alexa. wrote:devnulljp wrote:Ignorance and (cognitive) error explain most apparently paranormal phenomena, and do so much better than magic.
The rest comes down to outright fraud.
Yeah, cuz it's really hard to admit that there is 1% (i just popped a number) of things that may be legit but just have no explanation to them yet?
The key word there is
may be legit. But to date
every single case of people feeding themselves by looking at the sun, poltergeists, psychics, telekinesis, dowsing, homeopathy, chi energy, ancient aliens, or any other deepakchoprawoo you care to name that has ever been studied properly has turned out to be bogus. Not 99%, not 99.9%, not leaving room for your I-just-pulled-it-out-my-ass figure of 1%, but all of them.
Having an open mind is show me, and I'll believe it. Not I'll believe any old bullshit (except that it's bogus).
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
What evidence there is for any of this stuff is sketchy at best.
People are easily fooled -- by ourselves, by others, by nothing at all -- our minds are fallible, our psychology is such that we seek patterns, we seek agency, we have confirmation bias, confabulation, all sorts of (incidentally quite well characterised) things going on in our brains.
You might not like scepticism, but I bet you do it when you buy something online or go buy a car of Craigslist -- I just apply it to things that are important too

I enjoyed your bird analogy BTW. The key is to not stop at 'it's a bird' -- then you go find out what
is a bird, you find out it's a fucking dinosaur that learned to fly and that's awesome; that its bones are hollow but strutted so they're light and strong; you find out about how they develop in the egg; that the genes that control their development are the same as ours; and fish; and flies; and elephants; and probably T. rex; and that's cool. You find out how they fly, and where feathers came from, and how they can find their way around, and what determines their sex, and that it's different from us; and flies; and mice; and elephants; and the inverse of ants; and bees; and you find out how their cells work, how their behaviour is determined, how they learn, how their cognition can be bypassed by simple hardwired rules; and you wonder how much of ours is too.
'it's a bird' only tells you about what people choose to call this wonderful thing, and nothing at all about the wonderful thing itself. You'll also notice that calling it a 'tranformative hierophany of integrated perception' also tells you nothing whatsoever about the bird, only about what people (or a person) has chosen to call it.