 BARAA
BARAA         
          Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins         
          Outlander
Outlander         
         knowing exactly what was gonna happen in the next scene — BARAA
 Book273
Book273         
          Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins         
          Book273
Book273         
          Raul
Raul         
         Do you support that what I and many others have experienced is paranormal? — BARAA
 BARAA
BARAA         
          BARAA
BARAA         
          Outlander
Outlander         
         It's not always the right choice to defend the material side by making any thing that doesn't seem very related to a material interpretation eitther a not-eplained-yet by science or a coincidence in the worst case — BARAA
So,in the end of your reply you suggested the phenomenon to be a coincidence — BARAA
 Kenosha Kid
Kenosha Kid         
          BARAA
BARAA         
          BARAA
BARAA         
          Frankin
Frankin         
          Bartricks
Bartricks         
          Banno
Banno         
         I think it's not very safe and sound to say that I can misremember such a huge, very unique, shocking and extraordinary event which I would never ever have expected something like it to happen to me in my life...nope, — BARAA
 Kenosha Kid
Kenosha Kid         
         I've heard all scientific explanations for deja vu but in fact I'm asking about another phenomenon.... it's how can the brain remember a memory seconds before it actually happens and then waits for it to happen till it happen in real life? — BARAA
 BARAA
BARAA         
         Your conviction is not going to convince anyone else.
Memory is hopelessly unreliable; especially so when it serves mythology. — Banno
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          Banno
Banno         
         you're trying to dismiss any logical possibility for a non-material explanation to be true,let alone calling it and presupposing it's a myth.the case is you refuse to consider any chance at all for something not materialist-biased — BARAA
 BARAA
BARAA         
         Yep. I'm looking for the mot reasonable explanation. But you want to believe an unreasonable explanation... — Banno
 Banno
Banno         
         the probability of misremembering a specific event is inversely proportional to the importance, remarkableness and hugeness of that event and therefore an event that's very important, — BARAA
 Kenosha Kid
Kenosha Kid         
         reason...the probability of misremembering a specific event is inversely proportional to the importance, remarkableness and hugeness of that event and therefore an event that's very important,very unique, very remarkable and very huge(let alone its psychological impact) is very unlikely to be misremembered.... — BARAA
 BARAA
BARAA         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.