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07-18-2003, 12:58 PM | #21 | |
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What I am interested in reading is a brief description of the experience itself, not what supposedly caused it. We can talk about its causes after we have a clear expression of what the experience is in itself. |
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07-19-2003, 09:15 PM | #22 | |||||
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Sorry, I was out of town Friday and almost all of today, and will be again tomorrow.
Helen: Quote:
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The internal experiences I prefer not to discuss much, being that most of them are rather personal (and make me sound more like a flake than I do already, I'm sure). Quote:
Does that answer your question adaquately? If not, feel free to let me know. *** Pyrrho: Quote:
Although I'm not sure it's circular the way you describe.. it's more argumentum ad ignoratum. I have the experiences, I can't explain the experiences any other way, therefore goddidit. I'm not saying "A god exists, which causes me to have SREs, which prove a god exists," at least not as far as I'm aware. If that's what I've been projecting, I apologize; it was not my intent. Quote:
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07-20-2003, 05:56 AM | #23 |
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Very interesting.
My brother, and three close friends of mine, were camping at an old reservoir lake here in Georgia, way back in 1977. They all testify to an experience that seems quite mysterious- a steady white light in the sky, which they observed for several minutes. It moved about in ways impossible for a plane or helicopter, made no noise, and appeared to be between them and the treeline (about 200 yards.) They all still swear it's not just a joke they cooked up amongst them. In fact it scared them enough that they packed up and left! Thing is- one insists that it was a UFO, one thinks it was a ghost, and the other two just say they don't know what the hell it was. I really wish I had been there, anyway, as I have never seen any phenomenon which I could not make a fair guess as to what it was. Calzaer's 'fairies' sound like they might be similar. There are plenty of natural phenomena which are so seldom seen that most people never get to observe them. Ball and bead lightning, swamp lights, St. Elmo's fire, rare atmospheric refraction effects- all well documented, and at least approximately understood. I have a book in my library, Handbook of Unusual Natural Phenomena by William R. Corliss, which contains lots of extremely puzzling reports. I make no claim that I can precisely state the cause of Calzaer's lights, but they are of a class well enough known to have a name- will o' the wisps. Calzaer, I presume you had recited some incantation which was supposed to call up something- and the synchronicity is admittedly quite astonishing. Still I feel that if you had had the proper instruments to observe and record your 'faeries' they would have proved completely natural. |
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