No..that people describe things that happened to them is always sufficient to believe them.
With respect, you must be a very easy target for con men, advertisers, politicians and the like. I find it hard to believe that you take everything that everybody tells you as the gospel truth. In fact, the evidence on sciforums speaks against your claim, because you so often fail to believe in things like science, while at the same time going out of your way to believe in any woo that you find on youtube. This screams "bias!" at me.
Nobody but a prick would go around demanding everyone to provide evidence of all the things they say they have experienced. That's just stupid.
I agree.
You see, it doesn't matter too much to me whether you actually lost your car keys for a while back in 1995. If you believe you did, that's probably going to be good enough for me, under most conditions.
But when you claim that supernatural people exist who can appear and disappear at will, defy the laws of physics, give messages from beyond the grave, etc. etc. then chances are I'm not going to just take your word for it. For
that extraordinary claim, I'm going to ask for extraordinary evidence. It would be no different if you claimed you could leap tall buildings in a single bound. Most people, I have observed, do not have superpowers. If you were to say you have such powers, I think it would be reasonable for me to ask you to give me a demonstration, don't you?
Eyewitness direct experience is the gold standard of what happened in every case, from the news to history to autobiographies.
No. Eyewitness testimony is notoriously unreliable. Different witnesses consistently give different accounts of the same events, for example. Eyewitnesses often report what they think they saw rather than what actually occurred.
Do you ever think it strange that a biography of a person can disagree with elements from that person's autobiography? Why do you think that might be? At least one person must be wrong - the biographer or the autobiographer - and perhaps both are wrong. How could we resolve such a dispute, I wonder. What would you suggest?
We believe what people say they experienced when there is no compelling reason to doubt them.
I agree.
When it comes to the existence of ghosts, there are compelling reasons to doubt. The same can be said for bigfoot, alien spaceships, psychic powers, astrology ... all the woo, basically.
No..the onus is on you to show that people hallucinate full body persons in front of them.
No. See my previous post.
I have already provided evidence that they see them, that they wear period clothes, that they are often transparent, and disappear. That's the definition of a ghost.
Right. That's the definition of a ghost. It's what is expected when you report a ghost. So, if you don't report those things, the ghost people won't take you into the fold. Right? Which means.... what? Anything?
If you are claiming they didn't see this but hallucinated it, then just show that normal undrugged sober people hallucinate such things. There should be some well-known experiments proving this by now. Where are they?
The scientific literature is full of studies about human perception, including hallucination.
Better yet, provide some personal experiences of you hallucinating people in front of you. If it happens all the time, then it should be happening to you as well.
It doesn't happen to
me all the time. How about
you? Do you see ghosts regularly, MR?
If your claim is that people see ghosts
all the time, regularly, lots of people, then maybe we have something to explain. But if it's just a few people, or a few occasions, or a tiny fraction of the population who may have some mental issues, then it seems that the call for a supernatural explanation is somewhat reduced, wouldn't you agree?