That the word continues to be offensive when not used by people part of that group (or sub-culture as jamalrob describes it) is apparently confusing to some. However, it shouldn't be. — Benkei
Black people get to use that word, we honkies don't and we lost the right to do so because our dads and granddads were assholes to black people. — Benkei
But the cultural significance of all this is that in the public sphere, intent and the use-mention distinction are being ignored. And that is stupid. — jamalrob
Once more, and for the last time - Stevenson presents volumes of testimonial and documentary evidence for children who claim to recall past lives. — Wayfarer
Says he 10,000 posts later. :lol: — Baden