Rob_Roy
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Re: Why Dead Loved Ones Don't Contact Us
Reply #27 - Nov 19th, 2005 at 6:40pm
Blink wrote:
" I disagree. We need absolute proof. Without proof it means the most probable explanation is that there is no afterlife. "
Why does proof have to be absolute? Think about this for a moment. Do we, individually, have absolute proof that humans have landed and walked on the moon? I know I don't. I wasn't there to see it and I possess none of the physical evidence. I haven't even seen those moon rocks, let alone had and tested them. Yet is it not reasonable to believe that this did occur and is not a Hollywierd production? We know that if we challenged the landings, proof would be forthcoming,. Otherwise we believe they occured largely because of our faith in the US Government, NASA, the scientists involved, the news media, et al. Yet this faith is hardly absolute proof to us as individuals.
I don't think absulute proof is a reasonable critieria. Some things are reasonable to believe without an absolute standard of proof.
I suggest two other criteria:
Personal experience. If I see someone stab someone to death, I don't need proof of the murderer's action. I am an eyewitness. I am the proof from my own POV at a minimum. I don't have to believe because I actually saw it for myself. I don't believe; I know.
A preponderance of the evidence. Ten witnesses saying essentially the same thing about the murder would be difficult to dismiss. It would be unreasonable to not believe them, although that is still belief and not knowledge because they saw it and I didn't. I am still taking their word for it. But, again, it would be unreasonable not to believe them. Colloberate with physical evidence showing the same thing and you have proof beyond any doubt that is reasonable. The line between believing and knowing here is so blurred that it is reasonable to say we know and not just believe.
We can't go through life expecting absolute proof for anything, really, because there is always room for at least a tiny bit of doubt, however unreasonable.
I think there is a preponderance of the evidence that there is an Afterlife and that this evidence is universal in both space (crossing physical and cultural/religious boundaries) and time (throughout history). An Afterlife explorer has the additional personal experience that, with verification, proves beyond any reasonable doubt that there is such a "place."
I am tired, so if my points are flawed, please feel free to point them out.
Bob
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