Gawdzilla Sama
Valued Senior Member
Some posts should be "seen by direct request only."
No! If it was "certainly a fact" you wouldn't be constantly here trying to convince us all that it's a fact.Well it's certainly a fact that people witness ghosts and capture ghostly apparitions of dead people in photographs.
You're not making up the fact that some photographs have things in them that look like the archetypal "ghost".Those aren't facts I'm making up.
Call the new stations! An astounding revelation. Not.And as far as prior belief goes, yes I believe in ghosts.
No it hasn't. You started convinced.The evidence has convinced me of it over the years...
LOL. Keep on clowning, MR...., just as it should for every empirically-minded soul.
If one did, then one would be wrong about that. Knowledge is a justified, true belief, which is different from just a belief.One might even say I know ghosts exist.
Not surprised that you're not going to worry about knowledge.So if knowledge influences how I perceive the facts, as indeed it does and should for everybody, I'm certainly not going to worry about it.
There's no knowledge about ghosts. See above.And it makes an even smarter person careful not to dismiss a whole field of knowledge and practice based on the charlatans that have been exposed in that field.
Yes. The field of parapsychology is rife with poor experimental design and shoddy investigation practices.Have you even researched what has been learned in the field of parapsychology over the years? No?
That's not a mistake.You make the common skeptic's mistake of thinking asking questions about something makes that something questionable.
Maybe. So what?Anybody can come up with unanswerable questions about any phenomena.
There is usually convincing evidence for phenomena that are generally agreed to be real. There is no requirement that all aspects of a phenomenon must be understand before it is acknowledged to be real. But there must be sufficient evidence to establish that there's a "there" there.How does it happen? Why does it happen in this way? Why does it happen at all? etc. But that in no way entails that the phenomenon is therefore nonexistent or even dubious.
Why aren't you out there searching for better evidence for ghosts than fuzzy photos and videos of dubious provenance trawled from the interwebs, then?It just shows that it is largely unknown and in need of continuing exploration.
Are you unaware of such evidence? Forgive me. I have overestimated you again, even taking into account your clowning. Would you like me to dig up a few examples of fraudulent people pushing ghosts and the paranormal on the general public?So far you haven't provided a shred of evidence fraudulent people are pushing ghosts and paranormal phenomena on the general public.
You are assuming all those people are "quite innocent". But that is just your assumption. And it's a mistake to make that assumption all the time. You're also assuming that the things in the photos are "quite extraordinary", before putting any effort at all into evaluating them. That's confirmation bias writ large.All the photos posted in this thread so far are of people who quite innocently captured something extraordinary in them and so posted them online.
See above. I just told you what's wrong with that. But I've told you before, and not just me. It's all in one ear and out the other with you, if we're to believe your clown act.There's nothing wrong with that.
You've got it exactly backwards. You are the only one of the two of us who is assuming things about people you don't even know.If that pisses you off somehow then that means you are assuming things about people you don't even know.
I have vilified nobody, other than confirmed fraudsters and other liars.And that's a sign of projection---typically vilifying anonymous people to serve some psychological hang-up you have.
"All the photos posted in this thread so far are of people who quite innocently captured something extraordinary in them."Provide one instance where I have claimed something to be true that I knew to be false.
I fancy myself as an educator, bringing the light of the candle of knowledge to the ignorant, while shining the same light on those who are less than honest about their woo.Yes..no doubt you fancy yourself quite the crusading knight ever at war slaying the goblins and dragons of superstitious woo.
That's because, if we are to take your clown act at face value, you're unable to distinguish science and critical thinking from religion. You have a religion, but you don't call it that. And, again if we are to take the clown act at face value, you wouldn't know a critical thought if it came up and bit you on the bum.I wouldn't call that an admirable trait though. I'd call it religious zealotry dressed up in the garb of science and critical thinking.
You keep making the same basic mistake. Neither you nor your ghosts nor any of the other woo you peddle represents any kind of perceived "threat" to me or to my "precious little kingdom".Hence your righteous indignation and wrathful hypervigilance against all alleged deceivers, always scanning the horizon for looming threats against your precious little kingdom of neat black-and-white rationality.
Point to one place where I have "unwarrentedly" accused somebody of treacherous deceit and greedy motives, if you can.You do it every time you try to debunk some evidence I post, unwarrantedly accusing the witnesses or photographers of treacherous deceit and greedy motives just so you can dismiss it all.
It needs no more evidence or defence than some outlandish story about how the photo really shows an honest-to-goodness ghost.Somehow you seem to think making up some outlandish story about how the photo was really all a clever hoax doesn't need defense or evidence at all.
I don't need to. You're the one with the extraordinary claims. The onus is on you to provide the extraordinary evidence for them.And you never provide any of that.
Just like the ghosts. The onus is on the claimant to make his case.Oh but it's possibly true is it not? Sure, and it's possibly not true as well.
Again, I'm not the one making the extraordinary claims. I just state the obvious: people make mistakes, photographic errors happen, some people are motivated to lie, etc. etc. Nothing extraordinary about any of that.IOW, you have provided nothing of substance at all.
Exactly. Which is why I dismiss much of what you claim about the woo.And so, as Hitchens decreed, what is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.
Yes.That need for being unbiased and objective in our looking at evidence applies as much to the skeptic as to the believer.
Everybody has his own beliefs about what the world is like and about the things that are and aren't in it.That's because the typical online skeptic out to debunk everything otherwordly has his own set of personal beliefs (or really disbeliefs) about the world and what does and can happen in it.
If only you weren't such a hypocrite, you could not only say this sort of thing, but actually try to live it. Unfortunately, it's all just lip service, as far as you're concerned.If we are really to set aside our respective biases, we must confront evidence for an anomalous phenomena with the neutrality of the agnostic who neither believes nor disbelieves in it but remains open to both equal possibilities---that it is real or that it is not real.
Bravo! Well said, MR.The evidence or data should itself drive the analysis as much as possible, not our assumptions about what is real and probable in the world.
James R said: But by the time you post your next post, you will have forgotten all of that. You'll be back to making silly claims about how somebody you don't know can for sure be 100% trusted because they say took a photo of a real ghost.
That's a default mode for etiquette, not scientific investigation of anomalies.The default mode for all social interaction is to assume that the person is being honest about what they claim they did and saw.
But it is the job of a scientific investigation to rule out trickery. Especially in the era of Photoshop, drones, laser holography, etc.It isn't my job to prove that they aren't lying and aren't merely playing a prank on everyone
Incorrect. A negative claim can be proven if it concerns a well-defined domain that can be subject to comprehensive examination or search. I can drain Loch Ness and prove there is no Loch Ness monster. I can plant recording cameras in my living room, covering all areas, and prove no leprachauns are coming in while we sleep and knocking stuff on the floor (while proving an allied positive, that our cats are doing it). Indeed, many negatives are proven simply by proving a positive which excludes the negative. Proving no Scotsmen attended a meeting needs only security staff who require a birth certificate and US passport to be shown. You might also look up modus tollens.A negative can never be proven.
I can drain Loch Ness and prove there is no Loch Ness monster.
I can plant recording cameras in my living room, covering all areas, and prove no leprechauns are coming in while we sleep and knocking stuff on the floor (while proving an allied positive, that our cats are doing it).
It's said that some gullible folks would believe anything. Darby O'Gill is laughing at you.It’s said leprechauns have been around since 8th century.
You have entirely missed the point. It was an example of how a methodological approach can be applied to demonstrate a negative. I'm sure there are better empirical examples (drain the quarry, perhaps, to prove your missing Chevy wasn't dumped there, or checking your deadbeat brother's barn). , I was just trying to outline how a negative can in principle be proved or demonstrated to a level of very high probability (as with inductive reasoning). We don't sit around debating if the sun will ever rise in the west, but rather rely on inductive reasoning and what it tells us about the Earth's rotation. If all the swans we encounter are white, the ornithologists dig deeper and study the the genome and coding for feather coloration (building the philosopher WV Quine's "web of belief") and possible adaptive disadvantages to any color mutation. At some point, they settle on a taxonomic description of swans, or polar bears, which all began with an inductive data set on white coloration and pretty long necks.Well.. I don't think that would necessarily prove the Loch Ness monster doesn't exist. It could have been swimming in another connected loch or sea or river. But besides that, who could possibly drain Loch Ness of all its water? It would require a superhuman ability that you simply don't have.
Actually you've only proven there were no leprechauns knocking stuff on the floor at that time. Who knows about all the other nights. Maybe they are clever enough to not do it while you're filming the house.