Gman wrote:
IgoFan wrote:
Help narrow the discussion. Give specific examples that you consider psychic/paranormal.
We are debating what paranormal means? Let's look it up in the dictionary then… [...]
Does the forum software have a bug that is mistakenly posting replies to other topics? You seem to be replying to someone else's posts.
I was trying to understand what you meant by
psychic, because you made a non-natural claim about psychics. A general dictionary definition doesn't help
narrow the discussion.
Gman wrote:
I have never talked to a psychic... My belief about psychics is that it can be fake or occultist works.
You threw me off when you said early on:
I have witnessed things by psychics that I believe in no way could have been explained via a cold reading or naturally...
I'm encouraged that you're backing off that claim in making the new vacuous claim that [paraphrasing]
psychics may or may not be fake.
Gman wrote:
However, I have witnessed supernatural phenomena. And that is something held between me and God which comes in the form of answered prayer.
And supernatural belief, e.g., an answered prayer, can be perfectly fine.
But if you were to say something like, "pancreatic cancer patients have an overall survival rate of 5% after 5 years, but whenever I pray for a targeted sub-group, that sub-group's survival rate climbs to 50%," then you've just made a scientifically testable claim.
So we set up a controlled, randomized, double-blind experiment to test your claim. If your sub-group's survival rate is 50%, then (soon to be former) atheists all over the world will start knocking over old ladies to get to the front row of church on Sunday.
If instead your sub-group's survival rate in 5%, then science would still have come nowhere near disproving the efficacy of prayer. However, science would have provided evidence that believers should take seriously when making claims about the efficacy of prayer.
Scientific evidence has shown that you will probably misinterpret what I just said, so I'm replying mainly for all the other readers.
Gman wrote:
Making stuff up? You don't think Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, and Hindus believe in the supernatural? I don't have time to go into all the beliefs but you are wrong. If you don't believe me simply google it..
Could someone else please tell Gman that he's misunderstanding what I wrote.
Gman wrote:
Ok, then give me specific examples that the paranormal/supernatural doesn't exist... Where is your scientific proof? I stated scientifically we don't always know..
Do you see the irony of again asking for
scientific proof when my previous post not only explicitly anticipated that you would do just that, but also explained that
science does not prove? Hey, wait a minute! Maybe
I'm psychic!
Science does not address the supernatural (IMO, the untestable).
Science does not show (gasp, prove) that the paranormal (IMO, the testable) does not exist. Science provides evidence for or against a hypothesis.
A famous paranormal example was that of a smart 11 (yes, 11) year old girl, who tested Theraputic Touch (TT) practitioners with a protocol that she herself devised. TT claims to beneficially manipulate a person's energy field via the practitioner's hands, but the hands only hover above and do not touch the patient. How coooool would that be! But the girl created a simple effective test, in which a cardboard partition prevented the TT practitioner from seeing whether the hands were actually over a patient's body. The girl published her results in JAMA, the
Journal of the American Medical Association!
Anyone want to take a guess whether the TT practitioners could detect the presence or non-presence of a human body's "energy fields" better than random guessing?
And anyone want to take a guess on whether TT practioners were fazed one iota by the complete utter failure of their technique to even detect the presence of a patient, much less improve their health?
Anyone?
Bueller?
Gman wrote:
IgoFan wrote:
And to anticipate a repeated misconception from your posts, science does not prove anything about the natural world, and says nothing about the supernatural world. The scientific method does not give all the answers, but look around you if have any doubts about its effectiveness.
Are we talking about raw science or Darwinian evolution here?
I can see why you were confused, in this topic I've only mentioned
science and
never mentioned
Darwin or
evolution. Did an evolutionist pick on you as a child?
OK, another comment for the other readers:
Science has nothing called
Darwinism or
Darwinian evolution. The term is simply
evolution. Biologists regard Darwin's
Origin of Species as far less of a complete and accurate description of evolution, than physicists regard Newton with respect to gravity.
How would everyone here like to be called
neo-Catholics? And then, after you patiently, repeatedly, and accurately, explain why that term is flat out wrong, you continue to be called
neo-Catholics and asked to defend the latest thing Pope Benedict says?
No need for anyone to reply on this point; if I start seeing just the term
evolution show up in posts, I'll know someone was listening.
Gman wrote:
The point of all this is that Darwinism isn't empirical science. It is rationalism with a capital "R", a belief system...
Until this very reply, I haven't mention evolution once in this topic. BTW, I can go with you to confront that evolutionist who picked on you as a child.
Gman wrote:
So answer me this... Have you given all your authority to science?
Of course not. What a silly question. For example, morality is also outside the scope of science. And I certainly don't look to science for guidance on how to restrain myself when responding to your replies.
Science is not an authority, but a process for not fooling oneself about the
natural world. Look into it. The wonders you will find could strengthen your faith in ways you cannot imagine.