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Ghostly Encounters

I never said that you have to look at all evidence presented by me, or anyone else. I offered several citations not because I expected you to read them all, but for these reasons: for your benefit should you be interested (and anyone else's, should they be interested), because I hold myself to high standards and think that it is a poor job done not to provide evidence, and to show that the claims I made are not unsupported, but based in very sound, basic, and thoroughly evidenced science. I am not saying that you have to know everything about the subject, I am saying that it is intellectually dishonest to say that I am wrong and dismiss my evidence (saying I had "no hard core scientific evidence"), and in turn provide no evidence for your own position.

I think that's where an important part of the debate went wrong, saying "it is intellecutally dishonest to say that I am wrong and dismiss my evidence". As you later acknowleged, I wasn't saying this.

Also,
thestrangequark said:
The science behind the fallibility of our perceptions is not "conjecture based on our own personal perceptions" at all. Okay, I see where I misunderstood you. Yes, it is my position that a given observation make without evidence is untrustworthy, and I have given sufficient evidence to support that position.

Well, you have provided links to a couple of blogs which I checked out and to several books listed on Amazon, but I obviously can't read the books on-line. So, given that you have read them, can you describe as briefly as you can some of the prominent tests that were done to show the cognitive, social and motivational processes that distort our thoughts, beliefs, judgements and decisions? While I can appreciate how there are tests to show how people's perceptions can be distorted and that there is a propensity to do so, I don't see how it can be completely conclusive. If test subjects are exposed to a distortion of reality and in turn report misinformation, it proves that the human mind is capable of being deceived and report distortions. Yet, it doesn't conclusively say that it happens all the time. It simply shows that it is possible. The point I'm trying to make is that observations can be flawed but aren't guaranteed to be always or completely flawed. Sometimes flaws aren't significant. For example, a phenomenon was observed but the observer can't recall the exact time. They have a recollection of a time before and after the incident but not the exact moment of occurrence. It's a flaw, but not one that invalidates the observation, unless there's a specific timing relating to another event that is dependent or influential.


Anecdotal evidence is always flawed.
Yes that's true, but what I'm talking about is empirical evidence (the record of one's direct observations or experiences). Is it always flawed? It may be insufficient or innaccurate based on a given scope. Because direct observations are used in part of the scientific method. If a person is observing activity in a microscope, and their work isn't duplicated by anyone else, then it's their observations of that study being solely relied upon. If the individual happens to have an interest in a certain outcome, then it is possible for data to become inadvertently skewed to suit it. Of course in the scientific community, there is a certain degree of cross checking and validation performed, but it's not always possible to be thorough.


Oh come on, don't try to make it sound as if I'm trying to silence anyone. You can't apply this specific debate over a specific scientific topic to the whole board and every topic discussed. Talk about a logical fallacy!
Well, you could apply it as every topic has some kind of empirical data involved, in one way or another. And that's the point I'm trying to make, that while there is certainly a potential for flawed data, empirical observations are sometimes all we have to rely upon and perfectly fine to consider regarding non-scientific pursuits. For example, somebody talks about seeing a small animal swimming in a pond and when it gets out it turns out to be a cat! In your experience, it might be that all you've ever known is for cats to be afraid of water. Do you believe them? Did they hallucinate and really see a racoon or other animal instead? You then later find that there's this whole indoctrination process, whereby cats are introduced to water and become accustomed to it. Pretty cool, by the way.


Anyway, if there's one thing that can definitely said about ghostly encounters is that there are plenty of reported hauntings that have been disproven, but also many cases of observations that can't be proven or disproven. We simply don't know.

I will concede after giving the subject more careful consideration that it's very possible my experience regarding my grandfather's "spirit" was a subliminal hallucination, and that the scent I detected was my subconscious mind fooling me (and my wording to my friend may have planted the suggestion for him to agree). No doubt many people have such experiences.

Thanks for the link to "How We Know What Isn't So". I've added it to my future book list.
 
I think that's where an important part of the debate went wrong, saying "it is intellecutally dishonest to say that I am wrong and dismiss my evidence". As you later acknowleged, I wasn't saying this.
You are still claiming I am wrong though, with neither sufficient evidence to back your claim, nor an attempt to counter my evidence, nor enough knowledge on the subject to make that claim. This is what is intellectually dishonest.
Also,
thestrangequark said:
The science behind the fallibility of our perceptions is not "conjecture based on our own personal perceptions" at all. Okay, I see where I misunderstood you. Yes, it is my position that a given observation make without evidence is untrustworthy, and I have given sufficient evidence to support that position.

Well, you have provided links to a couple of blogs which I checked out and to several books listed on Amazon, but I obviously can't read the books on-line. So, given that you have read them, can you describe as briefly as you can some of the prominent tests that were done to show the cognitive, social and motivational processes that distort our thoughts, beliefs, judgements and decisions?
I've already done so, beginning with the basic mechanism by which our brain constructs our narrative of reality and the problems that arise between the primitive brain and the cerebrum. If you have even a basic understanding of that mechanism, then you can see that not only is our reconstruction of the world flawed, it must be flawed, for you can't put together a complete puzzle when you haven't all the pieces. You still seem to be operating under the false assumption that I'm saying that we sometimes mess up, when what I'm saying is that we never get it quite right. Most of the time Mostly Right is good enough, though, so we don't notice. One of the easiest and most revealing tests is any optical illusion. Attention blindness was displayed in the Color Changing Card Trick video, did you watch it? Attention blindness is also demonstrated every time someone tries to walk or drive while on a cell phone, of course -- I could describe a study in which people walking and talking on a cell phone fail to notice a unicycling clown directly in their paths, if you want that much information. Again, I'm slightly confused about how much evidence you want, because the last time I wrote a long post you said it was too much to read.
While I can appreciate how there are tests to show how people's perceptions can be distorted and that there is a propensity to do so, I don't see how it can be completely conclusive. If test subjects are exposed to a distortion of reality and in turn report misinformation, it proves that the human mind is capable of being deceived and report distortions.
Where did you get the idea that they are being exposed to distorted reality? That wouldn't be a test of perception at all! This is another logical fallacy, you're starting with the conclusion that the reality must be distorted for people's perceptions of it to be distorted. You have to start at the question: Are our perceptions of reality perfect? The answer is, definitively, no.
Yet, it doesn't conclusively say that it happens all the time. It simply shows that it is possible.
How can you make that statement without having read the evidence? Again, to go back to the basic mechanism by which our brain constructs our narrative of reality and its inherent fallibility, the most probable conclusion is that it does happen all the time, and the evidence bears that hypothesis out. Again, Mostly Right Most of the Time, never All Right All of the Time, or even All Right, Some of the Time.
The point I'm trying to make is that observations can be flawed but aren't guaranteed to be always or completely flawed. Sometimes flaws aren't significant. For example, a phenomenon was observed but the observer can't recall the exact time. They have a recollection of a time before and after the incident but not the exact moment of occurrence. It's a flaw, but not one that invalidates the observation, unless there's a specific timing relating to another event that is dependent or influential.
I never said otherwise, and I completely agree with this statement.
Anecdotal evidence is always flawed.
Yes that's true, but what I'm talking about is empirical evidence (the record of one's direct observations or experiences).
No, that is still anecdotal evidence.
Is it always flawed?
To varying degrees, yes.
It may be insufficient or innaccurate based on a given scope. Because direct observations are used in part of the scientific method. If a person is observing activity in a microscope, and their work isn't duplicated by anyone else, then it's their observations of that study being solely relied upon.
The fact that a person is working with the scientific method is what distinguishes their evidence from anecdotal evidence. It doesn't automatically mean their evidence is good enough, but it means it is better.
If the individual happens to have an interest in a certain outcome, then it is possible for data to become inadvertently skewed to suit it. Of course in the scientific community, there is a certain degree of cross checking and validation performed, but it's not always possible to be thorough.
I don't think you have a very thorough understanding of how scientific studies are done and how scientific evidence is evaluated. Here is a breakdown:

- Anecdotal evidence is when someone notices something, like "This herb seemed to help in the recover of my cold!" or, "I saw a ghost!" Anecdotal evidence can point science where to look, but it is worse than worthless in judging the reality, because of the very biases and skewed data you were concerned about. For the reasons I discussed, anecdotal evidence is always biased and skewed data.
- Scientific testing comes in various degrees of quality. Studies are designed specifically to eliminate the biases and skewed data, and that is what makes them scientific and not anecdotal. Studies have controls, and should be blinded, double blinded, or even triple blinded to control for bias. The quality of a study's design is one of the determining factors of its worth. The better designed a study, the more reliable the results. This doesn't mean, of course, that there are not poorly designed studies, bad science, or flukey results sometimes, that is why independently replicable results are necessary, and why there is a peer-review process to help determine if the science is good enough.
Oh come on, don't try to make it sound as if I'm trying to silence anyone. You can't apply this specific debate over a specific scientific topic to the whole board and every topic discussed. Talk about a logical fallacy!
Well, you could apply it as every topic has some kind of empirical data involved, in one way or another.
You're misrepresenting my stance with a slippery slope logical fallacy: just because I demand real evidence of a ghost doesn't mean I demand real evidence of what everyone ate for dinner last night! "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." Evidence must be proportionate to the claim. And, no, not every topic has some kind of empirical data involved. Opinions are not science, and there are things that lie outside the realm of science -- for example, the Intelligent Design proponents' argument that if god could design the universe to look anyway he wanted, then he could have designed it to look as if it evolved over billions of years. This is an untestable claim, and therefore lies outside the realm of science.
In any case, it would be silly to go into the go into the Dinner thread and demand proof that Iguana ate pie for dessert last night. But it is really fucking (for emphasis, not because I'm angry or anything) reasonable to demand evidence if someone claims a new medical treatment, or an experience that would completely change our understanding of the nature of reality, like seeing a ghost.
And that's the point I'm trying to make, that while there is certainly a potential for flawed data, empirical observations are sometimes all we have to rely upon and perfectly fine to consider regarding non-scientific pursuits.
You are using the word empirical wrong. Unscientific observations are not empirical data.
For example, somebody talks about seeing a small animal swimming in a pond and when it gets out it turns out to be a cat! In your experience, it might be that all you've ever known is for cats to be afraid of water. Do you believe them? Did they hallucinate and really see a racoon or other animal instead? You then later find that there's this whole indoctrination process, whereby cats are introduced to water and become accustomed to it. Pretty cool, by the way.
Again, evidence must be proportionate to the claim. A cat in a pool is not an extraordinary claim, it does not require as much evidence as the claim that there is a ghost.
Anyway, if there's one thing that can definitely said about ghostly encounters is that there are plenty of reported hauntings that have been disproven, but also many cases of observations that can't be proven or disproven. We simply don't know.
Really? I think it's your turn to provide some evidence, because I've never heard a ghost story that could not be explained naturally.
I will concede after giving the subject more careful consideration that it's very possible my experience regarding my grandfather's "spirit" was a subliminal hallucination, and that the scent I detected was my subconscious mind fooling me (and my wording to my friend may have planted the suggestion for him to agree). No doubt many people have such experiences.

Thanks for the link to "How We Know What Isn't So". I've added it to my future book list.
It's a good one! I'd also highly recommend Richard Weisman's (yes, the guy in the video) Quirkology.
 
This is much more enjoyable than watching The Expendables 2.

:) Carry on!

Note to self: All arguments are useless. :lol:

Meh, too much arguing and not enough ghost stories. It's like tuning in for the A Ghost Story For Xmas strand on TV, and discovering it's been replaced by Question Time after two episodes.

I wonder if they'll do a sequel about UFOs?
 
To be fair, I think I shared more ghost stories than anyone else in this thread, and the discussion has never gotten off topic. If you don't like the debate, don't join in, and post a ghost story instead. Clearly there are otter people who find the discussion of why we have ghost encounters interesting.
 
To be fair, I think I shared more ghost stories than anyone else in this thread, and the discussion has never gotten off topic. If you don't like the debate, don't join in, and post a ghost story instead. Clearly there are otter people who find the discussion of why we have ghost encounters interesting.

Sadly, I've never seen a ghost.
 
I'm really enjoying the thread for the most part. I must admit I'm open minded about these kind of things and always have been, but I love the science applied to these stories and if we can postulate logical reasons why some things happen then I don't see a thing wrong with it.

Ghost stories can be very creepy and fun and be rationally analyzed. Far too many people don't think you can have it both ways with "paranormal" tales, but you can. Sometimes the best chills and thrills are from stories you can actually somewhat explain. The truth can often be creepier and weirder than guesswork and conjecture.
 
You are still claiming I am wrong though, with neither sufficient evidence to back your claim, nor an attempt to counter my evidence, nor enough knowledge on the subject to make that claim. This is what is intellectually dishonest.
You are saying that all reports of ghosts or what appear to be spiritual manifestations are completely false. I'm agreeing that plenty of them are, but that there are also reports which can't offer up a scientific explanation. Which leaves the possibility for something beyond what traditional science can explain. You then stand on the premise that everything we observe is subject to being illusions or hallucinations, but then when I cite an example of an unbelievable observation, you then fall back on a different tactic. Of course this is a topic (ghostly manifestations) that does not have scientific evidence to support it, yet, just because there are scientific studies that have disproved several "paranormal" reports or shown that the human mind is capable of being fooled (illusion) or deceiving itself (hallucination), you then declare all observations not backed by hard scientific evidence flawed and therefore wrong.

But anyway, it really doesn't matter what I say. You're convinced I'm intellectually dishonest so there's no point in continuing this any further.
 
I enjoyed the video on the amazing colour changing card trick. That was very amusing.

Did you notice the gorilla? :)
You are still claiming I am wrong though, with neither sufficient evidence to back your claim, nor an attempt to counter my evidence, nor enough knowledge on the subject to make that claim. This is what is intellectually dishonest.
You are saying that all reports of ghosts or what appear to be spiritual manifestations are completely false. I'm agreeing that plenty of them are, but that there are also reports which can't offer up a scientific explanation.
Where are these reports, though? You haven't given any evidence to make your case.
Which leaves the possibility for something beyond what traditional science can explain. You then stand on the premise that everything we observe is subject to being illusions or hallucinations, but then when I cite an example of an unbelievable observation, you then fall back on a different tactic.
Where did I do that? I've maintained only one position throughout: that all seemingly supernatural experiences can be explained with natural phenomena. Everything I have said was in support of that statement. Where are these tactics I have supposedly employed? Where have I shifted gears once?
Of course this is a topic (ghostly manifestations) that does not have scientific evidence to support it, yet, just because there are scientific studies that have disproved several "paranormal" reports or shown that the human mind is capable of being fooled (illusion) or deceiving itself (hallucination), you then declare all observations not backed by hard scientific evidence flawed and therefore wrong.
You are putting words in my mouth. I never said that all observations not backed by scientific evidence are wrong. They are flawed, yes, but not necessarily wrong. Nor did I say that all "paranormal" experiences are results of hallucination or other brain-based phenomena. I don't know why you think I think this.
But anyway, it really doesn't matter what I say. You're convinced I'm intellectually dishonest so there's no point in continuing this any further.
Are you taking that as an insult? It is not meant to be. Intellectual dishonesty is a type of logical fallacy that everyone falls victim to, just like the others I mentioned. I don't think your a liar or anything, it is a term used to point out where reasoning is flawed, nothing more. There have been a couple instances in this thread where you have displayed intellectual dishonesty, and I pointed them out, this is not a value judgement on you...all it shows is that you are a human prone to the same thinking mistakes to which we are all prone.
 
^:lol: I know! It's hysterical!

ETA: This is another of my favorites of his videos:

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7jpJ12lBjg&feature=plcp[/yt]
 
I'm really enjoying the thread for the most part. I must admit I'm open minded about these kind of things and always have been, but I love the science applied to these stories and if we can postulate logical reasons why some things happen then I don't see a thing wrong with it.

Ghost stories can be very creepy and fun and be rationally analyzed. Far too many people don't think you can have it both ways with "paranormal" tales, but you can. Sometimes the best chills and thrills are from stories you can actually somewhat explain. The truth can often be creepier and weirder than guesswork and conjecture.

Agreed on all counts!
 
^:lol: I know! It's hysterical!

ETA: This is another of my favorites of his videos:

Eeee.. That's the sort of thing that would make me worry that I had something wrong with my retina if I'd left the sound off... (Which actually suggests it's purely physiological, an effect of the architecture of the eye, rather than psychological, but it's fun anyway)
 
^:lol: It's totally freaky, right?! But the physiological and the psychological are not two distinct entities, the latter is created by the former. To attempt to separate the two is folly, and it is the very folly that causes a lot of "supernatural" experiences.
 
My understanding is that post-sensory processing in the brain is responsible for that sort of illusion, at least according to the most widely accepted theories. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_spot_(vision):

A blind spot, scotoma, is an obscuration of the visual field. A particular blind spot known as the blindspot, or physiological blind spot, or punctum caecum in medical literature, is the place in the visual field that corresponds to the lack of light-detecting photoreceptor cells on the optic disc of the retina where the optic nerve passes through it.[1] Since there are no cells to detect light on the optic disc, a part of the field of vision is not perceived. The brain interpolates the blind spot based on surrounding detail and information from the other eye, so the blind spot is not normally perceived.
 
^Precisely! The orange background that your brain is filling in in that illusion is proof that what we see is the brain's imperfect construction of reality! (Or at the very least, very good evidence. :) )
 
^You must do exactly as he says in the video, and it might take a few attempts to find the spot...move slowly back and forth from your screen. Believe me, it's worth it when you see it!
 
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