So, if you say that if something has not been proven to be impossible it therefore must be possible, that is binary thinking, and you are ruling out the "maybe"; the possibility that it is in actuality impossible even though we cannot prove it. — Janus
On the one hand you want to reject science and a scientific worldview on the basis that it cannot encompass all of your voodoo. On the other you wish to maintain that dismissing supernatural phenomena is not scientific. You're not being consistent or clear about your position. — NKBJ
Janus
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In the case of the first we can say that we know something is impossible if it defies laws of the excluded middle — Janus
In logic, the law of excluded middle (or the principle of excluded middle) states that for any proposition, either that proposition is true or its negation is true. — Wikipedia
So, for any issue where other answers are possible - such as "maybe" as well as "yes" or "no", offering just one of many possible examples - you have no answer. Binary thinking - "Answer yes or no!" - doesn't help here, I suspect? — Pattern-chaser
As I said logical possibility is one kind of possibility, epistemological possibility and ontological or physical possibility are others. If you accept only logical possibility then you will indeed rule out "maybes" as Frank Apisa seems to (insofar as I can determine what his position actually is, since he says he agrees with me and acts as though he doesn't).
So, if you say that if something has not been proven to be impossible it therefore must be possible, that is binary thinking, and you are ruling out the "maybe"; the possibility that it is in actuality impossible even though we cannot prove it.
It is impossible to prove that something is impossible except in the case of logical contradictions. So if the position that insists that if something is not proven impossible it must be possible is saying anything more than that it must be logically possible, or epistemologically possible (as far as we know) it must be saying that it is actually or physically possible. This rules out the possibility (the maybe) that it could be actually or physically (given the nature of things) impossible.
I hope that makes what I have been saying more clear. — Janus
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↪Pattern-chaser
Right, just to be clear I wasn't referring to the particular you with the "you" but the general you.
I actually don't believe that it is possible to prove that anything is impossible except in the logical context or within a restricted context. For an example of the latter it is currently impossible for me to levitate or walk through walls. I can prove that by trying to do it. Can I prove that it will always be impossible? No. Can I prove that it is simply physically impossible? No. Can I prove that it is physically possible? No. — Janus
If, however, you're not materialist, then at least in principle you might be open to the possibility that there some means (as yet unknown to science) by which memories are transmitted. — Wayfarer
Science is perfectly open to the idea of means as yet unknown to science, that's how it discovers new thing for Christ's sake! — Isaac
Stevenson's evidence can be explained using only forces that we already have good reason to believe exist (psychology, mainly), so we don't accept his theory. — Isaac
It's not prejudice, it's not closed-mindedness, it's just rational methods of thinking. — Isaac
I actually don't believe that it is possible to prove that anything is impossible except in the logical context or within a restricted context. — Janus
For an example of the latter it is currently impossible for me to levitate or walk through walls. I can prove that by trying to do it. Can I prove that it will always be impossible? No. Can I prove that it is simply physically impossible? No. Can I prove that it is physically possible? No. — Janus
So why do you think this kind of research is regarded as ‘fringe’ or ‘alternative’. Do you think that investigation of children who claim to recall their previous lives as legitimate science? Do you think it would be generally understood as legitimate 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
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
The subjects in these studies were purported to know facts that they had no means of knowing according to psychology or any other science. — Wayfarer
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
I'm not sure what definition of materialism you're working with, but if you give it a moment's consideration, you may realize that it's compatible with accepting that things like rebirth and souls could exist. It would merely assume that these are heretofore undiscovered/not understood matters. — NKBJ
There are obvious alternative explanations which have been pointed out to you, which haven't been justifiably ruled out, but which you seem to have ruled out nevertheless, or seem to be deliberately ignoring. — S
one could point to incredibly weak evidence, like a relatively high number of personal testimonies. — S
A three-year-old boy in Lebanon recalled having been killed in battle in his former life. He accurately reported how much money the person he had been had in his pockets at the time of his death and identified various personal articles when taken to that person’s home.
A two-year-old boy in Turkey claimed he had frozen to death after an airplane crash in his previous life. The person’s family believed the man had died instantly in the crash, but when consulted, a Turkish Airlines official confirmed the man had indeed died from freezing.
A two-year-old girl in Thailand remembered living in a monastery in her previous life. When taken there, she knew her way around, recognized a number of monastics, and even detailed what had changed about the buildings in the time since she had lived there.
In many such cases, the location of a birthmark on the child’s body is said to correlate with an injury sustained at the time of death in a prior life.
The accusation I brought you up on wasn't about the quality of his evidence, it was about the theory proposed to explain it. — Isaac
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
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
The courts seem to do it. — Merkwurdichliebe
you think this Stevenson is an honourable guy? — S
Because you think that it's impossible that he could have been duped? — S
The courts! Thank you for bringing that up. How do you think that the courts would respond to attempts to allow testimony of alleged past lives into admission? — S
The courts seem to do it. — 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
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
You haven't presented anything which could be counted as evidence for recollections of past lives over alternative explanations, which is pretty damn important, don't you think? — S
I'm working with the definition of materialism that is commonly accepted by the majority of working academics and scientists. This holds that the basis of individuals and personality and memory is molecular in nature, and can only be transmitted by genetic means. But if you agree that such things could exist, and simply haven't been discovered yet, then really we have no argument. — Wayfarer
Funny you should bring that up. In a court of law it has been shown over and over and over that eye witness accounts are very unreliable. Laughably unreliable. Almost anything, even a strong argument, carries more weight.
If this research relies on that, and cannot corroborate the theory with real experiments and other methods of testing then that should be a red flag. Skepticism and more intense scrutiny are do, not acceptance of the theory. — DingoJones
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