The end of the rope is near...

Coming to the realization that we don't really know, filled me personally, with a sense of empathy. My whole life came crashing down, what i thought i knew was real...wasn't. What i had based my entire existence on, was a lie, presented to me by other people. I remember years ago, just sitting in my room, thinking, and i couldn't help but cry... it made me feel so lost, what was i to believe now that i understand that i cannot be certain of anything? How can i be happy, and live a just life... if good and bad are subjective and not inherent? If meaning wasn't given to me... that i had to give myself my own meaning?...

I remember searching for the answer, i was unconvinced that there wasn't one, i tried researching all religions, tried to find the best one i could, that meant the most to me... in time, i sadly came to the understanding... that what my emotions had striven for so deeply, just one certainty, just one... that i would never achieve, i would never have it.

So with that empathy, i can understand how hard and painful it can be for some people to just think, and question. To meditate, to try their best to be honest with themselves. I know how hard it was for me, and i fortunately find myself to be very open minded... but imagine how hard it is for those of us who aren't? They are going through an internal battle, lies vs/ truth. It is the hardest struggle, to be honest with oneself. It is a hard battle, and most of us don't come out of it without acquiring a few scars.

I think there are two kinds of people, those of us who are honest with ourselves, and those of us who aren't. Those of us who spend hours, days, in deep contemplation, questioning everything we have been told, everything we think we know... we all come to the same conclusion at the end, all of us. That we really don't fucking know ANYTHING metaphysical. And even the things we claim we know, gravity, general relativity, quantum mechanics... the laws that make up the reality that we are living in, it could all be illusion, or a dream... or an endless chart of possibility. We still cannot be certain about the things we have ACTUAL first hand experience with, because what we think is real... could be something else entirely.

Ah, so this is where you're "YOU DONT KNOW! Because I KNOW that you dont KNOW! Even though I think its impossible to know anything. I KNOW that you dont KNOW!" mentality comes from. From your insecure and desperate search for answers as a youth when flaws became apparent in your belief system. Can I ask you what those beliefs were?.. You're too dependent on what reality has to offer. You wanted it to provide all these comfortable answers and majorly freaked out when you got a dose of physical reality. Instead of going "Meh, I was wrong, good for me that I clued in", you broke down because you were too dependent on what reality has to offer (and still kinda are) instead what you had to offer yourself.

I went through religion and atheism and to where I am at now and I will probably stay here and enjoy the view. I Was a Christian until I was 11 (I think), grandma took me to Sunday school whenever she could, I believed in Jesus and judgement and what not. Still thought the priest was silly when denying dinosaurs though. But I didnt put much thought on what Christianity had to offer me, the Christian reality was not my reality. I thought "Meh, Jesus sounds cool, looks cool, hope I'm cool too so I dont go to hell" and continued being a kid. Then at 12 I realized how hateful and ridiculous most religious teachers were. I thought "Meh, theres a good chance theres no such thing as god" and I kept being a kid. Then as I matured I sided with that theres a good chance that there is a god because of cliche reasons. Amazing beauties and complexities, how the FUCK the universe began, asking myself "why the fuck do things exist?!", etc. Then I started listening to Joe Rogan about two years ago and he got me interested in so many things. Spirituality, science, psychedelics, mysteries and plausible theories, conspiracies, etc. That man is fucking smart. I would imagine that a lot of people here like and respect him. Yet if he came here anonymously and shared and explained his beliefs you all would greet him with the same dogmatic and condescending tone you greet all theists with, then you would get frustrated that he didnt accept your "logical" arguments, then say he believes in "woo", because thats what ego does... Then of course I had my infamous experiences that you guys fight tooth and nail to deny their existence lol.

Your life long dependency on what physical reality has to offer you, and explanations from others, has shaped your view of reality. Instead of caring of what YOU thought, you looked outside for answers. Now you have yet another worldview that makes you feel secure. You are afraid of the idea of not knowing, therefore you created a loophole. Now you KNOW its impossible to know anything, so now you can get rid of that fear that made your break down and cry as a youth. If only you stayed true to your word that your current view is only an idea and an opinion. That is not the case at all. You repeat this "I'm honest to myself, no one knows god" shpeal like it is an accepted fact instead of an idea and opinion like you claimed it to be in another thread. You claim that certainty is a delusion, yet you claim you're certain no one knows "god". You're falling victim to your own claim that certainty is a delusion, and you will not budge from that certainty... Yeah... open minded...

Now gentlemen. Please line up in an orderly fashion and wait your turn to tell me how I am wrong.
 
If this happens https://www.rollitup.org/toke-n-talk/558364-riu-podcast.html, would you consider being a guest?

I went through religion and atheism and to where I am at now and I will probably stay here and enjoy the view. I Was a Christian until I was 11 (I think), grandma took me to Sunday school whenever she could, I believed in Jesus and judgement and what not. Still thought the priest was silly when denying dinosaurs though. But I didnt put much thought on what Christianity had to offer me, the Christian reality was not my reality. I thought "Meh, Jesus sounds cool, looks cool, hope I'm cool too so I dont go to hell" and continued being a kid. Then at 12 I realized how hateful and ridiculous most religious teachers were. I thought "Meh, theres a good chance theres no such thing as god" and I kept being a kid. Then as I matured I sided with that theres a good chance that there is a god because of cliche reasons. Amazing beauties and complexities, how the FUCK the universe began, asking myself "why the fuck do things exist?!", etc. Then I started listening to Joe Rogan about two years ago and he got me interested in so many things. Spirituality, science, psychedelics, mysteries and plausible theories, conspiracies, etc. That man is fucking smart. I would imagine that a lot of people here like and respect him. Yet if he came here anonymously and shared and explained his beliefs you all would greet him with the same dogmatic and condescending tone you greet all theists with, then you would get frustrated that he didnt accept your "logical" arguments, then say he believes in "woo", because thats what ego does... Then of course I had my infamous experiences that you guys fight tooth and nail to deny their existence lol.
You were a Christian until age 11, then at age 12 became an atheist?

The difference between your delivery and Joe Rogans is he is open to criticism of his ideas and welcomes logical debate, he follows the rules, every interaction you and I have had you show the opposite and you don't respect the rules of logic, you think they're unfair tactics used against you when in reality, in order for logic to exist, to operate properly, the rules must be understood and must be followed, no exceptions. You have to know when and why something is logically inconsistent, instead of bothering with that, you call foul and more often than not fling personal attacks.

I think Joe Rogan is a smart dude, but his theory on Bigfoot is preposterous. He doesn't understand enough about biology or history to make any kind of educated guess whether Bigfoot exists or not. Essentially, he's talking out of his ass. This doesn't render him or his other ideas moot, not to me anyway, because of what I already mentioned, he's willing to actually accept criticisms and he doesn't get into a pissing contest if other people don't believe him. He's open and honest about it, with quotes like "Hey, I'm not saying it's real, I'm just saying I'm not ruling anything out completely...". He is leaving room for possibilities, something I have never seen you do, not one time during your entire tenure at RIU.


Your life long dependency on what physical reality has to offer you, and explanations from others, has shaped your view of reality. Instead of caring of what YOU thought, you looked outside for answers. Now you have yet another worldview that makes you feel secure.

I've seen you bring this up on a few different occasions..

"explanations from others", I'm assuming you're referring to scientists, other people with similar mindsets who've made a name for themselves in our science books... You're implying that it is bad, or applying a negative connotation to learning from the greatest scientific minds available. My question is why? Why is it bad to learn from the work these men and women did during their lives?

I suspect your answer will entail something about how they never looked outside the box and were confined to a 'material reality' (is there any other?) like Z and the rest of us are. But if their work provided solutions to real problems and real technological advances, advances of which you are using every day, even right now, while typing on that keyboard, so how do you characterize that as bad?


You are afraid of the idea of not knowing, therefore you created a loophole.

We welcome the mystery and thrive in not knowing. It is what drives us.

Now you KNOW its impossible to know anything

How do you KNOW it's possible to know anything? Could you enlighten me?

so now you can get rid of that fear that made your break down and cry as a youth.

I can assure you, the relief comes from knowing you're using a systematic approach to science that's stood the test of time for over 400 years. Nothing on the planet is as powerful as the scientific method, as I'm sure creationists will attest to.
 
...so, why do you feel like your material perspective is the only possible one? Also, why don't you acknowledge the theists here that CAN engage you - and don't want to 'convert' you? All the fish at the top of the barrel obscuring the view of 'those who made it'? There's about 50,000 questions left to be answered on this site before the boredom sets in.

*but I do know what you mean. Maybe my question is what constitutes arrogance here? Posting replies from the heart is not condescending or arrogant. People saying that they 'believe in something greater than themselves' does not spell out arrogance, imo.

Not being able to see the symbolism in the imagery used in various scriptures is the issue. It has been my experience that deep within the myths is a seed of truth. Trying to understand the myths intellectually doesn't work. It has to be felt. All I can say is that those seeds grow and cause a better understanding overall for the person that is exposing them. 'Solar Man' is a person who has the capacity (light - mind) to expose what is hidden.

***no person should walk around thinking "wow, I'm 'solar man!' - don the cape and try to fly. They don't consciously say "ok now, I have to be 'this way' and 'that way'... That's not the fckn point. That's seriously messed up. The point is understanding, or wisdom. Wisdom as far as I know is the 'child' of mind and heart. In a sub-forum with 'philosophy' in the title, I think that's about the 3rd time I've seen the term used. Wisdom. You can't 'have it' or 'get it', it grows but not on it's own. Something like evolution, I suppose.

I'm going to edit this one more time and stop there. If a person came to an intellectual impasse in their own scientific studies, would it be beneficial to expand their thinking the way that myth prescribes? (heh...with a 'bridge')

Before I replay to the same old same old... I request that this gets some attention.
 
Before I replay to the same old same old... I request that this gets some attention.

...so, why do you feel like your material perspective is the only possible one?

I don't see the value in something unverifiable. If you get a feeling from inside, what does it matter if you don't know where it came from or what really caused it?

Also, why don't you acknowledge the theists here that CAN engage you - and don't want to 'convert' you? All the fish at the top of the barrel obscuring the view of 'those who made it'? There's about 50,000 questions left to be answered on this site before the boredom sets in.

Because there are no theists willing. UTI does occasionally (thought I'm fairly sure he's not a theist).

Maybe my question is what constitutes arrogance here?

Absolute certainty.

Posting replies from the heart is not condescending or arrogant. People saying that they 'believe in something greater than themselves' does not spell out arrogance, imo.

I wholeheartedly agree, but when those people are presented with known, accepted, observable facts that oppose their beliefs it becomes arrogant, and the defense that follows is always condescending.

Not being able to see the symbolism in the imagery used in various scriptures is the issue. It has been my experience that deep within the myths is a seed of truth. Trying to understand the myths intellectually doesn't work. It has to be felt. All I can say is that those seeds grow and cause a better understanding overall for the person that is exposing them. 'Solar Man' is a person who has the capacity (light - mind) to expose what is hidden.

How do you 'feel' symbolism and how can you be sure your personal interpretation of what you thought you felt was symbolism is true? Do you think it's wise to come to a definite conclusion based on a subjective interpretation of symbolism?

Wisdom. You can't 'have it' or 'get it', it grows but not on it's own. Something like evolution, I suppose.

I agree, obtaining wisdom is only possible through time, experience and active study.

If a person came to an intellectual impasse in their own scientific studies, would it be beneficial to expand their thinking the way that myth prescribes? (heh...with a 'bridge')

I think it depends entirely on what the person came across. As mentioned before, the scientific method provides a way to weed out the things our intuition is telling us is true, if it passed all the standard tests, it wouldn't be an 'intellectual impasse'.



Forgive me, eye, for not getting to this sooner, I'll give you the same explanation I gave to Canna about being tardy on a response, I've been on an alcohol binge the past few weeks and have been thoroughly too fucked up to provide a response worth your consideration. But Chief insisted...
 
If this happens https://www.rollitup.org/toke-n-talk/558364-riu-podcast.html, would you consider being a guest?


You were a Christian until age 11, then at age 12 became an atheist?

The difference between your delivery and Joe Rogans is he is open to criticism of his ideas and welcomes logical debate, he follows the rules, every interaction you and I have had you show the opposite and you don't respect the rules of logic, you think they're unfair tactics used against you when in reality, in order for logic to exist, to operate properly, the rules must be understood and must be followed, no exceptions. You have to know when and why something is logically inconsistent, instead of bothering with that, you call foul and more often than not fling personal attacks.

I think Joe Rogan is a smart dude, but his theory on Bigfoot is preposterous. He doesn't understand enough about biology or history to make any kind of educated guess whether Bigfoot exists or not. Essentially, he's talking out of his ass. This doesn't render him or his other ideas moot, not to me anyway, because of what I already mentioned, he's willing to actually accept criticisms and he doesn't get into a pissing contest if other people don't believe him. He's open and honest about it, with quotes like "Hey, I'm not saying it's real, I'm just saying I'm not ruling anything out completely...". He is leaving room for possibilities, something I have never seen you do, not one time during your entire tenure at RIU.




I've seen you bring this up on a few different occasions..

"explanations from others", I'm assuming you're referring to scientists, other people with similar mindsets who've made a name for themselves in our science books... You're implying that it is bad, or applying a negative connotation to learning from the greatest scientific minds available. My question is why? Why is it bad to learn from the work these men and women did during their lives?

I suspect your answer will entail something about how they never looked outside the box and were confined to a 'material reality' (is there any other?) like Z and the rest of us are. But if their work provided solutions to real problems and real technological advances, advances of which you are using every day, even right now, while typing on that keyboard, so how do you characterize that as bad?




We welcome the mystery and thrive in not knowing. It is what drives us.



How do you KNOW it's possible to know anything? Could you enlighten me?



I can assure you, the relief comes from knowing you're using a systematic approach to science that's stood the test of time for over 400 years. Nothing on the planet is as powerful as the scientific method, as I'm sure creationists will attest to.

That sounds pretty cool, I might take part in a podcast. Will it be a biased podcast like the logical vs CWE? Or will it be more of a small party of people with both "logical" and "crazy" beliefs having a good time?

And I guess I had brain fart and included the age of 11 in my christian years, which it probably was one of my christian years.

I would of been open to criticism if it was in the form of "I think you are wrong, heres why", instead of , "You are definitely wrong, how do you believe such things? Heres why you are definitely wrong", and you are lying to yourself if you think my representation of the criticism is false lol. There is a smug know-it-all attitude to those that have a passion for skepticism, and that is why there is conflict. I have gotten used to the biased responses from you and others though. That is evident in my last thread I posted. I politely belittled the materialistic worldview just like (some) skeptics politely belittle the theistic worldview, and instead of considering the information I provided, the skeptics responded with ignorance and negativity, and the ones that did read some of the information I provided were fueled by ignorance and negativity. I was being a good boy, I was abiding by the rules, I was not starting any pointless fights, it was Z who through the first rock with his classic "YOU'RE WRONG!" mentality. I was merely speaking of the content of the information and people did not like that I guess. Tell me where I have crossed the line in my latest thread?

Joe accepts and listens to criticism from those much more respectful and less militant than yourself and at the end of conversations he accepts he could be wrong, but still thinks he is right, that his belief is correct. Joe also claims certainty to a few things like DMT and how the pineal gland/Third Eye creates it and how it takes you to other dimensions where you interact with angelic beings and "Have a conversation with god", says Joe, and so many other things about DMT that you and others find preposterous. I only say that he is certain do to his excitement when hes explaining DMT to people.

I dont think it is bad that you learn from these people. I think its bad that you completely accept their form of reality without ever trusting yourself on what reality might be. Heres a scenario... "Oh, this is interesting and could be possible. I dont trust myself so I better check some skeptic/science website to see it its legit rather than studying it myself without biased opinions to sway my judgement... Oh... they said its absolute bullshit... I guess I'll take their word for it."... Science is cool shit, I dont know why you keep bringing up the "you use science everyday" argument like I am oblivious to that. Its just that the dogmatic materialistic agenda that science has gives it a bad name. Science wont test the "supernatural" because the "supernatural" is automatically not real to science for some reason. If the "supernatural" happens, then it is not "supernatural" , because it happened in this reality that we call NATURE, which makes it natural. How can anyone know if its natural if theres only a few respectable scientists studying the so called "supernatural"? And even they get attacked and belittled by the scientific community... You tell me Pad, is there any other reality besides material reality? :wink:

Seeing is believing. Experience. etc etc. That is how I know... Yes yes, I know the skeptical take on such things, please spare me the lecture...

Science is just starting to take a leap into the "supernatural". So hopefully soon the great scientific method will convince those that so stubbornly hold on to materialistic views that there is much more to reality. The unveiling of reality through science has already begun, check out my latest thread for an example of that. :bigjoint:
 
^^ A sincere question, Chief: If science advances greatly and investigates all of these supernatural claims only to find out there is absolutely no such realm, how would you handle it? Would you be okay that the material realm is all there is?
 
That sounds pretty cool, I might take part in a podcast. Will it be a biased podcast like the logical vs CWE? Or will it be more of a small party of people with both "logical" and "crazy" beliefs having a good time?

Awesome, man! I will work as hard as humanly possible to make sure it's as non biased as possible. That is a personal guarantee from me to you.


I would of been open to criticism if it was in the form of "I think you are wrong, heres why", instead of , "You are definitely wrong, how do you believe such things? Heres why you are definitely wrong"

Possibly your most valuable contribution to this entire forum. Thank you, this is what people like me need to hear.

There is a smug know-it-all attitude to those that have a passion for skepticism

Look, I understand that, and I hope you don't think I'm (or any of us that take the skeptical reins here are) oblivious to it. I'm fully aware it exists, having said that, it should let you know that I am willing and able to rise above it and get to the actual substance of the argument. I'm not interested in arguing over the emotional aspects of each of our personalities that come out when one of us gets heated. It does nothing for either one of us and contrary to the goal actually causes more unnecessary animosity between us. I for one am tired of that, it's just too emotionally draining. I can honestly say I used t get a kick out of it, but not anymore. I find nothing thrilling and have no desire to argue with someone for (literally) months.

OTOH, you must also acknowledge that there is the same kind of arrogance on the other side of the fence as well.

Can we meet half way here?


and that is why there is conflict. I have gotten used to the biased responses from you and others though. That is evident in my last thread I posted. I politely belittled the materialistic worldview just like (some) skeptics politely belittle the theistic worldview, and instead of considering the information I provided, the skeptics responded with ignorance and negativity, and the ones that did read some of the information I provided were fueled by ignorance and negativity. I was being a good boy, I was abiding by the rules, I was not starting any pointless fights, it was Z who through the first rock with his classic "YOU'RE WRONG!" mentality. I was merely speaking of the content of the information and people did not like that I guess. Tell me where I have crossed the line in my latest thread?

Can you provide a link to the thread you're referring to? I may have missed it.. I'd just like to be sure I'm commenting on the correct one.

Joe accepts and listens to criticism from those much more respectful and less militant than yourself and at the end of conversations he accepts he could be wrong, but still thinks he is right, that his belief is correct. Joe also claims certainty to a few things like DMT and how the pineal gland/Third Eye creates it and how it takes you to other dimensions where you interact with angelic beings and "Have a conversation with god", says Joe, and so many other things about DMT that you and others find preposterous. I only say that he is certain do to his excitement when hes explaining DMT to people.

That's understandable, as most people feel and act the same way, myself included (interesting, right? Remember that..). I wouldn't consider myself 'militant' only because I believe I'm consistent. The fact is, remaining consistent in reality requires you to be as skeptical about religion as you are about things like Santa Clause. Perhaps though, I'd admit, the 'frustrated Padawan' comes out and it's difficult to restrain myself, depending on the post or poster, but I'm working on it...

If Rogan claims absolute certainty towards anything, he's making a mistake. As I've expressed before, I believe there is nothing in existence that is can be absolutely certain, so it's my contention that he's wrong. Again though, as I mentioned before, I don't think this makes him any less intelligent, just less consistent.

I also understand the enthusiasm, easy! I remember the first time I tried MDMA, I was sold, everyone NEEDS to try this, OMFG, you are missing out!! But again, no matter how enthusiastic a person is about something, especially on a substance that alters your state of mind, like DMT, you still need to stick to scientific standards, no matter what, to ensure you're not making any mistakes and coming up with the wrong conclusions. We don't do this just because we want to beak balls, we do it so that we're able to feel the rush of that same exact MDMA feeling again and again, and we're able to rely on it, we're able to responsibly give it to our friends to try, you know what I mean?


I dont think it is bad that you learn from these people. I think its bad that you completely accept their form of reality without ever trusting yourself on what reality might be.
I don't though. When I try to figure something out, I look at it from all the angles I can think of, I think about the best possible solution I can come up with, what somebody else might try, what somebody from the 16th century might try... and on and on.. eventually you develop a solution. If you take on problems scientists from centuries past have taken on and tag along with them, reading the history of their discoveries, and what I mean by that is what was going on at the time, what the man (or woman) was thinking the instant the revolution came to them, how they incorporated it into their research, how the society around them reacted to it, how it was received, how it was produced, how it was manufactured, how that impacted society at large.. literally dozens of variables (which is an interesting en devour in itself as you're exposed to multitudes of different disciplines)... Albert Hofmann's research on LSD is enough to get anyone hooked!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_LSD#Discovery

... you realize science isn't something that is taken on someones word. It is a systematic process with built in solutions to preconceived problems due to human nature and human error.

Heres a scenario... "Oh, this is interesting and could be possible. I dont trust myself so I better check some skeptic/science website to see it its legit rather than studying it myself without biased opinions to sway my judgement... Oh... they said its absolute bullshit... I guess I'll take their word for it."... Science is cool shit

This actually sort of offended me because it shows you haven't given my responses much consideration.

"Oh, this is interesting and could be possible. I dont trust myself (this never comes into account. 'Trusting myself' is irrelevant as I'm not a scientist) so I better check some skeptic/science website to see it its legit rather than studying it myself without biased opinions to sway my judgement... (as average human beings, we don't have the ability to research certain things with extensive detail, therefore, we're subject to a degree of faith. I'd like to make it clear right here right now that the faith I'm referring to is not the same kind of faith religious institutions rely on and emphasize again why the scientific method is so important and useful) Oh... they said its absolute bullshit... I guess I'll take their word for it." (the international scientific community ensures 'taking anyones word' for anything is impossible. There are rigorous academic and scientific obstacles to cross along the way. I'm confident enough to say that if the theory isn't true, or doesn't present a degree of truth to it, it will not pass through the scientific process. If you disagree and believe something could, please provide evidence of something that might, or an explanation as to how something could.)

Science wont test the "supernatural" because the "supernatural" is automatically not real to science for some reason.

This is really telling, dude. 'for some reason'? Science won't test the supernatural because it can't. How can we test something that isn't real? If it was real, wouldn't we be able to test it?

If the "supernatural" happens, then it is not "supernatural" , because it happened in this reality that we call NATURE, which makes it natural. How can anyone know if its natural if theres only a few respectable scientists studying the so called "supernatural"? And even they get attacked and belittled by the scientific community... You tell me Pad, is there any other reality besides material reality? :wink:

Again, man, you've gotta understand, as I've told you before, I've been in this game a long time. I've heard everything hundreds of times before from a lot of different people, most of these ideas are pretty consistent, for the most part. I've had a lot of time to reflect and ponder upon them. You're 100% right, if something 'supernatural' happened in reality, then it would not be 'supernatural'. We know whether something actually happens in nature or not by studying the available data. The thing about things like Bigfoot, the Cupacabra, Santa Clause, etc.. is that there is literally nothing to measure. There is no data. This is the point where I ask you, what do we measure? What is there? Where is the Sasquach skeleton? Where are the gigantic mechanical tools the ancients used to build the pyramids? Where are the stone tablets which contain the 10 commandments? There is just nothing to go on, except hearsay and secondhand accounts. I'm sorry, man, but that just does not convince me. I wish it did because some of the shit would be really cool to believe in, but it just doesn't..

I need to make one thing clear to you, the scientists that get 'belittled' by the international scientific community do exactly what you do, they come with an idea... but no evidence. All of them collectively say "OMFGBBQ!!!! REALLY!!!?! How the fuck did you figure that out?!?!! Holy shit!!", and they're met with "oh... well, I mean... I was in my bedroom thinking about shit... and it just CAME TO ME!!!!".. See what I mean, dude? If we had something to go on, we'd be ALL THE FUCK OVER THAT!! Bigfoot dude?? You don't think any scientist out there would LOVE to be known for discovering fuckin' BIGFOOT?! All of them would, it's just the evidence available now (which means there could be evidence eventually that DOES point to Bigfoot being real) doesn't suggest it exists.

Seeing is believing. Experience. etc etc. That is how I know... Yes yes, I know the skeptical take on such things, please spare me the lecture...

No I won't spare you, because you really need to understand this stuff!

Experience is not nearly enough to conclude anything. I know you've experimented with substances in your personal life, I know you've felt different states of mind, different 'realities'.. Now this is an honest question... Why should you believe anything from your sober state of mind is any 'more real' than something from an intoxicated state of mind you've experienced?

Don't you think you need something to distinguish between the two? Something consistent, something useful? This is the scientific method. With that, it doesn't matter how fucked up you get, if you follow the rules, you can't stray from the path. It is designed that way.


Science is just starting to take a leap into the "supernatural". So hopefully soon the great scientific method will convince those that so stubbornly hold on to materialistic views that there is much more to reality. The unveiling of reality through science has already begun, check out my latest thread for an example of that. :bigjoint:

I'm completely open to anything that follows the rules of the scientific method.
 
When I enguage in a debate style discussion, I feel it should be taken for granted that what I say is opinion and can be countered. I don't feel the need to qualify my statements with "you could be wrong in my opinion", especially if my opinion is that you are wrong, not that you could be. IOW, when I say someone has made a mistake I always go to the trouble of explaining myself, showing my work, which by default opens it up to criticism. I give someone the chance to defend, and am not afraid to admit when I am wrong.

I have certainly tried the more tactful approach with you chief, and yet you were not open to criticism. I do see you are making more of an effort to communicate, and I applaud that, but many times you have answered something I said by calling me a robot, and not by responding to what I say. Many times you have decided that my robotic language was reason enough to discount anything I might say, and once after a genuine attempt to reach out to you, your response was simply tl;dr. Now, how can you ask for the respect of framing our criticism as a possible opinion yet not want give us the respect of reading and considering what we say?

As I have said before, your M.O. seemed to be to pop on, say what you want, and attack anyone who didn't agree. I totally understand that people talking to you could state their criticism in different terms, but you haven't exactly shown much tact yourself. So I think on this road you could meet us in the middle.

The purpose of debate, even informal discussions like these, should be to find common ground. In order for all of us to stop arguing, the arguments must be had. Ultimately we need to work towards agreement, or we are just wasting our time. With matters such as these, agreement comes in baby steps. Things progress much faster when we all agree on rules of conduct, and people such as Eye, Bracko, karri0n, people who opposed me but were still willing to engage in respectful conversation, have taught me many valuable things and opened up my worldview. People such as fin, kaendar, and so far you, have taught me nothing. I don't believe that's because you have nothing to say worth listening to, I think it's because you need to do a better job of saying it, and I concede the point that I could do a better job of listening.
 
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Originally Posted by eye exaggerate
...so, why do you feel like your material perspective is the only possible one?

So, much here in one little sentence. "material perspective" make a giant assumption that there is more that one type of perspective.

How is it that Religion forms a new type of perspective? A group assumption maybe.

"why do you feel like...." Well, these are not feelings. To suggest there is Deity, is a "feeling."

"....the only possible one." I'm pretty sure he has never said this.

There is no ultimate perspective on this, as some sort of group think. There is only individual perception.

And the idea of a theist is one who assumes Deity. And they can only talk about what they has been indoctrinated in. And they are expert in
dodging the simple fact that they had to assume the Belief to be indoctrinated so they could a Defender of what was made up. A good employment.
That's all.

(not picking on you, Buddy) <wink>
 
There are some people on here, i just don't feel as if a reply is even worth my time. Most of the time when they read it, they just skip over it, reading bits here and there. It isn't important, the things i have to say, what is important to them is what they have to say in reply.

I can empathize with this, because ive done it before.

It doesn't matter what we say to cheif, or any other theist. They are going to believe whatever the hell they want to believe, regardless of the facts.

It doesn't matter if we try to help them understand that our feelings do not give us any amount of knowledge. It doesn't matter how you feel about something, our emotions have this certain tendency to distort our perception of "reality"


I "feel" like im going to continue to exist when i die.
It doesn't fucking matter how you feel! Feeling like your going to continue to exist doesn't make it any more real or true than feeling like existence is merely a dream. It doesn't make it any more real or true than feeling like we live in a multiverse. It doesn't make it any more real or true than feeling like an invisible dragon is behind you at all times watching everything you do.

I don't think it's that people can't understand, i think it's because they refuse to understand.

Whatever impedes on their beliefs, whatever makes them question their beliefs, they block it out. It's easy for them to do.

People like that will never be open minded to the notion that what you believe without evidence, what i believe without evidence, what everyone believes without evidence... they all have the same amount of possibility of being wrong, than they do of being right.

God could have made this existence, the christian doctrine could be true, god may not exist, this could all be an illusion, this could all be a dream, within a dream, this could be a computer simulation and we are all just programs given the illusion we have free will, everything could just be a figment of our imagination. There are BILLIONS of different possibilities, and each one has no more relevance than the last. Each of these ideas has the possibility of being just as true or false as the other.

Because all of these ideas; god, bigfoot, fairies, thor, invisible unicorns, invisible dragons, whatever the hell else our imaginations can come up with, we can't fucking test them! So all of them are just as likely to be true as they are to be false, they all have the same amount of credibility as the last! NONE!

You say you have had "experiences" well so has every one else in the whole fucking world! Say you experience god? Well say someone experiences seeing a fucking fairy? They are both just as ridiculous as the last! It doesn't matter which one you say, they both make you sound like you are fucking crazy! Someone who claims to see god sounds JUST as crazy as someone who claims to see an invisible fucking unicorn or claim to hear voices in their head! There is no difference what so ever...

Like i said at the start, some people i just don't want to give the time of day. One of the most idolized people i will never have the pleasure to meet said something that i can agree with on so many different levels, and it's been hard for me to accept, but as time passes.. it gets easier and easier, and instead of replying to someone who isn't going to listen to begin with... i just slowly shake my head and let it be.

You cannot convince a believer of anything, for their beliefs are not based on evidence, they are based on a deep seated psychological need to believe. ~Carl Sagan
 
There are some people on here, i just don't feel as if a reply is even worth my time. Most of the time when they read it, they just skip over it, reading bits here and there. It isn't important, the things i have to say, what is important to them is what they have to say in reply.

I can empathize with this, because ive done it before.

It doesn't matter what we say to cheif, or any other theist. They are going to believe whatever the hell they want to believe, regardless of the facts.

It doesn't matter if we try to help them understand that our feelings do not give us any amount of knowledge. It doesn't matter how you feel about something, our emotions have this certain tendency to distort our perception of "reality"


I "feel" like im going to continue to exist when i die.
It doesn't fucking matter how you feel! Feeling like your going to continue to exist doesn't make it any more real or true than feeling like existence is merely a dream. It doesn't make it any more real or true than feeling like we live in a multiverse. It doesn't make it any more real or true than feeling like an invisible dragon is behind you at all times watching everything you do.

I don't think it's that people can't understand, i think it's because they refuse to understand.

Whatever impedes on their beliefs, whatever makes them question their beliefs, they block it out. It's easy for them to do.

People like that will never be open minded to the notion that what you believe without evidence, what i believe without evidence, what everyone believes without evidence... they all have the same amount of possibility of being wrong, than they do of being right.

God could have made this existence, the christian doctrine could be true, god may not exist, this could all be an illusion, this could all be a dream, within a dream, this could be a computer simulation and we are all just programs given the illusion we have free will, everything could just be a figment of our imagination. There are BILLIONS of different possibilities, and each one has no more relevance than the last. Each of these ideas has the possibility of being just as true or false as the other.

Because all of these ideas; god, bigfoot, fairies, thor, invisible unicorns, invisible dragons, whatever the hell else our imaginations can come up with, we can't fucking test them! So all of them are just as likely to be true as they are to be false, they all have the same amount of credibility as the last! NONE!

You say you have had "experiences" well so has every one else in the whole fucking world! Say you experience god? Well say someone experiences seeing a fucking fairy? They are both just as ridiculous as the last! It doesn't matter which one you say, they both make you sound like you are fucking crazy! Someone who claims to see god sounds JUST as crazy as someone who claims to see an invisible fucking unicorn or claim to hear voices in their head! There is no difference what so ever...

Like i said at the start, some people i just don't want to give the time of day. One of the most idolized people i will never have the pleasure to meet said something that i can agree with on so many different levels, and it's been hard for me to accept, but as time passes.. it gets easier and easier, and instead of replying to someone who isn't going to listen to begin with... i just slowly shake my head and let it be.

You cannot convince a believer of anything, for their beliefs are not based on evidence, they are based on a deep seated psychological need to believe. ~Carl Sagan

Just like your demonic night terrors only exist in your head and nowhere else? :wink:... Even if they are symbolism of fears/insecurities/problems that you need to overcome like you THINK they are... You have some growing up to do...
 
I really don't know, they have just as much of a chance of being real as they do of being a figment of my imagination, or my dream state. There is no way for me to test it. So all i have is speculation on that matter.. which means, i do not know.

I cannot be certain, nor can you Chief.

Because as soon as we claim certainty of an idea or experience that we cannot be certain of... we are merely lying to ourselves.

I would love to think that these night terror experiences i have are symbolism's of my fears, but i do not know. And i am not afraid of not knowing... unlike SOME people here on RIU.
 
quote_icon.png
Originally Posted by eye exaggerate
...so, why do you feel like your material perspective is the only possible one?

So, much here in one little sentence. "material perspective" make a giant assumption that there is more that one type of perspective.

How is it that Religion forms a new type of perspective? A group assumption maybe.

"why do you feel like...." Well, these are not feelings. To suggest there is Deity, is a "feeling."

"....the only possible one." I'm pretty sure he has never said this.

There is no ultimate perspective on this, as some sort of group think. There is only individual perception.

And the idea of a theist is one who assumes Deity. And they can only talk about what they has been indoctrinated in. And they are expert in
dodging the simple fact that they had to assume the Belief to be indoctrinated so they could a Defender of what was made up. A good employment.
That's all.

(not picking on you, Buddy) <wink>

...no worries, Doer. I did hit the brakes fairly early though. Material perspective (to me) holds material at the top rung. A spiritual perspective (to me) is one that places an intelligence behind matter.

"pretty sure he didn't say that" - "a scientist reduces intuition" Hmmm, dunno here...

The idea of this theist is that I can only assume deity. I know this, but I also know it's a less strenuous battle toward reverence, yo.


"can only talk about what they've been indoctrinated in" It is my choice to study the materials I study, beyond what my upbringing gave me. I do very little catholic quoting here :)

Monstrous experience happened, you know the drill, bumped me out of the hole I was digging ;)
 
I really don't know, they have just as much of a chance of being real as they do of being a figment of my imagination, or my dream state. There is no way for me to test it. So all i have is speculation on that matter.. which means, i do not know.

I cannot be certain, nor can you Chief.

Because as soon as we claim certainty of an idea or experience that we cannot be certain of... we are merely lying to ourselves.

I would love to think that these night terror experiences i have are symbolism's of my fears, but i do not know. And i am not afraid of not knowing... unlike SOME people here on RIU.

If it is not too personal, what fears are you aware of? In what way do these evil beings represent your fears? What connections can you make? Have you tried decoding this symbolism? What you did to get rid of these night terrors earlier in life is not working now, why do you think that is? If our dream state actually exists in another reality, or if it is just a fictional imagination land, either way we find truths about ourselves in them.
 
As ive already explained before, i think they are merely presented as a deep seated fear, based upon the indoctrinations of my early childhood where i acquired the ideas of hell, devils and demons, also from movies i have watched as i have been growing up, also contributing to the ideas.

They just stopped, randomly. Tough they seem to happen when i am facing an extreme amount of discomfort and anxiety with life in general.

I agree on a second note, im not sure if we find so called "truths" about ourselves in the dream realm, but that our anxiety, fears, desires, wants and needs, emanate from them.

I personally think that it is merely an occurrence that is inside of my brain, with no relevance towards reality as we know it. But the truth is, i do not know.

Good questions though, but i have already thought about them before.
I could claim these experiences as imagination, another reality, or merely a dream... yet, i cannot, regardless of the emotions i feel, i do not know.

Though... this still doesn't change the fact that what you believe without evidence, has no more relevance than anything else anyone believes without evidence. Be it god, or anything else that is not evidence based. What you claim to know, you don't really know... it is merely an idea you claim truth to without evidence, nothing more, nothing less.

Saying you believe in god is no more crazy than someone saying they believe in an invisible dinosaur that fallows them around watching everything they do.

 

Awesome, man! I will work as hard as humanly possible to make sure it's as non biased as possible. That is a personal guarantee from me to you.




Possibly your most valuable contribution to this entire forum. Thank you, this is what people like me need to hear.



Look, I understand that, and I hope you don't think I'm (or any of us that take the skeptical reins here are) oblivious to it. I'm fully aware it exists, having said that, it should let you know that I am willing and able to rise above it and get to the actual substance of the argument. I'm not interested in arguing over the emotional aspects of each of our personalities that come out when one of us gets heated. It does nothing for either one of us and contrary to the goal actually causes more unnecessary animosity between us. I for one am tired of that, it's just too emotionally draining. I can honestly say I used t get a kick out of it, but not anymore. I find nothing thrilling and have no desire to argue with someone for (literally) months.

OTOH, you must also acknowledge that there is the same kind of arrogance on the other side of the fence as well.

Can we meet half way here?




Can you provide a link to the thread you're referring to? I may have missed it.. I'd just like to be sure I'm commenting on the correct one.



That's understandable, as most people feel and act the same way, myself included (interesting, right? Remember that..). I wouldn't consider myself 'militant' only because I believe I'm consistent. The fact is, remaining consistent in reality requires you to be as skeptical about religion as you are about things like Santa Clause. Perhaps though, I'd admit, the 'frustrated Padawan' comes out and it's difficult to restrain myself, depending on the post or poster, but I'm working on it...

If Rogan claims absolute certainty towards anything, he's making a mistake. As I've expressed before, I believe there is nothing in existence that is can be absolutely certain, so it's my contention that he's wrong. Again though, as I mentioned before, I don't think this makes him any less intelligent, just less consistent.

I also understand the enthusiasm, easy! I remember the first time I tried MDMA, I was sold, everyone NEEDS to try this, OMFG, you are missing out!! But again, no matter how enthusiastic a person is about something, especially on a substance that alters your state of mind, like DMT, you still need to stick to scientific standards, no matter what, to ensure you're not making any mistakes and coming up with the wrong conclusions. We don't do this just because we want to beak balls, we do it so that we're able to feel the rush of that same exact MDMA feeling again and again, and we're able to rely on it, we're able to responsibly give it to our friends to try, you know what I mean?



I don't though. When I try to figure something out, I look at it from all the angles I can think of, I think about the best possible solution I can come up with, what somebody else might try, what somebody from the 16th century might try... and on and on.. eventually you develop a solution. If you take on problems scientists from centuries past have taken on and tag along with them, reading the history of their discoveries, and what I mean by that is what was going on at the time, what the man (or woman) was thinking the instant the revolution came to them, how they incorporated it into their research, how the society around them reacted to it, how it was received, how it was produced, how it was manufactured, how that impacted society at large.. literally dozens of variables (which is an interesting en devour in itself as you're exposed to multitudes of different disciplines)... Albert Hofmann's research on LSD is enough to get anyone hooked!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_LSD#Discovery

... you realize science isn't something that is taken on someones word. It is a systematic process with built in solutions to preconceived problems due to human nature and human error.



This actually sort of offended me because it shows you haven't given my responses much consideration.

"Oh, this is interesting and could be possible. I dont trust myself (this never comes into account. 'Trusting myself' is irrelevant as I'm not a scientist) so I better check some skeptic/science website to see it its legit rather than studying it myself without biased opinions to sway my judgement... (as average human beings, we don't have the ability to research certain things with extensive detail, therefore, we're subject to a degree of faith. I'd like to make it clear right here right now that the faith I'm referring to is not the same kind of faith religious institutions rely on and emphasize again why the scientific method is so important and useful) Oh... they said its absolute bullshit... I guess I'll take their word for it." (the international scientific community ensures 'taking anyones word' for anything is impossible. There are rigorous academic and scientific obstacles to cross along the way. I'm confident enough to say that if the theory isn't true, or doesn't present a degree of truth to it, it will not pass through the scientific process. If you disagree and believe something could, please provide evidence of something that might, or an explanation as to how something could.)



This is really telling, dude. 'for some reason'? Science won't test the supernatural because it can't. How can we test something that isn't real? If it was real, wouldn't we be able to test it?



Again, man, you've gotta understand, as I've told you before, I've been in this game a long time. I've heard everything hundreds of times before from a lot of different people, most of these ideas are pretty consistent, for the most part. I've had a lot of time to reflect and ponder upon them. You're 100% right, if something 'supernatural' happened in reality, then it would not be 'supernatural'. We know whether something actually happens in nature or not by studying the available data. The thing about things like Bigfoot, the Cupacabra, Santa Clause, etc.. is that there is literally nothing to measure. There is no data. This is the point where I ask you, what do we measure? What is there? Where is the Sasquach skeleton? Where are the gigantic mechanical tools the ancients used to build the pyramids? Where are the stone tablets which contain the 10 commandments? There is just nothing to go on, except hearsay and secondhand accounts. I'm sorry, man, but that just does not convince me. I wish it did because some of the shit would be really cool to believe in, but it just doesn't..

I need to make one thing clear to you, the scientists that get 'belittled' by the international scientific community do exactly what you do, they come with an idea... but no evidence. All of them collectively say "OMFGBBQ!!!! REALLY!!!?! How the fuck did you figure that out?!?!! Holy shit!!", and they're met with "oh... well, I mean... I was in my bedroom thinking about shit... and it just CAME TO ME!!!!".. See what I mean, dude? If we had something to go on, we'd be ALL THE FUCK OVER THAT!! Bigfoot dude?? You don't think any scientist out there would LOVE to be known for discovering fuckin' BIGFOOT?! All of them would, it's just the evidence available now (which means there could be evidence eventually that DOES point to Bigfoot being real) doesn't suggest it exists.



No I won't spare you, because you really need to understand this stuff!

Experience is not nearly enough to conclude anything. I know you've experimented with substances in your personal life, I know you've felt different states of mind, different 'realities'.. Now this is an honest question... Why should you believe anything from your sober state of mind is any 'more real' than something from an intoxicated state of mind you've experienced?

Don't you think you need something to distinguish between the two? Something consistent, something useful? This is the scientific method. With that, it doesn't matter how fucked up you get, if you follow the rules, you can't stray from the path. It is designed that way.




I'm completely open to anything that follows the rules of the scientific method.

Dont get too excited about the podcast thing. Sounds like a great idea but it is very revealing and the idea of having a big audience kinda gives me stage fright lol. But I just might do it. It will make people look at us for who we actually are and not just some smug skeptic and crazy spiritualist.

I agree there is arrogance on both sides. The reason I was so aggressive and that I responded with emotion when I first got here is because I never knew "skeptics" existed. I knew what scientists had to say about such things but I didnt know normal people were so passionate about the same materialistic view. I was used to talking to people who said "this is what I think is happening, it kinda makes sense" rather than "Scientists say this, so why should I be interested in that? Why do you believe in that? Thats silly". I was confronted by those with absolute certainty that I was wrong. I expected a friendly environment where people discussed ideas, experiences, and what truths they have found in life. Instead I got the message of "Your ideas are illogical, your experiences mean nothing, your truths delude you, because my perspective says so". I did not like the smug, skeptic, know-it-all nature of a forum that starts with Spirituality, I did not think it was right. It also felt like I was being converted into a religion as well.

I have found consistency in my experiences. The odds that my first experience was just a combination of chance and trickery seemed very slim. How out of complete silence my friend said "no you cant, Chief", and answered a question that I just thought of. Then at the end of the walk he knew I was panicking on the inside about him being able to read everyone of my shameful thoughts so he said "Chief. Your faults are what define you, they are the diamond of your being.", and put me at ease. The dozens of experiences after that showed no error on his part, he was right every single time. Then I guess the material explanation would be that he was using clever guess work and trickery, I dont buy that at all though. Theres been too many different situations and circumstances where he got the same correct outcome every time. The specifics of his answers were way too detailed and thought out to be simple chance, guess work, and trickery. I am not trying to convince you of anything though, just that there is indeed truth in some experiences, and you dont believe in certainty, so you should be uncertain that experiences mean very little.

See this is where things seem dogmatic and biased to me. Why must every single person stick to scientific standards, especial that of materialism? Is it one of those exceptions to the rule of forbidden certainty? No one HAS to do anything, thats not how the world works. It would be quite a boring world if everyone HAD to follow such standards. Of course people will respond with negativity when you tell them they HAVE to do this in order to be sure of anything. IMO, thats just not true at all.

On the other hand, I believe people kinda use the scientific method when learning about mysterious things like the human brain, dreams, lucid dreams, ghosts, creation, the universe, and altered states of consciousness because some of the metaphysical theories seem just as possible as the materialistic theories, and its ok to believe in plausible theories. What I believe to be true is that reality runs on vibrations, resonance, consciousness, and "fields". I explained it to an intelligent atheist friend and she thought I was talking about the Higgs field, she overlooked my use of the word "consciousness" I guess. Its not like the Higgs field though. I think psychedelics turn a dial in your brain and tunes into different frequencies of reality and thats why physical reality appears to change and that DMT completely sends you into a another level of reality. Dr. Strassmans did an experiment where two volunteers are sharing the same DMT trip and speaking to the exact same angelic being at the same time, thats amazing! I think thats one of the examples where the "supernatural" becomes natural.

I've witnessed Heis take someones word for a book I suggested and judging from the points he made, his source was probably a hard atheist or a skeptic that is totally biased and against the metaphysical. He talked about how the author supposedly lied and made things up. But just by going off of the authors scientific sources for information (mostly materialists), the connections the author has made makes a lot of sense. If you only studied his sources of information without the authors commentary than you too would make some astonishing connections. Now how could the author lie about such things? Why did these materialistic, well respected scientists not sue the shit out of the author for lying about their research and giving them a bad name? Because he wasnt lying, and Heis's source for information was biased and completely false about the author lying.

Science says its supernatural and not real out of ignorance. Its not that they cant test it, its that they WONT test it because they think it is not real, and the scientists attempting to test these things face ignorance and ridicule, especially when they develop a plausible theory thats against materialism.

Im not talking about things like bigfoot, chupacabra, and santa, they dont interest me. My take on those creatures is that who knows? They world is huge and an ocean of forest and land has not been touched by humanity. I see it as possible, not really something I care about though.

My latest thread about Sheldrakes research shows data from controlled experiments that exposes the natural side of the "supernatural". Im assuming you already read the article and dismissed it as woo though. I ask you to go to his site, read around a bit if you want to, and PLEASE listen to one of the debates that are found in the "controversies" section. The respectable skeptical scientists hosting the debates show much resistance to what Sheldrake has to offer, but that is all they show, they are unable to provide information that contradicts his studies, and the audience ends up siding with Sheldrake. The book that Heis ignorantly dismissed shows many consistencies in multiple "supernatural" beliefs from all over the world, its pretty sad that people dismiss the only piece of information about "supernatural" consistencies.

I dont believe the ancients needed gigantic machines to accomplish great tasks. I believe that they were masters of consciousness and resonance and had greater control over reality and used spirit infused technology that to us would just be a piece of metal because we are spiritually lost. I dont think the Arch of the Covenant is a stone tablet with commandments from god on them. I think it is great piece of spirit infused technology. It is believed that the Arch is in Ethiopia under the surveillance of anciently traditional black Jews. No one is allowed to enter the building because they say the Arch will kill them. All the guardians of this building live short lives and often die because of cancers and tumors because of the radiation coming off of this technology. This is all just a theory though. No one can know because no one can enter the building.

I just provided an example of scientists and researchers that provide evidence and dont fall under your description of "supernatural" researchers.

Once again, I dont care about bigfoot.

Once again, I dont HAVE to understand anything, and neither does anyone else. Why do we HAVE to understand these things in a world that is supposedly completely uncertain? Because of the exception to the rule of forbidden certainty that is the scientific method? You are CERTAIN that is the only true way to figuring out reality? I think if you got rid of those exceptions to the rule of certainty, then you would have a better grasp of reality. That being said, the scientific method is starting to leap into the unknown and expose the falsely named "supernatural", but I dont think it is necessary, but it is necessary for those that are not convinced, like yourself.
 
Though... this still doesn't change the fact that what you believe without evidence, has no more relevance than anything else anyone believes without evidence. Be it god, or anything else that is not evidence based. What you claim to know, you don't really know... it is merely an idea you claim truth to without evidence, nothing more, nothing less.

Saying you believe in god is no more crazy than someone saying they believe in an invisible dinosaur that fallows them around watching everything they do.


*sigh* I know, Z, I know... Or I dont know because knowing is impossible? :-P
 
I just can't do it like I used to..

Engage with people about science or religion I mean..

I'll read a post where I think to myself "how is this thought process even fuckin' possible?", then I'll start out with a response and half way through, the voice in the back of my head starts screaming "why the hell are you wasting your time with this?!". 99% of the time, it's the exact same types of people. They generally hold some form of theistic belief, they do not know/understand formal logical fallacies (rendering communicating with them essentially useless), they're irrational, arrogant, and always vague and non specific..

Do you feel the same things? I've noticed there's been somewhat of a decline in this section, it seems like the regulars are just as fed up with everything as I am. Shit gets old when you explain it a million different times.

It's a little defeating, but it's taught me a pretty important lesson; you can't change the world, you can only change yourself.

100%
Some days you have to pass them by because it looks like romper-room. Educating the masses is a daunting if not impossible task. To maintain your own sanity sometimes its best to just turn the page :!: and enjoy the fruits of your labor :weed:
 
On the other hand, I believe people kinda use the scientific method when learning about mysterious things like the human brain, dreams, lucid dreams, ghosts, creation, the universe, and altered states of consciousness because some of the metaphysical theories seem just as possible as the materialistic theories, and its ok to believe in plausible theories. What I believe to be true is that reality runs on vibrations, resonance, consciousness, and "fields". I explained it to an intelligent atheist friend and she thought I was talking about the Higgs field, she overlooked my use of the word "consciousness" I guess. Its not like the Higgs field though. I think psychedelics turn a dial in your brain and tunes into different frequencies of reality and thats why physical reality appears to change and that DMT completely sends you into a another level of reality. Dr. Strassmans did an experiment where two volunteers are sharing the same DMT trip and speaking to the exact same angelic being at the same time, thats amazing! I think thats one of the examples where the "supernatural" becomes natural.

This is where i cannot agree. There is no "kinda" using the scientific method. You use it whole, or not at all.
What you really truly need to embrace is that the domain of science is limited. It is limited to the material. Metaphysics of any stripe is not suitable terrain for science. By its definition, metaphysics contains unprovables (technically, unfalsifiables) among its premises.
This makes it out of bounds for science, structurally, irredeemably.

Does this mean that metaphysics is an unsuitable field of human study? I don't believe that, because science is a portion and not the totality of human experience and story.

However, you tried to extend the scientific way of doing things onto the metaphysical by the usual, invalid and frankly annoying method: to invoke hard-science concepts with a healthy dose of metaphor and evocation to seel parallels to favorite metaphysical/supernatural concepts of connectedness.
This does not work.
You cannot use science to lend these ideas more weight.
It injures the basic premise of science, and in doing so devalues the metaphysical argument. It should really be developed, explored and defended on its own terms.

One of science's salient traits is how successful it has been ...when allowed to operate within the confines of its domain. But i have witnessed a cultural phenomenon ... many not-quite-scientific enterprises have wrapped themselves in a grammar and symbology of science ... in order to get some of the reflected radiance of all that scientific success. To a knowing and caring observer, this trend is sterile, since the assumption of scientificity is usually spurious, a metaphor at best.

And here's the nub: science does not use metaphor internally, except as a pedagogic device. Science is absolutely reliant on direct, nonfigurative expression of its concepts and conclusions. Metaphysics ... cannot be.

The biggest crime or mistake applies when someone vaguely suggests that scientific method can be used to advance metaphysical inquiry, as the bit I've kept of your post posits. The tragedy occurs when a pathological or fraudulent scientist ignores Rule #1 (science is restricted to the repeatably, sensorily observable) and ascribes spurious meaning to things like the Strassmann experiment, which cannot be reproduced for love or money.

The real question then is, since it's not appropriate, why all this focus on trying to "scientize" a nonscientific pursuit? Science does not benefit. I am left to conclude that it's an effort to give metaphysical inquiry the veneer of legitimacy. but in the attempt, it cheapens both science and the actual inquiry.
Metaphysics needs to stand on its own philosophical legs and not use science as a crutch. This is my considered opinion. cn
 
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