Are space aliens purportedly empirical entities? — John
But who's really doing the ignoring here? I already explained, against this very kind of point, that the mistake you guys are making lies in thinking that spiritual realities must be either the same as empirical realities or else not realities at all, but instead the same kind of thing as you would conceive dreams and fantasies to be, as the Lochness and Bigfoot examples attest.
What precludes that there might be a plurality of spiritual beings, or that the reality of those beings might be linked to the different spirits of different cultures? Your thinking is still of the "it must be either this or that" variety. This means you are not open to spiritual experience at all, and so could have no grounds for any opinion about its power to convince and even radically transform lives in ways that merely empirical experiences never can. — John
If God can be experienced, isn't God empirical by definition? — Sapientia
I haven't said that "we have sufficient reason to reject the claim that an experience could cause one to know that God exists. — Brainglitch
Rather, I have offered an alternative explanation for the experience, in which people's brains are producing the experience and casting it with beings they already believe in.
We have, as I argued in some detail a post or two ago, much reason to be highly skeptical of such claims. — Brainglitch
If God can be experienced, isn't God empirical by definition? — Sapientia
And personal, first-hand experience is the epistemic gold standard--"I KNOW what I experienced." — Brainglitch
Only problem is that there is much reason to be skeptical about certain kinds of beliefs, even if they are based on personal, first-hand experience. — Brainglitch
So there is an element of the 'transformative vision': seeing things in a new light, or suddenly understanding life in a different way. — Wayfarer
I don't agree, I think we ask others to corroborate, and this is the epistemic gold standard. I realize that in common experience there is a tendency to claim that I know it because I experienced it, but I think that this is hasty sloppiness in relation to true epistemic principles. Justification requires that the correctness of the belief be demonstrated, and justification is essential to knowledge under most epistemologies. This is the power of communication. If we can describe our experiences in a way which makes sense to others, we can justify our beliefs concerning these experiences. If others are unaccepting, there is no justification for those beliefs. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think that anyone here doubts that Colin had an experience which made him believe that God exists. — Metaphysician Undercover
Splendid question. However in the realms of 'experience of the numinous', one often encounters paradoxes; by its very nature, that kind of experience is - what's the word? - ecstatic. And 'ecstatic' means 'outside of stasis', stasis being the ordinary state. — Wayfarer
This is characteristic of certain kinds of mystical experiences. Mystical traditions also often figure individuals who fall into trance states, something which is more characteristic of Eastern religions, but is still found in the contemplative aspects of Western religions. Arguably, such practices were derived from shamanism, rather than from deity-worship. — Wayfarer
In any case, lots of this discussion about 'what Colin experienced' don't necessarily take into account that a spiritual epiphany might actually consist of seeing the whole world in a new light. There are plenty of examples of that from the romantic poets. And in the reports on these 'encounters with the Sacred', it might appear as a figure, form, image, or nothing at all; German protestant mystic Jacob Boehme's vision was triggered by the glimpse of sunlight reflecting off a pewter dish. So there is an element of the 'transformative vision': seeing things in a new light, or suddenly understanding life in a different way. Accounts of these can be found in the literature of religious conversions. — Wayfarer
But dismissing all such accounts as being in the same class as encounters with mythical creatures, seeing fairies in the bottom of the garden, doesn't do justice to the amount of literature that is out there on these subjects. — Wayfarer
If God can be experienced it would not be like experiencing any empirical object, which may be reliably available as a public object. It would be more like experiencing love or beauty. God may appear to you in some form, but the form could never be the exhaustive identity of God. — John
What I don't understand is why anyone wouldn't think that it's simply their brain "behaving" differently.
Again, I can't imagine anything like that where I wouldn't simply assume that something unusual (even if maybe very pleasant) is going on with my brain. — Terrapin Station
You're obviously not going to get it; but most likely that's what you want anyway, so that's OK. Better not to fret over it. — John
What I meant, though, and should have said, is that as far as most people are converned, their own personal experience is the gold standard--"Seeing is believing." It is notoriously difficult, to the point of impossible, to change some people's minds about certain beliefs, particularly of the kind that are not repeatable, even if others who witnessed the incident contradict the belief. Disoutes about remembered events are a common example. — Brainglitch
Contrarily, it might not in fact be a supernatural experience at all, nor an experience of God, but rather a phenomenon that can be better explained naturally, and as mistakenly attributed or misinterpreted. — Sapientia
What I don't understand is why anyone wouldn't think that it's simply their brain "behaving" differently. — TerrapinStation
The conversation has the implication of 'you're trying to convert me'. I'm not, although I am beginning to realise that because I was always open to the possibility of the reality of spiritual experiences, that actually is what is meant by 'belief'. My view was always that understanding the nature of spiritual experiences was more philosophically mature than simply believing what you're told, but I'm starting to see that an element of belief, or at least openness, is required to even investigate the issue. — Wayfarer
In any case, the last thing I will say to you is that religious revelation and spiritual insights are fundamental to all the world's cultures, and to believe they're all delusional is like the mother of all conspiracy theories. — Wayfarer
there is no logical relationship to what is considered to be fundamental and what is true, such that the former entails the latter. — Sapientia
One can have an element of openness — Sapientia
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