Well, no. We just lack in science, right now, enough evidence and/or the kinds of evidence necessary. Parapsychologists might consider this assessment incorrect and would argue that paradigmatic biases are leading to poor evaluations of what they consider sufficient evidence, those parapsychologists who think the evidence is sufficient. But my saying Well, no is not based on their position but rather that scientific epistemology doesn't weigh in like that. It can weigh in on the current evidence and saying it is lacking.From a scientific epistimology, ghosts surely don't exist.
I'd say I'd certainly understand their not just accepting my belief. It depends a bit what one means by 'reject'. If this means, they don't accept that it's true, fine. If they want to tell me the belief is false, period. Well, I wouldn't accept that - unless of course, their explanation for this convinced me.I'm thinking there are perhaps situations where you can rationally believe something based on your personal experience, and also accept that you can't convincingly communicate that experience to someone else so you should allow them to rationally reject the thing you rationally believe. — flannel jesus
Sure. I think that's healthy in general. Up to a point. I think skepticism can reach toxic levels. But if this kind of reflection never happens, where you question your memories, or for me more often my interpretations, then that's also likely to be toxic.And then of course there's always room to question your own memories. Did I really experience that the way I remember? Memories are very malleable things, I find that quite interesting. — flannel jesus
What's curios to me is that many people, not all, could be put in such a state of mind given specific circumstances, say, being in a cult or being constantly barraged with people saying and believing in these things. But what accounts for this?
Is it just that we experience things to some extent due to cultural circumstances? — Manuel
speculative branch of sociology... — Manuel
Yes, and that's nonsense which is why "ghosts and spirts" are merely (affective) ideas but not (non-mental) entities.One aspect of the idea of ghosts and spirits would be the idea of disembodied 'minds'. — Jack Cummins
I don't think it is a 'state of mind' as such that we're looking for. Just a worldview that includes, perhaps even embraces, ghosts and spirits and is therefore receptive to them. Which tends to result in an experience of them readily in ordinary events. A flash of light, a sudden breeze, a movement, a noise and, 'bang' it's a ghost or spirit. I have met many people who default to such interpretations regularly.
For those more elaborate (and much rarer) accounts were an entity appears and talks to the person - we can perhaps include lucid dreaming, wishful thinking, and other brain states. — Tom Storm
And yes, I do think that we experince things based on the culturally informed sense making tools and narratives we are immersed in. A person whose culture recognizes demons will see demons. A person whose culture recognizes djinns will see djinns.
I wonder if there is some similarity between some 'ghost stories' and UFO abduction stories. We can find hundreds of folk worldwide who are convinced they were abducted and probed by aliens. Is this, as Jung suggested, an expression of our psychological state, our anxieties and fears and, perhaps, an emerging spirituality/religion for this era of technology and science? — Tom Storm
The point being that morphic fields, and morphic resonance, provide a medium for what is perceived by us as ghosts. I will add that the existence of morphic resonance is on the whole rejected by most scientists, despite Sheldrake's claims to have found evidence for it, so I'm not saying you should believe it. Only that they at least provide a paradigm. — Wayfarer
The UFO people tend to almost always describe the actual UFO like the ones we see on 50's movie billboards on the topic. And the aliens have the huge black eyes and are green. That's a very strong connection between culture and experience.
But I don't even find a supernaturalist "folk-account" that could explain this belief. — Manuel
perhaps the mind they have is not readily or easily put in such a receptive state. — Manuel
I think by now aliens are folk accounts. All such traditions start somewhere. Perhaps aliens are just a technologically updated form of supernaturalism, located in the era's zeitgeist; science rather than magic.
I wonder if functionally there is much desirable psychological difference between aliens and spirits? They are probably founded on similar principles and psychological factors. Note, I am not considering in this account the more reasonable speculative notion that aliens may exist somewhere in reality. — Tom Storm
I wonder what counts as a receptive state? What are you thinking? A psychological state? My candidate explanations for this are personality, psychological health, and individual sense making shaped by culture. Same things that inform most of our choices. — Tom Storm
Same upbringing but they chose one of the two dominant belief systems in ther culture - Christianity and materialism. Why do people make such choices - why are some 'receptive' to religion and others to materialism/physicalism? I've often likened this to a sexual preference. We can't help what we are attracted to. The justifications and arguments are post hoc. — Tom Storm
But the difference from sexuality is that, on some occasions, arguments can persuade some people the religious belief is not based on a rational foundation. — Manuel
t's not a choice, it's a preference. It's very intricate though. — Manuel
Nothing more than being that type of person who, for instance, feels that they are actually communicating with a higher power, as opposed to talking to oneself. As in cases in which people are in a church, and some people once they leave the religion say, they never felt such a force or power in the first place.
Or being the type of person who tend to believe that virtually every coincidence is very meaningful in some transcendent sense. — Manuel
As most of us know, according to Max Weber, as societies progress and become more rationalized, they tend to lose their mystical and enchanting qualities. This process is characterized by the replacement of traditional religious beliefs, magical thinking, and mystical worldviews with rational, bureaucratic, and scientific approaches to understanding the world.
Might it not be the case that many people bemoan this disenchanted world and flee to romanticisms and superstations for some relief? — Tom Storm
We could call this a proposal.Any thoughts on this topic? — Manuel
Either side can speculate (in ad hommy and psychoanalyzing ways the reason the other has the belief or lack they have) but avoid it.
Those non-believers who have experienced something that they think matches the experiences of believers can instead be cautious about assuming they know, in fact, what the others have experienced. — Bylaw
One can certainly decide it was a hallucination. Or a less charged way to think of it would be that one mistook a shadow, plus a sound, and formed a pattern in the mind, perhaps given one was afraid at night and it seemed for a second like the shape of a transparent person. IOW hallucination is a pretty strong word. It implies that there was no visual trigger at all. I think we have all had experiences when our brains form patterns that aren't there, but they aren't hallucinations. Oh, that's Dave, but actually it was a woman, who walks a bit like Dave and has the same color hair. That's not a hallucination. Where the exact boundary is between mistaken pattern recognition and hallucination is unclear I think, but generally I'd go for the softer judgment, unless someone is in psychosis or seeing things regularly that are not there.But then there's also the issue raised here by others, suppose we don't believe such things exist, such is my case. Do I say, "I thought I saw a ghost, but instead saw a hallucination."? — Manuel
Yes, they say that. But we have instances in the past where people were told, even by experts that they did not experience X (and they were being irrational, or delusional, or hallucinating), when it turned out later they were actually not only experiencing what they said but correctly experiencing it.Or the topic of, ghosts aren't real, ok. But then people who do see them (or any other related phenomenon) see fake ghosts? Some have suggested that they shouldn't claim they've seen a ghost or spirit, only that they have misinterpreted what they've seen. — Manuel
We can be technically agnostic, or say we doubt that, but I see no reason to tell them they are doing something wrong when they assert their beliefs. — Bylaw
It depends on the context, but people assert things all the time based on faulty epistemology/self-knowledge/rushes to judgment and so on. This includes assertions about people, politics, reality, morality. I'm not saying we need to accept their account or we shouldn't question or challenge. I'm questioning the idea that they shouldn't say it. Say it to whom? To their friends? Tell strangers the truth that they believe in ghosts?I don't doubt the veracity of the perception they had, nor even the epistemology in some cases. The issue become problematic when we make metaphysical claims from perceptual judgements, such that if one says one sees a ghost, then it follows, that there are such things as ghosts in the world.
It's in this part that it becomes difficult. — Manuel
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