Do you believe in ghosts?

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  • What determines if you become a ghost or a zombie?
    And can you be both at the same time?

    Diet.
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    edited October 2016 Posts: 9,117
    I have no evidence to present here. And you have presented no evidence for the existence of atoms.

    Why don't you go to Hiroshima or Chernobyl and ask the people who had their skin burned off, got cancer or gave birth to deformed and mutated babies if they think atoms exist.

    If you've never been to Auschwitz or Treblinka does that mean the holocaust is just a massive hoax?

    Do you think you've won the argument because none of us here can offer any evidence of atoms from personal anecdote?

    If we want we can go and take university courses in atomic science or read the research of Rutherford or Bohr. Can you point me to where I can study the wealth of similar extensive evidence, painstakingly researched and proven by scientific method, for the existence of ghosts?

    And by that I don't mean morons saying 'I heard a noise and felt cold. How dare you doubt my senses as empirical proof that spirits of the dead exist.'
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,184
    @Thunderfinger
    The existence of atoms has for the longest time been evidenced by the entire "particle theory" that supports almost all of physics and chemistry. If atoms weren't real, our understanding of chemistry would be completely wrong, but then so would be almost every prediction we ever made in chemistry, which would be particularly strange because most if not all of those predictions have turned out correct in experiments and because many of them have actually lead to pharmaceuticals that manage to work miracles for us in times of sickness. For over 200 years, physicists have been building on the notion of atoms, exponentially expanding our view on the cosmos and creating tons of applications. One might go so far as to say that car engines and refrigerators would never have been successfully built were it not for atomic theory allowing for a proper theory of thermodynamics.

    However, since the second have of the 20th century, we have mastered the skill to see larger molecules through microscopes, to in fact observe molecules and atoms (!) under electron microscopes and to observe the atom's minuscule constituents, the "fundamental particles" known as electrons and quarks for example, with the aid of particle accelerators.

    We know atoms are real. We have for decades been manipulating them to give us types of matter previously unknown to nature. To deny their existence is to brand oneself as an ignoramus, a terrifyingly outdated person or a clumsy and dangerous denier of the reality of science, often from a ridiculous desire to get "in touch" with the supernatural.
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    Posts: 9,117
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    @Thunderfinger
    The existence of atoms has for the longest time been evidenced by the entire "particle theory" that supports almost all of physics and chemistry. If atoms weren't real, our understanding of chemistry would be completely wrong, but then so would be almost every prediction we ever made in chemistry, which would be particularly strange because most if not all of those predictions have turned out correct in experiments and because many of them have actually lead to pharmaceuticals that manage to work miracles for us in times of sickness. For over 200 years, physicists have been building on the notion of atoms, exponentially expanding our view on the cosmos and creating tons of applications. One might go so far as to say that car engines and refrigerators would never have been successfully built were it not for atomic theory allowing for a proper theory of thermodynamics.

    However, since the second have of the 20th century, we have mastered the skill to see larger molecules through microscopes, to in fact observe molecules and atoms (!) under electron microscopes and to observe the atom's minuscule constituents, the "fundamental particles" known as electrons and quarks for example, with the aid of particle accelerators.

    We know atoms are real. We have for decades been manipulating them to give us types of matter previously unknown to nature. To deny their existence is to brand oneself as an ignoramus, a terrifyingly outdated person or a clumsy and dangerous denier of the reality of science, often from a ridiculous desire to get "in touch" with the supernatural.

    'Sorry mate I'm not having that. Have you ever seen an atom with your eye? No? Must be bullshit then. I, on the other hand, once saw a curtain move with no explanation so put that in your pipe and smoke it. QED I have proven atoms don't exist and ghosts do.'
  • Posts: 4,617
    I hope we dont have any forum members from Japan who are upset at the suggestion that the atom does not exist. This is how things get out of hand and the argument twists and turns and rational people end up justifying the existance of atoms rather than focus on the original claim. This is a standard method and its not a route to go down.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    @Thunderfinger
    The existence of atoms has for the longest time been evidenced by the entire "particle theory" that supports almost all of physics and chemistry. If atoms weren't real, our understanding of chemistry would be completely wrong, but then so would be almost every prediction we ever made in chemistry, which would be particularly strange because most if not all of those predictions have turned out correct in experiments and because many of them have actually lead to pharmaceuticals that manage to work miracles for us in times of sickness. For over 200 years, physicists have been building on the notion of atoms, exponentially expanding our view on the cosmos and creating tons of applications. One might go so far as to say that car engines and refrigerators would never have been successfully built were it not for atomic theory allowing for a proper theory of thermodynamics.

    However, since the second have of the 20th century, we have mastered the skill to see larger molecules through microscopes, to in fact observe molecules and atoms (!) under electron microscopes and to observe the atom's minuscule constituents, the "fundamental particles" known as electrons and quarks for example, with the aid of particle accelerators.

    We know atoms are real. We have for decades been manipulating them to give us types of matter previously unknown to nature. To deny their existence is to brand oneself as an ignoramus, a terrifyingly outdated person or a clumsy and dangerous denier of the reality of science, often from a ridiculous desire to get "in touch" with the supernatural.

    'Sorry mate I'm not having that. Have you ever seen an atom with your eye? No? Must be bullshit then. I, on the other hand, once saw a curtain move with no explanation so put that in your pipe and smoke it. QED I have proven atoms don't exist and ghosts do.'

    ...says the forum psychopath.

    You clearly don t understand sarcasm when it isn t you who handle it out. I have my own idea of who it is who have mental issues here.
  • edited October 2016 Posts: 4,325
    No, but a freaky thing once happened when I watched The Omen on blu-ray. I paused it to go and make myself a cup of coffee. As I flicked the kettle on I realised I was watching it on the 6th June and at that moment the kettle switched itself off well before boiling.
  • MayDayDiVicenzoMayDayDiVicenzo Here and there
    Posts: 5,080
    tanaka123 wrote: »
    No, but a freaky thing once happened when I watched The Omen on blu-ray. I paused it to go and make myself a cup of coffee. As I flicked the kettle on I realised I was watching it on the 6th June and at that moment the kettle switched itself off before well before boiling.

    Those pesky ghosts, sabotaging the perfect cuppa.
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    Posts: 9,117
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    @Thunderfinger
    The existence of atoms has for the longest time been evidenced by the entire "particle theory" that supports almost all of physics and chemistry. If atoms weren't real, our understanding of chemistry would be completely wrong, but then so would be almost every prediction we ever made in chemistry, which would be particularly strange because most if not all of those predictions have turned out correct in experiments and because many of them have actually lead to pharmaceuticals that manage to work miracles for us in times of sickness. For over 200 years, physicists have been building on the notion of atoms, exponentially expanding our view on the cosmos and creating tons of applications. One might go so far as to say that car engines and refrigerators would never have been successfully built were it not for atomic theory allowing for a proper theory of thermodynamics.

    However, since the second have of the 20th century, we have mastered the skill to see larger molecules through microscopes, to in fact observe molecules and atoms (!) under electron microscopes and to observe the atom's minuscule constituents, the "fundamental particles" known as electrons and quarks for example, with the aid of particle accelerators.

    We know atoms are real. We have for decades been manipulating them to give us types of matter previously unknown to nature. To deny their existence is to brand oneself as an ignoramus, a terrifyingly outdated person or a clumsy and dangerous denier of the reality of science, often from a ridiculous desire to get "in touch" with the supernatural.

    'Sorry mate I'm not having that. Have you ever seen an atom with your eye? No? Must be bullshit then. I, on the other hand, once saw a curtain move with no explanation so put that in your pipe and smoke it. QED I have proven atoms don't exist and ghosts do.'

    ...says the forum psychopath.

    You clearly don t understand sarcasm when it isn t you who handle it out. I have my own idea of who it is who have mental issues here.

    I apologise profusely; if that was sarcasm it passed me by. You've got the whole believer schtick absolutely nailed. You should go undercover to infiltrate them.

    Is being labelled 'the forum psychopath' an insult or a compliment? I'll take it as the latter thanks. The Norman Bates of the forum stabbing idiocy in the shower.
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    You should trademark it, then.
  • 0BradyM0Bondfanatic70BradyM0Bondfanatic7 Quantum Floral Arrangements: "We Have Petals Everywhere"
    Posts: 28,694
    @TheWizardOfIce, in these metaphorical showers, are you stabbing the idiots with an icicle?
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    He is pricking his victims with himself.
  • Posts: 15,125
    Ok now that we are all settled about the existence of the atom, how about ghosts? What do we have to back up any claim of their existence?
  • MayDayDiVicenzoMayDayDiVicenzo Here and there
    Posts: 5,080
    Ludovico wrote: »
    Ok now that we are all settled about the existence of the atom, how about ghosts? What do we have to back up any claim of their existence?

    Ectoplasm, of course!
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    Posts: 18,281
    @TheWizardOfIce, in these metaphorical showers, are you stabbing the idiots with an icicle?

    Oh, someone's been reading their John Dickson Carr. Good.

  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    Posts: 9,117
    He is pricking his victims with himself.

    You really should be on Mock The Week.
    Dragonpol wrote: »
    @TheWizardOfIce, in these metaphorical showers, are you stabbing the idiots with an icicle?

    Oh, someone's been reading their John Dickson Carr. Good.

    Or watching Die Hard 2.
    Ludovico wrote: »
    Ok now that we are all settled about the existence of the atom, how about ghosts? What do we have to back up any claim of their existence?

    It would be nice if someone could offer anything wouldn't it? We're only 14 pages into this thread after all.
  • Posts: 15,125
    Ok so how about for those among you who think they witnessed ghosts: tell us about your experience and tell us why you believe it was a ghost.
  • tanaka123 wrote: »
    No, but a freaky thing once happened when I watched The Omen on blu-ray. I paused it to go and make myself a cup of coffee. As I flicked the kettle on I realised I was watching it on the 6th June and at that moment the kettle switched itself off before well before boiling.

    Those pesky ghosts, sabotaging the perfect cuppa.

    Why make the walls run red with blood or send the corpse of a dearly departed back to terrorize you when you can perpetrate the greatest of horrors known to man: switching the kettle off?

    Demons have no imagination these days, I tell ya.
  • DragonpolDragonpol https://thebondologistblog.blogspot.com
    edited October 2016 Posts: 18,281
    He is pricking his victims with himself.

    You really should be on Mock The Week.
    Dragonpol wrote: »
    @TheWizardOfIce, in these metaphorical showers, are you stabbing the idiots with an icicle?

    Oh, someone's been reading their John Dickson Carr. Good.

    Or watching Die Hard 2.
    Ludovico wrote: »
    Ok now that we are all settled about the existence of the atom, how about ghosts? What do we have to back up any claim of their existence?

    It would be nice if someone could offer anything wouldn't it? We're only 14 pages into this thread after all.

    Shamefully I have not seen Die Hard 2, Wiz. I think that John Dickson Carr was the originator of this idea.
  • stagstag In the thick of it!
    Posts: 1,053
    Personally I'd like to see proof that ghosts exist

    also

    I'd like to see proof that they don't.

    It's basic claims and defence.

    No one has said anything from either side which would remotely satisfy the other in respect to the matter.

    I remain open minded and while I am sure that 99.9% of supposed encounters have a perfectly rational (and earthly) explanation that still leaves the tiny fraction which cannot be explained away so easily.

    Let's pretend its Christmas day, get out of our trenches, a have a kick about and discuss it.


  • edited October 2016 Posts: 4,617
    What would proof that ghosts dont exist look like? Similar to proof that Father Christmas does not exist? or that God does not exist, or proof that no pigs have ever flown etc etc,
    These concepts are not disprovable and that is something that makes them appealing to many beleivers.
    To treat the argument on equal terms is to give believers 50% of the debate when they have done nothing to deserve that place. Does anyone want to have a 50/50 debate re the invisible Dragon in my garage?
  • stagstag In the thick of it!
    edited October 2016 Posts: 1,053
    With that I must conclude that you are not interested in debate just diatribe?

    So you personally cannot prove that ghosts do not exist? That makes your own 'evidence' that they don't as compelling as those who are being hounded down and mocked for what they have experienced. With all due respect what you are actually providing is just your opinion in the same way as those who believe in their own experiences.

    Lastly - and referring you to the thread title - may I ask why those who believe in ghost should not have an equal debating platform here? Up to now they have provided just as much 'evidence' as the NO camp.

  • edited October 2016 Posts: 4,617
    "So you personally cannot prove that ghosts do not exist"

    No I cant and nobody else can either. Anyone can invent a theory that cannot be disproved and then challenge others to disprove it and then criticise third parties for not wanting to have a debate (just diatribe),
    opinion is based on fact. There is zero evidence that ghosts exists , therefore, I cant justify beleiving in them until new evidence comes to light. Everyone uses this theory everyday unless its something that they want to believe in and then the rules get bent.
    Shall we have a debate about the fairies at the bottom of your garden? or that your next door neighbour is the re-incarnation of Elvis? Are you not interested in a debate? or just a diatribe.
    This basis of justification from believers is as old as the hills and dealt with decades ago by Bertrand Russell and his cosmic teapot:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell's_teapot
    Does anyone want to debate the existance of the teapot?
    It speaks volumes that this well known and established principle is deleberately ignored by those determined to either believe or add weight to their belief by entering into a 50/50 debate and keeping an open mind.
  • stagstag In the thick of it!
    edited October 2016 Posts: 1,053
    I completely agree with your opening paragraph and especially the last sentence (which applies equally whichever side of the fence you are on) however I must point out that your post degenerates thereafter leaving me with no requirement to underscore points. That said I should just like to ask in what context do you use the word 'principle'? A fundamental truth or a proposition? Given that you agree you cannot present any tangible evidence to support your case I take the liberty of presuming it to be the latter.

    My own opinion (because I have no proof to back it up) is that much supposed paranormal activity is most likely the result of deep rooted superstition which is so heavily embedded into the human subconscious as to be little more than reflex. That said otherwise innocuous activity which is open to (mis)interpretation by those who witness it doesn't mean they are what they have been variously described within these pages.

    Just back to your opening sentence (quote) "No I can't and nobody else can either". You can't prove it, the believers can't prove it. Let's throw stones at each other.





  • edited October 2016 Posts: 4,617
    Its a philosophical principle that everyone applies to life everyday without even thinking about it. Its simply impossible to be open minded about the infinite amount of disprovable theories that exist (especially when many require fundamantal breaches in the laws of physics)
    Obviously, you can be as openminded as you want about any of these theories. What it does show, and you are obvioulsy not unique in this, is that humans have the ability to change, bend and ignore rules if it suites then regarding a particualr theory and the way they consider their own World around them. I am not sure of you read the link in my post but here is a fragment which perhaps makes the point better than myself:

    "Some people speak as if we were not justified in rejecting a theological doctrine unless we can prove it false. But the burden of proof does not lie upon the rejecter.... If you were told that in a certain planet revolving around Sirius there is a race of donkeys who speak the English language and spend their time in discussing eugenics, you could not disprove the statement, but would it, on that account, have any claim to be believed? Some minds would be prepared to accept it, if it were reiterated often enough, through the potent force of suggestion.[4]"

    Shall we be open minded and have a debate about the donkeys?

    PS I wonder if you were accused of speeding, how open minded and willing to apply the "50/50" debate principle rather than enjoy the principle of burden of proof and the onus on the state to prove the case using reliable evidence? After all, how could you prove you were not speeding?
    Apply the same principle to the regaular claims we get from various religious groups that the World will end on a particular date? Do we give that a 50/50 debate? Do you seriously consider the chances it could be true? Do we start living our lives as if we could have a week to live? I suspect not.
    The "burden of proof" principle is built into our culture and we have a concensus re its value until we get to spooks, tea leaves, fairies etc and then it does not seem to matter.
  • stagstag In the thick of it!
    Posts: 1,053
    What has rejecting theological doctrine get to do with the subject in hand? Of course The burden of proof lies with both parties otherwise what happens when those who reject the existence of spirits have have their own claims rejected? The believer then becomes the rejector ergo the rejector in the first instance has then to prove their own claims!

    That anyone who has the temerity to question the pack mentality which has sadly prevailed here themselves becomes an enemy is as obvious as it is disturbing.

    The principles of law as you to which you pertain in your 'PS' has absolutely no relevance to this matter as it again drifts so far away from the actual initial question raised as to be completely irrelevant. Let's be clear I am speaking about whether or not ghosts exist.

    Unfortunately that you feel that you are not obliged in anyway to justify your own points of view on the matter of whether ghosts exist or not by providing proof - and yes the onus is on you just as it is those whose experiences or theories you reject - means that your point of view has no more credence than those whom you wish to undermine.

    Just for clarities sake I am not saying that you are wrong or the believers are wrong or you are right or the believers are right. I want you (the rejectors) and them to give me and other people who are neither one way or the other on the subject some evidence with which to back up your theories.
  • Posts: 4,617
    "The burden of proof lies with both parties"

    Obvioulsy disagree but, on that basis, I welcome evidence from any forum members that I dont have an invisible dragon in my garage and, until such evidence is received, then we must regard it as a possibility.
  • Posts: 15,125
    @stag You do not understand the burden of proof, how we investigate or how we establish truth.
  • Posts: 4,325
    Sorry to burst the bubble but ghosts DO NOT EXIST.
  • TheWizardOfIceTheWizardOfIce 'One of the Internet's more toxic individuals'
    edited October 2016 Posts: 9,117
    stag wrote: »
    What has rejecting theological doctrine get to do with the subject in hand? Of course The burden of proof lies with both parties otherwise what happens when those who reject the existence of spirits have have their own claims rejected? The believer then becomes the rejector ergo the rejector in the first instance has then to prove their own claims!

    That anyone who has the temerity to question the pack mentality which has sadly prevailed here themselves becomes an enemy is as obvious as it is disturbing.

    The principles of law as you to which you pertain in your 'PS' has absolutely no relevance to this matter as it again drifts so far away from the actual initial question raised as to be completely irrelevant. Let's be clear I am speaking about whether or not ghosts exist.

    Unfortunately that you feel that you are not obliged in anyway to justify your own points of view on the matter of whether ghosts exist or not by providing proof - and yes the onus is on you just as it is those whose experiences or theories you reject - means that your point of view has no more credence than those whom you wish to undermine.

    Just for clarities sake I am not saying that you are wrong or the believers are wrong or you are right or the believers are right. I want you (the rejectors) and them to give me and other people who are neither one way or the other on the subject some evidence with which to back up your theories.

    Your position is, frankly, ludicrous.

    I take it you consider that all criminals should therefore be set free because clearly balance of probability and beyond reasonable doubt hold zero credibility in your world view?

    Even if 50 witnesses saw a bloke hack someone to death with an axe that would be insufficient evidence as given we cannot disprove he wasn't possessed with the spirit of the devil or Hitler or Vlad the Impaler or whoever then we have to acquit don't we?

    But if it's disproving ghosts you're after I would point to the fact that no believer can come up with a scintilla of evidence beyond the anecdotal. I would assume that something humankind has been looking into for so many centuries might have gone slightly beyond 'I heard a noise when I was alone in the house once. And my gran died in that house. Ergo ghosts exist' if it had any basis in fact.

    Whereas something like atoms were barely a hypothesis 200 years ago. Yet by 1945 we had proven their existence, split them and used the power to destroy cities.

    The notion of ghosts has been around for thousands of years yet we still haven't managed to evolve beyond camp fire tales.

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