It is, right? When visiting a person who is ill, people leave words of encouragement and well wishes. Even those who do not believe in prayers.it’s possible the prayer is a kind of therapeutic process. — Average
Good read from the link. Thanks.I don't buy into these things literally of course, but I do have this instinct of refusing to say or think bad thoughts for fear that I'll think them into existence. — Hanover
Yes, just reading those words make me feel it. I literally sent that thought to someone living abroad at the time when I couldn't reach him. And I felt at the time that the stronger you will it, the stronger it would get to the person.Be strong!
Do you feel the strength now within you? — Hanover
Yes! People actually pray for facts, for the actual reality. That's why I put this in epistemology because we treat our own prayers and wishes as part of our knowledge about the world.You don't go around praying about unicorns after all, you pray about what really matters to you. — Garrett Travers
Yes! People actually pray for facts, for the actual reality. That's why I put this in epistemology because in our prayers and wishes we treat them like a part of justified true beliefs. — L'éléphant
And what about the expression "I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy". — L'éléphant
In the New Thought spiritual movement, the Law of Attraction is a pseudoscience based on the belief that positive or negative thoughts bring positive or negative experiences into a person's life.[1][2] The belief is based on the ideas that people and their thoughts are made from "pure energy" and that a process of like energy attracting like energy exists through which a person can improve their health, wealth, and personal relationships. There is no empirical scientific evidence supporting the law of attraction, and it is widely considered to be pseudoscience.
I freakin' do! :starstruck:↪L'éléphant
So, you don't believe that the law of attraction holds? I agree. Imagine it were that simple to find happiness. — Agent Smith
Thanks.As for the OP, a novel take on prayer and wishing wells. :up: — Agent Smith
Did I not make that clear in my post? I find the law of attraction very believable, but we just don't have scientific backing for it. — L'éléphant
Actually I think you're right. — L'éléphant
Okay, I think you're wrong. Don't walk away with a broken heart.Somehow that breaks my heart. Good day. — Agent Smith
Somehow that breaks my heart. Good day.
— Agent Smith
Okay, I think you're wrong. Don't walk away with a broken heart.
I believe in the law of attraction. — L'éléphant
I can assure you that the universe has no meaning or emotion.That's how cruel the universe is: it tears apart our delicate souls. — Agent Smith
I can assure you that the universe has no meaning or emotion. — L'éléphant
Humans give meaning to the universe. We assigned emotions to things.Or, you can choose to believe every thing is where it is for some purpose and live your life that way. — Hanover
Oh big time!Thinking is very hard. Articulating the problem explicitly allows one to contend with it more readily. Pleas and prayers are the first step to facing the problem head on and bringing the power of rationality to the fore. Meaning, when we feel a situation is hopeless often we just need to break it down into smaller problems and attend to the one/s that are easiest to articulate. — I like sushi
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