Alright, I agree and disagree with your post in general. Radio waves were theorized first then a working experiment was developed and presto change o radio waves are real. Now how did they do it? Surely they would of had to rework the scientific method because the scientific method is only limited to our five sense and has nothing about things we can not see or feel?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method
refreshed myself on what it is... I'm still right.
Right, but my point was there could be things as basic as the electromagnetic spectrum that we have not yet discovered, and is important to reality as we know it. One such thing would be what Rupert Sheldrake called the Morphic Field. This is also akin to what Carl Jung called the collective unconscious. Sheldrake showed in one test that the London Times crossword puzzle was easier to do later in the day than in the morning. So he had them make up a new puzzle that was not published. He found that the more people did the puzzle, the easier it got for people after them, as if the knowledge of the answers were available to the people who had done the puzzle later in the day.
We don't yet understand consciousness, so how do we know that it can't "pool" together and be accessed from time to time. Like the idea that some ghost phenomenon is a "recording" playing back, while others can be interacted with. Thoughts are energy. Perhaps this energy can linger on independent of the source that created them. That would explain a lot of what people experience.
The problem with ideas like this, even if you can statistically show a pattern, they are considered unfalsifiable by some, and therefore can't be tested in the usual manner.
I've always been highly interested in science, and had I not become a working musician, would have gone in that path. However I'm often appalled by the way some scientist treat new ideas. It clearly gets into an area of ego more than anything else.
A lot of paranormal stuff is very transient. We can capture images of UFOs and ghost, or we can all have our own personal experiences with various paranormal events, so many of us know this stuff is real, but it eludes being tested in a scientific manner. That doesn't mean it's not real however, just that it can't be tested in the usual manner. So which is at fault, the data or the test? Scientist will invariably say the data, and I feel that's incorrect. Also these scientist that wont accept that people see UFOs, haven't seen any themselves. When they do, they change their view, such as happened with Jacque Vallee.
If you ignore the real world functions of Quantum mechanics. Also Quantum mechanic is heavily reliant on mathematical formations
Yes it is, and it's a lot of the same math that also underlies general physics. But at the present time, math is all we have for some of it. But math also predicted things like radio waves, etc. And that discovery was inspired by observations of light.
Last thing about Quantum mechanics, is I'm a laymen at it, all I know is it's really weird really deep with the numbers and the crunching of the numbers I feel this is no excuse for paranormalists to grab it as THE answer to everything they talk about.
I listen to the Astronomy Cast podcast, and I'm always amused when Dr. Pamela Gay calls a lot of the math "ugly". She points out that you can often get anything to work if the math gets convoluted enough!
But we get to a point where we can no longer test for things... or even see them. It's almost as if we aren't allowed to see how things work.
We don't have an answer for paranormal events. But it doesn't hurt trying to think of answers. We may never have an answer either. And the events will continue to occur. Just as we don't know why there is a universe and all, and it continues on in our ignorance.
I like a lot of the conjecture by some quantum physicists that consciousness might be the basis of reality. Like the old saying, I think, therefore I am.
rerailing this thread to the orignal topic, I'm still amused that the guest would like you declairs this is above the scienfitic method then he talks about photographic evidence of 'ghosts' and how he heard a stage cart ride past him and he's son. Yet he can't devise a test to prove his hypothese?
I'm not saying it's above scientific method, just that if you don't understand something, you can't test for it. You have to come up with a theory first, and then test for
that. That's how it's done. Where are the theories? Some of it is likely beyond our current understanding of things. You have to admit there are things we don't yet understand. Any scientist of any discipline will tell you this.
Some examples:
13 Things We Don't Understand
Ten things we don't understand about humans
So, how do you test for these things? What's the theory behind something like ghosts? Let's say they are "spirits". How do you define a spirit, and how do you test for it? What if they are some kind of time anomaly that plays back an event. How do you test for that? What if they are something that effects only our consciousness, like they are an idea or a concept. How do you test for that? First you have to try and figure out what they are.
See the problem? We are possibly dealing with things that don't fit into our present knowledge of reality, but nonetheless keep happening to people. Observations are being made, and sometimes tangible evidence is obtained (photos, EVP, instrument readings). But still, no one has devised a test for such things. The phenomenon persists though, so a lack of tests doesn't prove it doesn't exist. I had an experience with about 6 other people 30 some years ago where we all saw the shadow of a person, and things were being thrown across the room. It was in a basement and the only unlocked entrance was behind us. We didn't have direct line of sight, but we saw a shadow cast on the wall by a light bulb. And what had happened was a woman died in an apartment in the house a week earlier, and something had removed stuff piled up on a steamer trunk that belonged to her!
We all saw this, and physical things moved. But there was no one there. Now if we had a camera, we could have captured an image of the shadow, and even video of stuff being thrown. So the six of us know this happened... but what was the underlying cause behind it?
But I'm with you... lets get some good minds on this subject and do some testing...
Keep in mind that these people (the Enos) aren't scientist, and it would be great to have some scientist testing for this stuff. But who's going to do it? As I pointed out in an earlier post, there has been serious scientific study into paranormal topics, and as god as the science and testing is, and with positive results, other scientist will attack them. Even if they can't find any errors in the testing or data. It comes back to egos... they don't believe it, so it can't be true. It happened with the Duke University program, and with Rupert Sheldrake too.
I'm sure tests could be formulated to test these things... it's already shown that during ghost sightings that instruments can show some change in the environment.
Lastly, what if we are dealing with something so strange that we have yet to have even thought of the idea. If there is no inclination to study such things, who's going to even stop to put serious thought into it? On the show, David often states that he feels we are dealing with something we probably can't comprehend. We are still trying to figure out the fabric of reality... and we find really weird things that make us scratch our heads.
Then we have stuff like consciousness. Brain scientist don't know what's going on yet. If we are going to talk macro, why are we even here? Sure, it's a philosophical question, but it's a valid question, and you can't answer it or test it in a lab.
So we have to be open minded enough to accept that we don't know many things, and we need to keep looking. You can't sweep people's experiences under a rug because science can't tell you why they happen. But scientist don't always want to say "We don't know", and instead will say the data was at fault... the people were mistaken, or hallucinating, or lying. That's not science either. That's egotism.