But it's very important to distinguish them, especially in this day and age, with its proliferation of media and entire artificial fantasy realms into which you can be consumed. There's billions of young adults spending all their time playing computer games. And being able to make sense of experience and differentiate the real from the unreal is a critical life skill. — Wayfarer
On the contrary, the researcher Ian Stevenson conducted many investigations into alleged cases. He followed the same kind of methodology that would be used for missing persons cases, epidemiological evidence, and so on. It is of course true that almost all his work is dismissed or rejected by the scientific community, and it is also possible that he was mistaken or tendentious in his approach, but having read some of the literature, I think it is not feasible to declare that all of it was simply mistaken. There were many cases - hundreds, in fact - where the purported memories described by the subject children were then checked against documentary evidence including newspaper reports, birth and death notices, and many other sources. — Wayfarer
I think there's a possible naturalistic explanation for past-life memories and re-birth. It is that humans bequeath future generations with the results of their actions in this life, and not only by way of what they leave in their will. They set in motion causes which continue to ripple outwards into the future. Those yet to be born are inheritors of these causal factors, just as we have inherited the consequences of our forbears' actions. Genetics is part of it, but only a part - as epigenetics shows, gene expression is a causal factor, and that relies on environmental influences. The only factor that is absent from the mainstream naturalist accounts of such a causal matrix is a subtle medium through which memories propogate. But it doesn't seem to great a stretch. — Wayfarer
I hope we are clear I am not here to learn English and if you can decipher the meanings, there is no need to pick up on these non-native speakers' grammatical errors. Unless, this forum is for only members who can speak English as their first language in which case I should be told so. — Raef Kandil
I hope we are clear I am not here to learn English and if you can decipher the meanings, there is no need to pick up on these non-native speakers' grammatical errors. Unless, this forum is for only members who can speak English as their first language in which case I should be told so. — Raef Kandil
The scientific method seems to be our best tool to protect us against building a high credence level, from a faith based origin. — universeness
Why would you choose to assign any significant credence 'at this stage' to the work done by Stevenson? — universeness
BTW do you assign high credence to Rupert Sheldrakes morphic resonance? — universeness
I think that's mistaken, because scientific method is a method, it is not a creedal statement. Following that leads only to 'scientism', as there are innummerable matters requiring judgement that are out of scope for science. — Wayfarer
Stevenson really did build a large portfolio of researched cases, each of them comprising sometimes hundreds of cross-checked factual accounts - names, ages, incidents, locations, dates of birth and death, and the like. (See his Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect.) He had a number of cases of children born with birth defects or markings that seemed consistent with accounts of accidents and injuries in their previous lives. One of his sceptical critics remarked that, if the same standards were applied to Stevenson as to any other researcher then he would have proven his case, but that 'extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence', a very useful goal-post shifting technique for sceptics. — Wayfarer
Scientism is the opinion that science and the scientific method are the best or only way to render truth about the world and reality. — universeness
The concept of 'faith', empty of content, is empty. — Fooloso4
I don't want to impose my hard-earned concept of God over everyone's else. — Raef Kandil
I, and I would claim God, want people to worship God with their own free will. — Raef Kandil
So, you are talking about faith in some concept you call God, who presumably is not just a concept. — Fooloso4
Or, what if one has faith that God is a deceiver? — Fooloso4
It appears that faith is an empty concept after all. One that can be filled however one wishes. — Fooloso4
I used to think the same thing and I talked it through with him. — Raef Kandil
Well if you have talked through it with him that settles the matter. What then are you doing here? Proselytizing? Surely no one here can tell you anything more than you get directly. What you go on to say it sure seems like it. — Fooloso4
Would you say that he has more data than the astrologers... — universeness
Sounds like a new religion to me! Because this is what all religions would say before their downfall — Raef Kandil
Yeah, divine hiddenness does suggest god does not exist. That idea has been around for quite a while.If God wanted to be discovered, wouldn't it just have been easier to just show himself? — Raef Kandil
Sure he does. The point I keep making - seems to have slipped by - is that checking what a child says about a remembered previous life is an empirical matter, unlike astrology. I don't expect anyone to believe it, but I do expect that this distinction is intelligible. — Wayfarer
He has a very solid logic and a character that would bring you along his way wherever you go. — Raef Kandil
The only thing that can bring you closer to Him is honesty and sincerity. — Raef Kandil
Yeah, science the religion! Hallelujah brother, your logic is obviously a gift from your god :halo: — universeness
So, once again, it seems you are proselytizing. It is not about the distinction between faith and religion, it is about faith in your god, the god who "has a very solid logic", a god who will "bring you along his way" "His way." The way of God. To be brought "closer to him" in order to be brought along the way is, by its very definition, religion. Rather than sever faith and religion you join them. Are you trying to fool us or have you fooled yourself? — Fooloso4
Redicule is the hallmark of a weak position. That is all I can say. And by the way, I was pointing out to not converting science into a new religion to maintain its power. But, it seems you really need to believe that something is always right and never fails to maintain your peace of mind and think that life is still okay. So, yeah, go back to sleep. Sweet dreams. — Raef Kandil
Which is the big difference between faith and religion: choice. — Raef Kandil
The choice is: whether you want to bear the pains to know and trust something as a solid truth or not. — Raef Kandil
and so you attack religion in order to create a backdoor for your god talk and call it "solid truth". — Fooloso4
Sure he does. The point I keep making - seems to have slipped by - is that checking what a child says about a remembered previous life is an empirical matter, unlike astrology. I don't expect anyone to believe it, but I do expect that this distinction is intelligible. — Wayfarer
Do some scientists make holy war on non-scientists, and do some scientists strap explosives to themselves and blow up as many non-scientists as they can? — universeness
No I don't. I say what I attempt to say. I have no backdoorsThere is a difference between organized religion and your own religious quest. Perhaps you do not understand that difference, but I suspect you do. It is evident that you know that many people here are adverse to religious talk, and so you attack religion in order to create a backdoor for your god talk and call it "solid truth". — Fooloso4
Sure, and I bet you're glad of M.A.D. It may be the only reason we are not already in WW 3.Do scientists help nuclear bombs? Yes. Do scientists help create advanced weapons? — Raef Kandil
Yeah sure, No scientist has even spoken out against the dark side of the production, storage, threat, testing, and use of Nuclear weapons. I don't think TPF has enough server storage space to hold all the examples.. But science is blind to these facts. — Raef Kandil
Good for you! Do you know if your god agrees with you? The one in the bible and the one in the quran doesn't. Is your god so weak that it needs your protection?I am against destroying and killing. But, can I at least free God from some of the horrible things you say he is solely responsible for. — Raef Kandil
Are you afraid of science/scientists? If you know the truth of your god then why does it not tell you how to easily deal, with these pesky scientific discoveries that punch so many holes in theism, that it makes that which is holy, literally so!!The same dogma that puts you on a pedestal when you talk about science and fail to see its downfalls. — Raef Kandil
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