Opdrey
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- Feb 12, 2022
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No evidence? Other than Eucharistic miracles you mean?
Let me try this. See if this helps explain things better.
I have experience of working in the lab and writing articles for publication. I and my coworkers once did an extensive study of the surface chemistry of a particular material. We wrote up the results and found evidence for "X". We published it and it made it through peer review. So you would think we were "RIGHT". It had evidence for "X" and others reviewed it and found it compelling enough to allow it to be published in a real journal.
Three years later another group of researchers were looking at the same material and realized that there was another possible explanation for "X" which we had failed to account for.
So do you see that simply because something was PUBLISHED doesn't necessarily mean that it is PROVEN?
And if you think quantum reality is just conjecture about the math, you are mistaken.
No I am not.
It challenges the very framework of existence. How can a single thing pass down two separate paths? Does it even exist till observed? These are fundamental questions!
And that is exactly what they are: questions.
I suggest you read something like “ through two doors at once
Dude, I'm sorry. I've actually read quite a bit on Quantum and I've had training in the sciences on quantum. Yes, a lot of it is "shut up and calculate", but that's fine. It works that way quite effectively. I don't need to know why the double slit experiment works as it does in order to use Quantum. But by the same token it does not mean that there aren't still "fundamental questions". And these remain questions.
The problem of determining what is real underlying phenomena is no surprise to those who have studied the philosophy of science, and what it is possible to know, ie metaphysics.
Rather than metaphysics, why don't we talk EPISTEMOLOGY for a bit. I'm an empiricist by training. As such there is a fundamental limit to empiricism. I assume you have read Hume extensively. If one were to take Hume's explanation to its logical conclusion one realizes that effectively no one can "know" anything at all.
The empiricist says we have to have direct experience of an event. If I flip a light switch and light comes on it does NOT provide me with direct experience of the event. It could be just random chance that it happens. I can do it a million times and I have NO ABSOLUTE CERTAINTY that there is a necessary causal connection between the two events. NONE.
What I do have is what science provides: a likely hypothesis. The more I flip the switch and the light comes on the more likely it is that there is a connection. But I am NEVER 100% certain. NEVER.
I will propose that a book describing anecdotes about OBE's is just a flip of that switch.
The switch is flipped 2 times and you reject the null hypothesis. I require many many more flips of the switch than you do.
Does that make sense to you?
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