Arya wrote:My rationalization on when "bad things happen to good people" is that if guardian angels exist but do not "intervene" say when a person loses all they owned in a hurricane, there may be a different reason why that has happened. Perhaps the angel has sat back to allow the person to face the hardship, overcome it, and become a stronger person for it.
And here I find a glaring problem... consider an airplane crash. The statistics for survival in particular classes of accidents are such that everyone onboard is going to be killed. How can it be that several hundred men women and children were all picked-out for a terrible and premature termination? For what 'reason' is this happening? Were they all carefully shepherded from their various walks of life towards this one fatal calamity at 30,000 feet?
Arya wrote:
Why one child will suffer when another doesnt may be the same scenario, or if my rationalization of reincarnation is true, perhaps that child who suffers is suffering for a fate he/she forced upon another in a past life. Of course you would have to be accepting to the possibilities of reincarnation for this type of reasoning to make any kind of sense.
Nurture has it's limits if the lesson involves death. As for reincarnation this is an extraordinary idea that we might be punished or corrected for misdeeds in a previous life. Surely the only sensible lesson we can learn from the suffering of innocents is that there is no aspect of the cosmos that smiles upon living creatures: We are our own guardians and while our powers are considerable, they are most definitely limited.
Arya wrote:BTW-I am not Christian, so the term "sinner from birth" does not apply to my reasonings. .
Except with respect to reincarnation.
Arya wrote:
Not everything is known, such as the afterlife, spooks, and angels for example. Tangible evidence cannot apply for there are no solid evidences, data, or other means by which to determine their validity. But logic for me steps in when I read of parallels in many different countries and/or belief systems historically that document or mention the existence of spirits, reincarnation, and an account of "and afterlife". My logic states that there must be some form of truth to these possibilities when there are so many accounts of them from so many different people, eras, and belief systems globally.
Well I presented you with a valid explanation for it being a global phenomenon. The common factor is "us". We all share the same senses and cognitive processing.
In case I've not bored you before with it, let me relate my favorite demonstration of why it is that such accounts are entirely internal experiences: You find yourself lost while walking in an unfamiliar place late at night. As this wasn't bad enough you realise that your path has taken you into a graveyard which is suddenly silhouetted before you by a fork of lightning. Are you feeling spooked? Can you cheerfully continue on the path or do you sense the presence of the supernatural as a tangible sensation down your spine? So what then if this graveyard turns out to be a prop -- an outdoor movie set?
Yes people the world over relate accounts of paranormal goings-on but isn't it reasonable to suggest that the reason we can't bottle it or weapons it is because it exists entirely within the realm of our human thought processes?
Arya wrote:
QED wrote:I think that the problem is that we become too used to thinking that we have a direct-line to reality in our waking hours. As a consequence of this we have too great an expectation for that reality to stay real. Thus when we experience a processing glitch we tend to view it as something corporeal when infact it is not. If we take mind-altering drugs we know that our experiences are 'unreal' -- but the mind is just as capable of the odd 'hiccup' now and then. In the case of an afterlife the reports coming back from near-death experiences are consistent with brain function subject to oxygen starvation for example.
This can be very well so since all the persons reporting similar events also share the same basic brain functions and human chemistry, so that the particular circumstances that they all experienced physically had similar effects on them mentally. I don't doubt that possibility. But again, the inclusion of an afterlife, spirits, and reincarnation that is reported or believed by different persons of different belief systems throughout human history? That really indicates to me something more.
I have to hound you down on this because you are giving me a reason why you believe something and I think that reason is not a good one. You agree that our shared cognitive processes represent a common element in all this. That is so. Have you ever noticed how widespread is the response to a "tear-jerker" moment in a movie? Next time you feel your eyes welling-up at the cinema take a moment to glance around at the rest of the audience if you need any confirmation of this.
The same widespread emotional response is to be expected to other sensory stimulation. So rather than take the numerical value and distribution of these accounts as an indication of "overwhelming evidence for the paranormal" we should be looking only at the merits of each individual case. All you are seeing is "overwhelming evidence that all humans operate along the same lines".
Arya wrote:
Again, this can very well be true and without tangible evidence to clearly prove otherwise how can we truly know if all the events that are the topics of this post are figments of our imagination (for example)?
What we have to do is look elsewhere to either disprove/prove that events like an afterlife, spirits, and angels may be a reality. Similar events reported by different persons worldwide may be one factor, but that can be possibly explained (as we discussed concerning near-death experiences and brain functions). But what of documentations of ghosts or angels that are recorded by persons of different religious backgrounds throughout human history? What of the belief of certain religions in reincarnation? Can those be just "hiccups" or "unreal percieved events" experienced by many?
We're discussing a wide range of phenomena here, but even so, I think the same answer applies: These types of phenomena are
inevitable artifacts of mind because they are based on ideas which are "self-supporting" i.e.
part of the idea is that it only happens in a realm outside the one we have access to. Any number of arbitrary claims can be made in this environment but certain ones endure because of their appeal.