Aether Blue
Devoted Cultist
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2020
- Messages
- 206
Whenever people debate psychic phenomena, I usually start to think about how one might design an experiment that distinguishes between the two following scenarios:
A) A physical phenomenon actually occurs, but only if everyone perceiving it believes that it can happen.
B) A psychosocial phenomenon occurs, whereby a group of believers convince themselves, and one another, that a certain physical phenomenon occurs when in fact it does not.
It seems to me that most skeptics approach these situations with the assumption that only scenario B) ever occurs, or indeed is possible. When trying to understand the baseline functioning of the universe, in the absence of human intervention, this assumption is generally reasonable and appropriate.
However, when investigating phenomena where human mental faculties are alleged to directly affect the world, then this assumption may not be valid. How one can investigate a phenomenon without "damping it out" through excess doubt becomes an interesting problem.
Maybe detailed surveillance via electronic means?
A) A physical phenomenon actually occurs, but only if everyone perceiving it believes that it can happen.
B) A psychosocial phenomenon occurs, whereby a group of believers convince themselves, and one another, that a certain physical phenomenon occurs when in fact it does not.
It seems to me that most skeptics approach these situations with the assumption that only scenario B) ever occurs, or indeed is possible. When trying to understand the baseline functioning of the universe, in the absence of human intervention, this assumption is generally reasonable and appropriate.
However, when investigating phenomena where human mental faculties are alleged to directly affect the world, then this assumption may not be valid. How one can investigate a phenomenon without "damping it out" through excess doubt becomes an interesting problem.
Maybe detailed surveillance via electronic means?