I think of them as personal (or ancestral) memories and traumatic (or social) histories, respectively.How do you think about spirits and ghosts? — Manuel
IMO, such beliefs (i.e. literal projections) are delusional. :sparkle:And, more importantly, what do you think about falling into such a state as to be suggestible into believing such things to be existing phenomena?
Any thoughts on this topic? — Manuel
How do you think about spirits and ghosts? And, more importantly, what do you think about falling into such a state as to be suggestible into believing such things to be existing phenomena? — Manuel
IMO, such beliefs (i.e. literal projections) are delusional. :sparkle: — 180 Proof
told me that he believed in haunted minds, not haunted houses. I am inclined to accept this explanation. We sometimes see and hear things as a consequence of our sense making gone wrong - we are stimulated, prompted and primed by so many things. Heightened emotion often provides the catalyst. The people I have known who have seen ghosts on a regular basis, all tended to have anxiety related issues, often well hidden. — Tom Storm
I think many of us are attracted to stories of ghosts and other occult phenomena because they are exciting, they lift us out of the mundane and promise us that in our increasingly technocratic world, a form of romanticism and mystery can still be found. — Tom Storm
but it is curious to see how our beliefs entangle with our perception of reality. — Manuel
Are we to say that ghosts are not real for us, but real for them? Are we then saying that people speak of fake ghosts? That sounds strange, but it may be true. — Manuel
Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a man who wasn't there
He wasn't there again today
I wish, I wish he'd go away...
When I came home last night at three
The man was waiting there for me
But when I looked around the hall
I couldn't see him there at all!
Go away, go away, don't you come back any more!
Go away, go away, and please don't slam the door... (slam!)
Last night I saw upon the stair
A little man who wasn't there
He wasn't there again today
Oh, how I wish he'd go away...
— Hughes Mearns
Any thoughts on this topic? — Manuel
How could you know it's not a hallucination? — flannel jesus
so I don't assume everything reported is necessarily a hallucination. — Ciceronianus
Otherwise, there are people who never experience ghostly vibes because they take their non-existence for granted. — javi2541997
What about the ones who are not welcome to accept their existence? Would their senses allow them to see a ghost at all? — javi2541997
Apples don't disappear if someone doesn't believe in apples. — flannel jesus
it should be capable of sussing this one too — flannel jesus
if ghosts are visible, they ought to be visible to everyone regardless of belief. — flannel jesus
What one does not believe exists, one can find another explanation for. and it happens in science frequently - the aether, dark matter, dark energy etc. — unenlightened
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