Lydiaa wrote:
I’m aware that this is the truth, thus I admit to the leap in logic in the form of religion. So technically I do agree with you, we need more research in this area. However take at look the double blind study they did on cold reading, this confirmed that it indeed exist pertaining to that specific part of the brain (Case study in the second link). How those works to gather information is still unknown but it’s a work in progress.
I can barely understand what you're saying here, but I did read the second link, and the case studies there don't change anything.
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This part, I don’t agree with necessarily. Lets talk about another feeling which is similar, love. Most people have a part of the brain pertaining to it, it can not technically be measured, and there’s genetic defects which limit or increase your ability to feel it. I guess it’s more a philosophical question, but how could you say that the actual existence of each belief (feeling of love) held by any given individual is (not) necessarily equally valid. What backing do you have of such a statement?
I don't need any backing for it. They're not necessarily equally valid. You would need to show that they ARE necessarily equally valid; that's how Burden of Proof works. You've just assumed in your example that any given person's experience must come from their god, and that all gods must exist or that none do. In fact, it could just as easily be that any given god allows people of other beliefs to still have spiritual experience for reasons we're unaware of. You're making huge assumptions about supernatural beings that we have no way of directly observing; beings whose existence and behavior would be beyond the measurement of science since they could be observed only to the degree they wished.
Love is not necessarily a valid analogy either. Just because it is also universal does not mean it functions in the same way. The need to breathe, eat, sleep, drink, and take a leak are all universal as well but do not necessarily work the same way.
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It’s was easier to use the example of a computer I guess as the brain is similar in concept. Actually we do know that many of these “experiences occur during periods of rapid eye movements (dreaming), when cerebral processing shifts toward limbic sources and memory consolidation”. We also know he used a questionnaire used to determine previous experiences and the possibility of experiencing specific types of epilepsy, and many who score high on the test, were also more likely to feel these experiences.
Before you claimed that this experiment identified some "program" that gives you supernatural experiences. Look at what you typed; "many" occur during REM sleep and they are "more likely" in epileptic people. But all this experiement does is identify that some things cause them some of the time. There is no discreet "program" for this in the brain; to the degree that the brain is "programed" it is by all our experiences and is changing all the time. A questionairre really can't go very far in determining that.
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So no, we can’t prove what each person’s past was, but we could easily make a correlation between the two. You are also correct in saying that there are deviations, this is biology, there always is. However by using a 95% confidence interval, we could at least conclude that no other single deviant is great enough to have caused considerable consideration to be included in the conclusion.
It's not even remotely clear what you're talking about here.
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We could in this case say that there is at least 1 specific, uniform input (the electromagnetic field) which creates these sensations. As the output is consistent with the hypothesis and no other extra discrepancies are noted at the confidence interval, we could at least safely conclude that there is universal input and output. The god thing was philosophical as technically you can’t prove or disprove, however from the above it would either have to be uniform, or would cause a discrepancy high enough to be noted. I guess I could consider the possibility that religious people was a very small sample in the test subjects (less then 5%), but seeing that he quotes studies spanning 20 years, the chances of that are again low, but not impossible.
We can't even say that there is one uniform specific input that creates these things. All we can say is that there is one input that
sometimes creates these experiences. We cannot conclude that there is any universal input that creates these experiences at all, nor can we say that God needs to either create a discrepancy or be uniform. You can't even try to start applying confidence intervals in the way you're talking about because all he's got is the ability to A) create experiences int he lab and B) show that they also can occur outside the lab if similar electromagnetic conditions exist. It in no way excludes other causes.
[/quote]Unfortunately I don’t believe there will EVER be a way for science to measure a being that does not exist, as you can not prove a negative, let it be Greek mythology, Christian, or Wiccan. We can however measure other super natural phenomenon such as premonitions, psychics, feeling of presence etc, and explain others physical anomalies like visions, voices, feeling of warmth etc.[/quote]
No, of course there will never be a way for science to measure whether God exists. However, it's patently obvious from your above comment that you're starting from the idea that God doesn't exist and trying to force this experiement to support that so that you can lecture people for hoe silly they are for adhereing to organized religion.
As for the other things you're measuring, those aren't supernatural phenomenon. Sound, warmth, visions etc. are natural phenomenon that may or may not have a supernatural cause or origin.
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Many religion uses these feelings or super natural phenomenon as proof of existence of their god, they have been using it more and more as a propaganda tool. (I’m looking at those new religions who chant themselves into a frenzy in order to ‘feel’ god.) So while we can’t invalidate god the entity, we can certainly take steps to scientifically explain the tools used by many religion as a measure of control over their ‘flock’.
I don't see how you use a person's feelings as "propaganda", nor do I see how chanting yourself into a frenzy in any way simulates the conditions described in the experiment. Indeed, those feelings appearing under such conditions would dispel any idea of a "constant" input simulated in the experiment. You're just falling into the typical anti-religious bigotry of assuming "religion" is trying to "control its flock" and looking to this experiment to reinforce your position.
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Anyways, I’m digressing, my disagreement with organised religion is another rant for another time =P Back to work for me
Yes yes, we've heard your pompous lectures on how silly organized religion is before.