Bobby. wrote on Jun 17
th, 2018 at 4:01pm:
But PZ547,
what about people who are affected without their knowledge from hallucinogenic substances?
Stale rye bread can contain ergot fungus which has the same effect as LSD.
http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/lsd/lsd.htm Sure Bobby. That's true. People hallucinate due to a variety of reasons. There are people
seek to hallucinate in order to experience the paranormal and to that end, they ingest hallucinogenic substances or engage in various practices. Some do because they're curious. Others do it to explore what lies behind the curtain of their everyday consciousness. Lots of reasons
I'm gathering that the professor in the OP carefully ensures his subjects are not under the influence of anything, otherwise he'd be wasting his time. No doubt those who've used LSD and other mind-altering drugs in the past would be excluded from his research because LSD can, apparently, produce 'flashbacks' even years later
So my post concerned those who were 'clean' of drug use, psychiatric conditions, etc. In other words, 'ordinary' people who experienced the extraordinary, spontaneously. And such people do exist and are sufficient in number (and always were, throughout time) to warrant science's interest and study
There will never be consensus, not in our lifetimes and perhaps not for a thousand more years, if ever. Interestingly however, the church presumes to validate certain paranormal experiences and congregations accept those
Most people pass through their life with few if any paranormal experiences. Some people experience one or two. And some experience a number of paranormal events. That's what science is attempting to unravel. What is responsible? Location? The individual acting as a type of magnet to such experiences? Various stressors? Genetics? Multidimensional randoms having fun?
We humans see, hear and experience a minute slice of the spectrum. It's all most of us know, so we believe our minute slice is all there is. It shakes us to the core to discover that life as we know it is in fact just a tiny broom cupboard within a mansion covering hundreds of acres. We feel secure in our broom cupboard, which is difficult enough for us to handle. Most do not want to explore the rest of that massive mansion, so we deny its existence and we gang together against those who've wandered (or been pulled) into some of those other rooms. When they tell us what they've experienced beyond the broom cupboard, we tell them they imagined it, or invented it. We say they were dreaming or hallucinating, etc
Human life is short. People's paranormal experiences (if they even relete them to others) are forgotten in a few decades. New generations hear of people's experiences and they too are dismissed and forgotten swiftly. It's been that way all through time: people describing the same or very similar experiences, most of them to suffer dismissal, ridicule and accusations of mental illness, hallucination, dreams, imagination, attention seeking, etc. Some experiences of the past make it from one era to the next because they're enshrined in myths and legends, books, etc. And people are fine with those ancient accounts, because they're in the past and can be dismissed as fable --ancient history which has lost its immediacy and most of all, cannot reach out and touch us in the here and now. We're told such ancient accounts need not be believed and are simply the way ignorant people of the past understood and described such experiences
There are people in the here and now who have experienced the same things, quite a few people, actually. Those experiences happened
to them. The experiences were unsolicited and came out of the blue, just as they did to people one or more thousand years ago. No one need believe them and most choose not to. And those who've had the experiences thrust upon them are usually left in no doubt that they'd better keep quiet about it or suffer loss of reputation and career, friends, even family members. So for the most part, they shut up and spend the rest of their lives trying to gain more information about such experiences. But they do it on the quiet. Or they confide their experience/s anonymously
Confusing the issue of course are all those who claim to have experiences which never happened. They do so for attention, most often, or to elevate their own importance. Some of them exaggerate a slightly unusual event and in time come to believe their own BS. Others relate an experience which resulted from drugs, fever or brain damage, alcohol poisoning, etc. Add to those all the individuals who wish to believe they're psychic and will find the anomalous in a piece of toast
Nevertheless, disturbing or interesting and perplexing paranormal experiences of the genuine variety do occur. But those who've experienced such events usually succumb to defeat and dismissal in face of majority scepticism and ridicule. People would rather place their faith in charlatans and tv psychic shows, gurus and religious claims