Debunking Pseudo-Skeptical Arguments Of Paranormal Debunkers
Section I: General arguments against the paranormal
Argument # 1: “It is irrational to believe in anything that
hasn't been proven.”
This
is the main philosophy behind most skeptical arguments. As Dr. Melvin Morse,
“The
notion that 'It is rational to only believe what's been proven' somehow got
twisted into ‘It is irrational to believe in anything that hasn't been
proven’.” (Interview from video: Conversations with God)
By
"proven" skeptics mean proven according to the scientific method,
which they consider to be the only reliable method. There are several problems with this
argument:
1) First of all, just because something hasn't been proven and
established in mainstream science doesn't mean it doesn't exist or isn't
true. If it did, then nothing would
exist until proven or discovered.
Bacteria and germs would never have caused illnesses until they were
proven and discovered, smoking would not cause cancer until it was proven, the
planet Pluto would not have existed until it was discovered, etc. Anyone knows that this simply is not so. For instance, when Acupuncture was first
introduced in the West, skeptics and certain scientists claimed that it had no
basis and only worked due to the placebo effect because they couldn’t
understand how it worked. This reflected
the typical false thinking of skeptics that anything they don’t understand must
be due to superstition or chance.
However, practitioners and believers knew otherwise and were later
validated by extensive studies have been done to show that it indeed does work
for treating various ailments and getting results which placebos can’t account
for. An extensive listing of these
research studies can be found on the Med lab website. In fact, the AMA (American Medical
Association) has already declared that Acupuncture works and is an effective
treatment, proving the skeptics wrong.
The point is that Acupuncture worked before
it was proven to work, not after.
Skeptics assume that everything that exists must be able to be analyzed
in a lab. That’s just not how reality
works.
2) Second, just because something hasn't been proven to established
science doesn't mean that it hasn't been proved firsthand to certain
people. Established views are not the
dictum of all reality. Many types of
paranormal phenomena have been proved firsthand to eyewitnesses and experiencers. For
example, even though the cases of NDE’s don't prove
the existence of an afterlife (at least not yet), those who have experienced
them claim that the experience of the separation of body and spirit is
firsthand proof to them of an afterlife, just as riding in a car is firsthand
proof that cars exist, and they fear death no more. Those who have OBE’s
(Out of Body Experiences) also make similar claims, and they need no proof nor
do they need to convince anyone. These
claims are further supported by the fact that in many documented cases the
subject could hear conversations or see things in other rooms and other places,
which are later confirmed and verified to be remarkably accurate. Who's to say that they're wrong just because
we haven't had the same experiences?
That would be equivalent to saying that because I’ve never been to
3) Third, many research experiments and studies conducted under the
scientific method HAVE passed with positive results. For example, experiments in micro-psychokinesis done by Dr. Robert Jahn
and Brenda Dunn at the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research labs (PEAR)
using random generator machines to measure subjects’ PK influence on them,
obtained positive consistent results for over 20 years. These were done under proper controls and
scientific procedures, even according to prominent skeptic Ray Hyman, who
investigated the Prince experiments in person and conceded that he could find
no flaws in the methodology. The small
but consistent results achieved by PEAR over 20 years are calculated by chance
alone to be 1 in 1035. Likewise, the Ganzfeld experiments in telepathy done in the early 70’s
also had repeated success, with receivers in 42 controlled experiments scoring
an average of 38 to 45 percent compared to the chance rate of 25 percent. (See
Argument # 17) The odds of that occurring by chance are less than one in a
billion. More recently, controlled
experiments involving four prominent mediums accuracy were done by Dr. Gary
Schwartz of the Human Energy Lab of the
4) Fourth, just because something is irrational to skeptics doesn't
mean that it is irrational to others who know or believe that it is real. Skeptics and scientific materialists do not
have the monopoly on rational thinking.
Lots of rational intelligent intellectual people believe in God,
spiritual dimensions, or that there is more to reality than the material world. The skeptics' system of rational thinking is
not the dictatum by which all things that exist must
conform to. This can easily be
demonstrated by all the things that skeptics have been wrong about before, such
as flight, laws of physics, quantum mechanics, giant squid, etc. proving their
fallibility.
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