Comshaw
VAGITARIAN
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2000
- Posts
- 11,996
That particular subject was brought up in another discussion yesterday. I personally do not believe ghosts or spirits exist in the popularly understood definition. I wish I did. I really do. The idea of those who have passed but are still around is an enticing pleasant thought. There very well may be another plane of existence, but I can not accept that premise without some kind of proof.
There have been many who claimed to have seen ghosts. I can neither say they speak true or not. I can say there has never been any valid proof ghosts and spirits exist. This article from the Atlantic has a very thought provoking take on the subject: hallucinations.
"This hierarchy perspective represents an ongoing revelation in how widespread and varied hallucinations can be. A survey in the early 1990s found that 10 to 15 percent of the population of the United States experienced vivid sensory hallucinations at some point in their lives. And scientists have begun to take seriously the idea that voice hearing and other forms of auditory hallucination can be benign or “nonclinical.” This newfound ubiquity has come with a host of questions. Why is it so common for people to perceive what isn’t there, and how does the brain allow this to happen in the first place? To find answers, researchers have turned to the mechanics of how we perceive reality itself."
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/hallucinations-are-everywhere?utm_source=pocket-newtab
Comshaw
There have been many who claimed to have seen ghosts. I can neither say they speak true or not. I can say there has never been any valid proof ghosts and spirits exist. This article from the Atlantic has a very thought provoking take on the subject: hallucinations.
"This hierarchy perspective represents an ongoing revelation in how widespread and varied hallucinations can be. A survey in the early 1990s found that 10 to 15 percent of the population of the United States experienced vivid sensory hallucinations at some point in their lives. And scientists have begun to take seriously the idea that voice hearing and other forms of auditory hallucination can be benign or “nonclinical.” This newfound ubiquity has come with a host of questions. Why is it so common for people to perceive what isn’t there, and how does the brain allow this to happen in the first place? To find answers, researchers have turned to the mechanics of how we perceive reality itself."
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/hallucinations-are-everywhere?utm_source=pocket-newtab
Comshaw