What was the good reason? — Andrew4Handel
There are many different types of pre-life, after death, near death accounts etc I wouldn't lump them altogether. Near death experiences tend to be taken seriously but theorists tend to try and explain in terms of types of neural/biochemical activity. — Andrew4Handel
You initially said
Yes, because there isn't a shred of credible evidence in its favour. Only fools take seriously such presumed possibilities
— S
You started your "debate" being completely dismissive with no good reason. — Andrew4Handel
Initially, you claimed you needed credible evidence and then used scientific evidence as a source of credible evidence and personal testimony as made up stuff. — Andrew4Handel
I wasn't using certain in that sense of the word. I meant it in the sense of some but not all.
Personal testimony can be fallible but that does not make it all false, logically. We rely on successful inter human communication to get through life. — Andrew4Handel
Keith Ansell-pearson - Philosophy and the adventure of the Virtual — emancipate
Why do you need "scientific" evidence to prove the earth is not flat? If you travel around the globe on a boat you will find it is not flat. Why does evidence have to be classed as "Scientific"? — Andrew4Handel
It’s not spin. — Wayfarer
He was generally ignored and often maligned. Reincarnation is a cultural taboo in Western culture, as a matter of fact. It goes against the grain. The main point I’m making is simply that this body of work does exist, and it is, as Stevenson suggests, suggestive of the possibility. — Wayfarer
I got one of his books out of the library once, and read some of it.
One of the things he said in the article I linked was ‘the will not to believe is as strong as the will to believe.’ — Wayfarer
which would be....? — Wayfarer
its not uncommon on a online forum for people to dislike each others opinions. Thanks for sharing.
He even says alot of this stuff in his videos on youtube. — christian2017
Values have everything to do with it. The idea your beliefs have nothing to do with your values is simply derisible.
Science does not prove the earth is not flat, evidence does. You do not need science to validate claims. How often in a conversation do you demand people validate a claim with science. Never?
People cannot prove the claims they make about the contents of their experience nor can science.
You have made such a simplistic and facile notion of evidence that only trivial claims could past muster.
It is clear that your notion of evidence is maximally bias and prejudice. — Andrew4Handel
There is evidence of children recalling previous lives. See this article. — Wayfarer
The main researcher was a Professor Ian Stevenson — Wayfarer
My understanding from the book is that the percentage of neanderthal dna is far too low to rule out genocide. — praxis
I will continue to say it until you get it...
...or stop asserting things that defy it. — Frank Apisa
I see what your saying about presumed possibility. — christian2017
As for the rest I guess I need to go back through and see what was said. — christian2017
I have no interest in your senseless repetitions. If I were a moderator I would have been taking action against them long ago.
— S
All Frank Apisa said was that there are basically mathematical principles that no one can argue with.
If i say truth is not equal to A (hypothetical situation) then it would follow from the information given that any other variable other than A is a possibility.
"if something is not impossible then there is a chance it can happen even if it is unlikely.
This is basic math. — christian2017
However, God and the mystical world are accessible to everyone. Anyone can think they are a master of knowledge in the realm of mysticism. It provides a sort of mastery of our understanding and of our place in the universe, without doing the heavy lifting. — schopenhauer1
What do you consider credible evidence? It seems you are making a value judgement by using the word credible. — Andrew4Handel
What about clinically dead patients who have full knowledge of what transpired during their intermission? — Shamshir
There is no such thing as a "presumed possibility."
Unless a thing is established as impossible...by definition, it is possible. — Frank Apisa
The notion of any post death existence is generally scoffed at by Western materialist types, but is it really so absurd? — Inyenzi
Then argue the other side. — tim wood
That is, easily solved, if we want it solved. If we don't want it solved, it's impossible. — Jake
Some people have been thinking about these subjects for 50 years, while others are encountering them for the first time. — Jake
The same year, he published four groundbreaking papers during his renowned annus mirabilis (miracle year) which brought him to the notice of the academic world at the age of 26.
I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, I'm wrong, WRONG! — Jake
For example, if I call something a chair, and someone else calls it a pigeon, and someone else calls it a cyclopean calculator, then I think we're in for a troublesome conversation. — whollyrolling
Wait, hold on a second here. Ive been following this thread and what you are saying makes zero sense at all, you’ve made some kind of nightmare turn in your logic that I am compelled to point out here...what kind of madman puts sugar in his milk?!
Get help. — DingoJones
I'm not sure if Socrates took joy in being the gadfly. Maybe it was some proto-Kantian duty he sought to fulfill. — Wallows
For the record, I think they are important in some cases. If a person uses the descriptor "atheist" or, let's say, "agnostic atheist"...it says to me that the person almost certain "believes" (blindly guesses) there are no gods or "believes" (blindly guesses) that it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one. In a discussion with someone using that descriptor, It is an aid to realize that. — Frank Apisa
I do not rant. — Frank Apisa
I often repeat things... — Frank Apisa
as you do...and as many others do. — Frank Apisa
Anything else I can help you with? — Frank Apisa
Well, you are a balloon popper and button presser, so whatever floats your boat, I suppose. — Wallows