As I said from the outset, my aim was to draw attention to these cases, so as to demonstrate the falsehood of the claim that 'there is not a shred of evidence', when in fact, there's quite a bit. — Wayfarer
That’s what the research comprises, though. Stevenson's program ran from the early 1980'2 until his death in 2007. He did a lot of field trips and interviewed thousands of subjects. He was well aware of the scope for fraud, wishful thinking and deception, and tried to prevent those factors distorting his cases. The examples I've mentioned above are but four out of a much larger set. — Wayfarer
Bias could cause him to deceive even himself. The important thing about scientific studies is that they should be able to be precisely repeated, which allows others to check the results, which is obviously not possible in this case. — Janus
The point is, were he reporting asthma, or moles, nobody would think twice about it, but as the claims are regarded as extraordinary, then much higher standards are demanded. — Wayfarer
So, surely we must conclude that anything we believe possible - not probable or likely, only possible - remains so until more evidence clarifies matters? — Pattern-chaser
Logically and epistemologically speaking, yes. I am holding open the possibility that at least some things which we cannot prove to be impossible, actually are impossible simply due to the nature of things, in other words that at least some things may simply be ontologically or physically impossible. This seems obvious to me, and I am genuinely perplexed that others seem to be having difficulties with it, even though no one seems to be able to explain what the problem is. — Janus
Scientist currently believe that genes and the molecular structure of the brain are what creates consciousness, because there is no proven account of anything else. That's how science works. — NKBJ
The problem is that you have no way to assess the likelihood that there is a genuine case — Janus
And that, I swear, is my last word, for at least the next two days, as I have other duties pressing, and really can't repeating the same thing over and over. — Wayfarer
Whew! That's a relief.
You are just repeating the same contradictory stuff over and over. You want to claim science is inherently inadequate, but somehow also claim that it supports your view. Any time someone here refutes your position on the former, you flee to the latter and vice versa. That's called being a moving target and it's bad philosophy. — NKBJ
Janus
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So, surely we must conclude that anything we believe possible - not probable or likely, only possible - remains so until more evidence clarifies matters? — Pattern-chaser
Logically and epistemologically speaking, yes. I am holding open the possibility that at least some things which we cannot prove to be impossible, actually are impossible simply due to the nature of things, in other words that at least some things may simply be ontologically or physically impossible. This seems obvious to me, and I am genuinely perplexed that others seem to be having difficulties with it, even though no one seems to be able to explain what the problem is. — Janus
I'm sorry, I can't be bothered to decipher the nuances of types-of-impossibility. — Pattern-chaser
Doesn't that about cover it? :chin: :smile: — Pattern-chaser
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