Berserk
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Deanna,
Thanks for sharing your spiritualist experience. I hope it means what your understandable wishful thinking suggests. But the use of words like "proof" (Deanna) and "solid evidence" (Bruce Moen) is sadly misguided because the ESP interpretation seems at least as plausible if not more so. Why? Over the years, I've occasionally reported one of the most devastating counter-examples descrediting channeled contacts with deceased loved ones and no one here has been honest enough to acknowledge its force. So I will repeat it again.
Dr. Sam Soal visited a famous British medium, Blanche Cooper, in the hope of contacting his recently deceased brother. During the sitting, Gordon Davis, an unexpected drop-in communicator, interrupted the seance. Davis was a schoolmate of Soal's who had recently died--or so Soal had been told. Davis lamented, "I'm only concerned about my wife and kiddie now." He gave detailed verifications that he was genuine by describing the interior of his house, by recalling incidents in their school life together, and by using jargon that typified his speech (e.g. "old chap" and "confab" instead of "meeting").
A while later, Soal discovered that Davis was in fact still alive and knew nothing about the channeled impostor. If one asks why mediumship is not discredited in this way more often, one need only ask: How often are you wrongly told that a friend has died? Apparently Soal's belief in Davis's death either enabled Cooper to reconstruct his personal via ESP or was seized by a spirit impostor as an opportunity for deception. Such examples shift the burden of proof to those who claim that the best of channeling is evidence of postmortem survival.
Remember two additional facts. (1) Many mediums also display ESP. (2) Prior to the 19th century, channeling was generally attributed to a god or a demon rather than to a discarnate human. Who is to say that modern mediumistic contacts with the dead are more than culturally conditioned wishful thinking?
Deanna, what your example does do is eliminate the claim that the most impressive channeled claims can be dismissed as either fraudulent or lucky guesses. Instead, the 3 most likely options are ESP, spirit impersonators, or genuine contact--in that order of plausibility IMHO. That said, there are a few examples of mediumship that I suspect really are genuine contacts with the dead and I have previously posted one such case on this site. But please, people, let's inject a little integrity into our assessment of the evidence.
Don
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