Are you asking in general what would be a compelling piece of evidence, or are you asking us to nominate a known piece of evidence from a particular incident?What is the single most compelling piece of evidence for any supernatural happening or Fortean occurrences you know of?
Personal experience. It's not transferable.
Personal experience is mostly witnessed by chance. Transferring a chance experience to others will always remain questionable because seeing is believing in what you see, and you can't expect others to take your experiences as proof of anything.Personal experience. It's not transferable.
I have seen and heard things - briefly. But they were convincing to me regarding my religion. I wouldn't attempt to convince others for the reason Sid gives. I have met others with similar experiences, though.No matter the religion, if one is religious they are believing in something unseen.
Since I believe in the paranormal, it is comparatively the same idea without physical proof needed.
Mine is the piece of paper on which was written (instructed by the medium) the 3 initials of her name, the initial of her home town, and the date and age of death , of my wife nearly 12 months before I met her.What is the single most compelling piece of evidence for any supernatural happening or Fortean occurrences you know of?
Sadly no- died on the date given to me.PeteS, I hope your wife is still with us.
Fully agree with that myself!Personal experience. It's not transferable.
I remember one guy that used the dowsing rods to show the audience the ley's at Stonehenge when I was visiting that site some years ago. They seemed to work well for him (a guide/talker at Stonehenge).Something which confuses me is dowsing. I mean on-site dowsing, not remote dowsing. Many tests have been made that show that under trial conditions it doesn't work, and yet it is still widely accepted as a perfectly rational thing in rural areas and even some companies make use of professional dowsers.
In fact I live next door to one. His other skill is as a steeplejack. He is entirely fearless of heights. Which, TBH, is pretty much opposite to me.
My neighbour uses the traditional forked willow wand and grows willows to ensure the supply. Hazel apparently also works.I remember one guy that used the dowsing rods to show the audience the ley's at Stonehenge when I was visiting that site some years ago. They seemed to work well for him (a guide/talker at Stonehenge).
Of course, putting my sensible head back on, I shouldn't believe it for an instance.
A really complicated story, so this is the quick version.
I would see the word “seek” constantly in the strangest places like for example, inside a Chinese fortune cookie.
Out of curiosity I googled “ seek “ and it is the word in the exact middle of the Hebrew Torah ( the five Books of Moses ) which is ( darosh or darash ).
The meaning of all of this is God telling you to seek your destiny.
I classified this as being on the level of supernatural because of the number of times I came across this word in a few days.
Hmmm. A pleasing circularity:I remember one guy that used the dowsing rods to show the audience the ley's at Stonehenge when I was visiting that site some years ago. They seemed to work well for him (a guide/talker at Stonehenge).
Other people can convince me of things.
Hmmm. A pleasing circularity:
How do you know the dowsing works?
Because I successfully used it to find the leys.
I can't see any leys. How do you know they exist?
Because of the dowsing...