Bruce Moen
|
John,
>> Personally, I look for hard evidence that does NOT come through me. IMHO, I'm not any better than anyone else as a data point. <<
From my experience I'd disagree. In my opinion the only evidence that will ever be useful to you in proving to you that our afterlife exists is evidence that comes through your own direct experience.
It is just too easy to find reasons to dispute evidence gathered by someone else. We can easily believe they are: biased, deluded, fraudulant, misinterpreting their experience, swayed by their beliefs, etc.
As someone from a workshop once said, I could always believe that the supposed evidence gathered didn't prove our afterlife exists, until it happened to me. When I had evidence I'd gathered verified as real, that there was no other way for me to know except by communicating with a dead person, I couldn't explain it away like I could other people's evidence without lying to myself.
>> You suggest that the people discuss what they are going to do together before the attempt. I don't see the value of this. It seems like a way to generate common data that hides the real data. <<
Using my example of visiting the zoo to observe the monkeys, there are lots of things that can potentially happen to verify the reality of the shared experince. Who arrived first, second, etc. What each person was wearing, What each monkey looked like and what each one was doing, etc, etc.
Talking ahead of time provides a framework, a location and time as well as defining the kind of information to be targeted.
For example, targeting only the zoo could mean each member went to a different area of the zoo, reducing the potential for shared experience. One partner descibes watching the monkeys, another the lions, another the hyenas, someone else the popcorn stand. It's better, in my opinion if they at least start out in the same, previously discussed and agreed upon place at the zoo.
>> It seems like a good thing to add to this board if you can implement a web page that lets two people make appointments, define their goals and then after the event, they each write results, and only after both are entered, does anyone see the results. And the results are then available to anyone for comparison. The people could be anonymous. <<
I'll think about that one, the new Board software would make that easier to do. But in the beginning of learning the technique it is more important to see similarities in experience than it is to be precisely accurate. Even at the expense of credability, at least early in learning the technnnique. There are lots of conflicting beliefs to be overcome and Interpreter overlay to learn about.
Bruce
|