Michael Sudduth's critique of the Leininger case as reincarnation or psi evidence

149 Replies, 10554 Views

(2022-09-06, 03:12 PM)Laird Wrote: Hey, hey, hold up there! I planned to reread your posts and give them due consideration after we worked out the whole how-to-readily-distinguish-quotes-from-original-content problem. It's just too messy at the moment for me to make sense of. [Edit: another problem is that you don't distinguish your quotes of me from your own content, which isn't a problem for me 'cos I remember what I wrote, but might be for others.]

No problem with quotes, learning curve. And not all of my posts have been that way. 
(This whole discussion has been some nightmare hyper-sensitivity syndrome to me.)

Really too messy? Damn, I don't think I even changed anything from the original book. It is mostly if not all a cut and paste with a comment here or there.
So Stevenson is too messy? Or attacking me again? Making these posts now something that are my personal problem or my fault?
I mean, what is the purpose when you could have private messageed me? Calling me out in front of the whole group?

I went back to the original book we were discusssing. I read that (again), since it had been awhile and they are old materials. It seems pretty obvious to me that NOBODY else went back and read that material.
Out of courtesy, I cut and pasted things. Not just what you requested, but for one of the seriously aggressive and mean members as well. 
and quoted some of them, and presented it on a sliver platter to the group.
I even went back, cut and pasted some things where someone tried quoting it to me, then didn't quite remember how it went, just so they had a refresher.
(See #110, even if improperly formatted, I did include the page numbers and all)

So we are discussing works that they either read a long time ago and don't remember, or read and didn't digest or remember, or don't care to go back and do any homework.

I had my opinions, based on personal experiences, what I know, the content, the evidence, etc.

Since we were discussing Michael Sudduth's critique, and I find it is valid as it stands, however harsh or critical, that critique requires intense discussions on reincarnation and psi phenomena with open minds and continued education, as well as understanding how critique in science works. 

That I have my own opinion appears to be a mistake, and normal discussions are impossible at this point. I ended up having to put two members on ignore for a few days, just so they would stop attacking me personally like some kind of crazed fundamentalists. No open minds, no opinions allowed, while getting mean and nasty in the process.

To me, this discussion doesn't require that I have to defend or support the obvious evidence as if this were my own book
This was not mine. It was not my critique. It is the work of Stevenson from 1966 with an update in the 70's and Michael Sudduth.
 
First thing this group did was to try and dish out a beating because they automatically assumed I'm some kind of skeptic, just because I understand the content of both the original book, and the critique. Add that I have an opinion, and oh my! Somebody stop him, he isn't brainwashed!

The next thing this group did was to dismiss my own opinions, which are based on my research, studies, and personal experiences, and require that my opinion be propped up with quotes or sources, while NONE of THEM did the same for me. 
A single apology would have gone a long way.
So I am this new outsider that isn't welcome, that is obvious. Like the new kid in a class full of butt hurt bullies. 
They have created a clique, like in prison. The are defensive and nasty. 

Not the place for me, or for any serious discussions.

There is some issue that goes way beyond this discussion, beyond fair play, open minds, or what the topic of this thread is.
Why aren't others being held to some higher standard, required to do homework, cut and paste quotes from sources to prove or disprove, etc.?
Is it because they all agree about the critique being unfair, or that everything Stevenson said and did is somehow above reproach or is now holy?

It makes me wonder about what the real issues might be.

Very totalitarian and shocking to me. 

They have attacked me, belittled me, challenged me, made me jump through hoops, and the discussion is not even about me.

At what point can we not have an opinion, or make up our own minds, without being attacked in this new cancel culture hate everything society?

When do we get back to debate and fairplay?

I'm like 2 clicks away from just leaving and never coming back here, every single time I come here. It is like watching an accident happen in slow motion.
(2022-09-06, 07:30 PM)Durward Wrote: Why aren't others being held to some higher standard, required to do homework, cut and paste quotes from sources to prove or disprove, etc.?

They have attacked me, belittled me, challenged me, made me jump through hoops, and the discussion is not even about me.

Hi Durward, I'll let Laird answer you, and since he's in Australian time that might take a little time.

Regarding putting sources down, all that we ask (of everyone) is that when they quote something, that it's clear (including in the way it's formatted) that the quoted material is attributed to its proper source, for copyright reasons. It has nothing to do with "proving" your point with your sources. If Laird "challenges" you to do "homework", that's his personally motivated challenge to you, but you are not are required to meet it. In that instance, he was speaking as a regular member, not an administrator-moderator.

I was initially a little suspicious when you showed up and posted a lot because we've had trolls on this forum before, but it's been clear to me for a while now that you're genuine and I for one appreciate your presence. I don't wish you to leave. So I don't know by who you're feeling attacked now, but it's certainly not everyone.

There's probably some confusion going on, maybe motivated by what you experienced through Laird offering you his "challenge", and the same time what you've been told to "do" pertaining to properly make it clear when you're quoting material, or other members. We use quotes, or italics, to make sure it's understandable if someone is being quoted. And if an article or book or website is being quoted, we just ask that the source be made clear. Hopefully I'm drawing a clear distinction and this resolves some of the confusion.

Hopefully this is clear enough and you can wait until Laird wakes up again (if he's gone to bed) and answer you properly!
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  • Laird
(2022-09-06, 08:15 PM)Ninshub Wrote: I was initially a little suspicious when you showed up and posted a lot because we've had trolls on this forum before, but it's been clear to me for a while now that you're genuine and I for one appreciate your presence. I don't wish you to leave.

Thanks. And troll attacks might confirm a reason for the defensive attack mode that is clearly obvious on this forum. Likely open wounds or something.

I have those wounds as well. Living life in the fringe is never easy.
It certainly isn't an easy or welcoming place so far. Glad you stepped up and shared your opinion.
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  • Laird, Ninshub
So, first off:

Like Ian (Ninshub), I think you're genuine. I have thought so from the start, and I have defended you against those who initially thought you were a skeptic (or maybe a troll).

I think you bring a lot to the table and have proven already to be a valuable member. Like Ian, I definitely don't want to see you leave.

I'm sorry that your experience so far has been that the board is cliquish, that you've been attacked, and that your opinions have been dismissed. Because of this, I'm going to make an extra effort to give your opinions as shared in this thread the consideration they're due - see bottom of this post.

Secondly, re quoting, I did indeed contemplate mentioning that privately, but ended up deciding it was worth doing publicly because it potentially brought this policy of ours to the attention of those who weren't yet aware of it. Probably, I made the wrong call there. I'm sorry that that embarrassed or otherwise hurt you.

(2022-09-06, 07:30 PM)Durward Wrote: Really too messy?

By that I just meant that words from different sources - your quotes of me, your quotes of Ian Stevenson, and your own comments - blend seamlessly in to one another in some of your posts, with no explicit indication as to their source. It wasn't a criticism of anybody's actual words.

(2022-09-06, 07:30 PM)Durward Wrote: No problem with quotes, learning curve.

No worries. Feel free to get in touch privately (or even publicly if you prefer) if you need help. Here's a resource that might also be of help:

How to quote when responding to posts

(2022-09-06, 07:30 PM)Durward Wrote: Why aren't others being held to some higher standard, required to do homework, cut and paste quotes from sources to prove or disprove, etc.?

They often enough are. You might just not have encountered that yet in the short time you've been here.

In any case, there's no requirement on you (or any other member) to respond to anything that you (or they) don't care to. You might remember that my initial response when you objected to my challenge was to say pretty much that. You decided to take it up in any case because you were pleased with me for fixing the alerts behaviour. Maybe you regret that now, but I'm going to try to make up for that by completing my incomplete rereading of the General Discussion section of Twenty Cases, summarising its arguments and contentions, carefully rereading everything you've shared in this thread, and then trying to come up with a summary of the discussion so far and potential ways forward for any who are interested in such a thing. Please allow me some time to do this though.
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  • Ninshub
@Durward, here's the post that I promised above. First, I list the alternative hypotheses considered in Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation, then I list those which you independently proposed, and then I share my view on it all.
  • Alternative hypotheses (to reincarnation) considered by the author (Doctor Ian Stevenson):

    • Fraud (pages 331-333). [Neither reread nor summarised because nobody in this discussion seems to consider this to be a valid hypothesis anyway.]

    • Cryptomnesia (pages 333-342). [As above.]

    • Genetic memory (pages 342-343).

      • The hypothesis: Memories are inherited from ancestors.

      • The author's response: Doesn't account for the majority of cases, in which the putatively prior-life person is not an ancestor of the person living the current life.

    • Extrasensory perception (ESP) (pages 343-373)

      • The hypothesis: There is an extrasensory linkage between the two personalities which explains the facts of the cases. This might include retrocognition.

      • The author's response:

        • Doesn't account for all features of the cases, in particular, the behavioural features and elements of personation, which are of a magnitude hard to imagine for those who haven't seen them for themselves. [The author elaborates on these in a list from (a) to (f) on page 360.]

        • Doesn’t account so well for the claim of these children to be remembering a past life. This does not definitively falsify the hypothesis though, and would itself be falsified if a child who seems to be a case of the reincarnation type (especially with apparently confirmatory birthmarks) claims that (s)he is not remembering and that (s)he instead obtained the past life information via, for example, spirit communication.

        • The children in these cases do not generally exhibit ESP in other areas of their lives.

        • There seems to be no good motivation in the cases in the book for a child with ESP to have sought out a deceased person to model as their past life. The children were mostly happy and in happy families, and had no need to seek external role models. Conversely, other children from unhappy families who become alienated from those families don’t generally seem to associate themselves with a deceased person, which we might expect if the “motivation to seek out a role model via ESP” hypothesis was true.

        • Although parents sometimes subconsciously impose their identity wishes on their children (who might then via ESP take on that – deceased – identity), the extent to which this is a viable explanation of the book’s cases is very limited. This is in part because, without intervention, such parental impositions continue unabated, whereas, in the book’s cases, the children’s identification with a past life gradually fades away with time.

        • Doesn’t account for congenital birthmarks and deformities consistent with the past life.

      • Subsidiary ESP hypotheses:

        • Telepathy

          • The hypothesis: There are one or more living persons who know both families or the areas in which they live, and thus constitute a telepathic bridge between the current and past lives.

          • The author's response:

            • Does not explain the selection of the target past life: why one deceased person and not another?

            • In some cases, this would require multiple living persons, since no single living person knew everything that the person living the current life knew about the past life.

            • Especially in those cases, we lack an explanation as to why the telepathically-obtained information pertained only to the past life, and not to other facts known to its (multiple) living sources.

        • Mediumship

          • The hypothesis: [Implicit] Past life information in these cases was obtained in a similar way in which mediums obtain information about deceased persons.

          • The author’s response:

            • The information obtained by mediums is not often limited to one particular historical life (across a medium’s full career), whereas it is in these cases.

            • Mediums typically enter a trance-like state when obtaining information. The children in these cases typically do not – they seem to remain in an ordinary state of consciousness even when discussing the past life.

            • Even though some mediums sometimes self-identify as the deceased person with whom they claim to be in contact, this self-identification is brief, whereas, for the cases in question, it is extended – typically into years.

            • Generally, when mediums personate as the deceased individual with whom they claim to be in contact, they do not identify with this individual as themselves in a continuity with their present life, whereas in the cases in question, the children do.

        • Psychometry

          • The hypothesis: [Implicit] Past life information in these cases was obtained via contact with objects which conveyed it.

          • The author’s response: Cannot be excluded as a possibility, but we don’t even need this specific an hypothesis given that many mediums can already achieve the same outcome without needing an object.

    • Possession (pages 373-382)

      • The hypothesis: The identification of a child with a past life person is best explained by the spirit of that person possessing the child.

      • The author’s explanatory comments:

        • “The difference between reincarnation and possession lies in the extent of the displacement of the primary personality achieved by the influence of the “entering” personality. Possession implies either a partial influence with the primary personality continuing to retain some control of the physical body, or a temporary (if apparently complete) control of the physical organism with later return of the original personality.”

        • “In short, if the previous personality seems to associate itself with the physical organism at the time of conception or during embryonic development, we speak of reincarnation; if the association between previous personality and physical organism only comes later, we speak of possession.”

      • The author’s response:

        • Does not explain the common increased revival of memories when a child returns to the location of the previous personality.

        • Does not account well for situations in which an external stimulus prompts, e.g., a song from the previous personality: we would not expect a possessing spirit to hang around waiting for such a prompt, and to afterwards simply retire again.

        • Does not seem to account for the typically patchy memories of the past life: we would expect a possessing spirit to have full memories of the past life, but these children don’t. However, it might be that a possessing spirit itself has only patchy memories, so this isn’t such a strong objection to the hypothesis.

        • Does not seem to adequately explain the children’s knowledge of how buildings were arranged or people looked during the life of the previous personality. We would expect a possessing spirit to keep up to date with changes. However, it might be that a possessing spirit simply doesn’t keep up to date with changes, so, again, this isn’t such a strong objection to the hypothesis.

        • There does not seem to be a motive in these cases for a spirit to possess any of the children, as there typically is in cases of possession.

        • None of the above allows us to adequately distinguish between cases of possession and those of reincarnation, however, cases of birthmarks or deformities matching injuries in the past life do allow us to so distinguish, because possession is understood to occur after birth – with attempts to displace the native personality – when the birthmarks are already present.

I structure the following in the same way as in the above list derived from the book, just for ease of comparison:
  • Alternative hypotheses (to reincarnation) suggested (implicitly or explicitly) by you (Durward):

    • Genetic memory (post #91).

    • Extrasensory perception (ESP)

      • Subsidiary ESP hypotheses:

        • Telepathy (post #87).

        • Mediumship (post #87).

        • Psychometry (posts #91 and #92).

        • Psychic ability (post #87).

        • Akashic record retrieval (post #87).

        • Steering by psychic or medium parents (post #89).

        • Psychic force by another living person (post #87).

          • The hypothesis: Another living person uses psi to force the child to see or dream things that are then interpreted as memories of a past life.

        • Leftovers of the once-living (posts #99 and #133).

          • The hypothesis: "Leftovers" of once-living people, like tulpas, wander around and leave their impressions on the living, leading the living to believe that they are reincarnations of the "leftover" people.

    • Demonic interference (post #87).

    • Herd intoxication (post #108).

      • The hypothesis: I'm not really clear as to what exactly you are proposing here.

My general thoughts on Ian Stevenson's General Discussion section

First: I see it differently than you do. You think Ian Stevenson should have shut up and just shared his results, without trying to interpret them. I don't think that that's realistic. He had done a lot of research, and the obvious question for the reader of his book is: based on all of your studies, what do you think; what are your conclusions? Given that he's in "the box seat", and that this is a book for popular consumption, this is only to be expected. The General Discussion section then is, in my view, perfectly reasonable. It might not be correct in all respects, but it has a lot of value anyway, coming from the author and researcher as it does.

As that implies: his points and arguments vary in strength. Some - or at least one - I would say, are compelling and even definitive. As an example, his argument against genetic memory as a viable hypothesis - that, in many cases, the past life isn't even an ancestor of the current life - is, in my view, definitive. Others are - even by his own admission - too weak to even help distinguish between reincarnation and the hypothesis in question. Some examples are the first five of his responses to the possession hypothesis: as indicated in the sixth in that list of responses, he openly acknowledges their weakness.

The rest are to varying degrees in between.

He also, as you acknowledge, does not claim that these cases "prove" (or even "demonstrate") reincarnation, but rather are "suggestive" of it. We shouldn't, then, expect that his responses to the various alternative hypotheses are anyway even intended to be definitive.

However, it is fair for you to poke holes in them, or to otherwise critique them. So, I'll consider that poking/critiquing in the next section, before going on to consider those of your hypotheses which are unique and not already raised by Ian Stevenson in his General Discussion section.

First, though, I want to briefly acknowledge one of your complaints:

(2022-09-04, 04:14 PM)Durward Wrote: Most often, he redirects to another study or interesting case, and the entire thought process follows that one and only situation as his go-to knowledge, example, or as the basis for comparison.

Fair enough. I noticed that too.

I also want to try to understand another of your criticisms better:

(2022-09-04, 04:14 PM)Durward Wrote: I do wish he would just supply the information in a format that would help determine the differences in cases, the differences between knowing things Harribance style, and knowing things because you were there, etc. In other words, columns and rows in [Ian Stevenson's] table of data are much different that what I would pick, because I look for different things that can take us down a different path than just assumption and speculation.

No need to go to this extent if you prefer not to, of course, but can you provide an example of a table supplied by Ian Stevenson that you think was poorly structured, and how you prefer he would have structured it (and which information you'd prefer him to have included)?

Your counter-argument to Ian Stevenson's general observation that the children did not otherwise exhibit ESP

Ian Stevenson makes the - compelling, to me - point that the children in these cases do not generally exhibit ESP in other areas of their lives.

You want more rigour though: you want brain scans and other tests to be undertaken to prove that the children do not exhibit any patterns characteristic of ESP (or mental illness), as per these affirmations of yours:

(2022-09-02, 12:27 AM)Durward Wrote: I would be scanning for [mental illness] and for the known configurations and neural networks of psi phenomena, EEG and fMRI data that also show up as a common factors.

I have not followed nor researched the extent to which this is possible, so I can't really comment on how viable an idea this is. If I were to research it, I'd be looking primarily to determine just how reliable any of these sort of tests are. Are there 100% (or close enough) positive correlations between certain (tested) brain states and psychic functioning (and that, as that implies, are negatively correlated with non-psychics)? Are those brain states well known and documented, and thus readily testable?

In any case, I think that the following suggestion of yours is pretty reasonable, especially if the answers to the above questions are "Yes":

(2022-09-05, 03:32 PM)Durward Wrote: Today, we have brain scanning and other measuring equipment, lab tests, and other means of figuring out deception, tracking, information flow, etc. We can see the brain configuratin that would designate telepathy or medium, as an example.

These would help to define a possible "reincarnation" configuration as different from psychometric, telepathic, or other possible sources. We could monitor forms of known hypnosis memory recall and compare those scans to dream / sleep studies that can record data during reincarnation memory recall, to determine if there are particular configurations and frequencies that are specific to reincarnation memory as opposed to hypnosis types, or if they are the same.

The only problem I see with this (assuming the reliability of testing) is in convincing subjects and their families to submit to this sort of testing. That's not necessarily straightforward to achieve.

Finding brain patterns unique to cases of reincarnation would be very intriguing, but I'm not sure that it would be especially evidential. By that I mean that we already know that there is something different about these individuals, and, via the other tests that you suggest, we would already have ruled out ESP as an explanation for that difference.

In any case, while I think that your suggestion is perfectly reasonable, I don't consider such testing to be necessary for me to personally accept Ian Stevenson's argument in this respect: his observation that the children generally did not exhibit ESP is enough for me to accept it - unless/until any of the tests you suggest show that they generally are capable of ESP.

Your counter-argument to Ian Stevenson's "behaviour and personation" defence of the reincarnation hypothesis (against the ESP hypothesis)

Ian Stevenson argues against the general ESP hypothesis by asserting, as I paraphrase him above, that ESP cannot be the source of the behavioural features and elements of personation of the cases, which, he claims, are of a magnitude hard to imagine for those who haven't seen them for themselves.

You counter-argue that acquired behaviour and personation can occur via:
  • Brain damage, including the acquisition of "piano playing skill or math skill" (post #91).

  • Synchronised brain frequencies, as discovered by Persinger, who found that with "video game players, novice players were suddenly capable of expert player skills when brains were submerged in the same oscillating frequency. Thus a direct transfer of skills and knowledge without any learning or memory." (post #123).
You seem to suggest then that we can't rule out the alternative ESP hypothesis on this basis, since acquired behaviour/personation can occur via ESP.

Do these two examples apply to cases of the reincarnation type though? If not, can the general idea of acquired behaviour/personation via ESP hold for these cases?

Brain damage, it seems to me, does not explicitly involve ESP, although it very probably involves mind/consciousness. It does not, then, seem applicable to these cases of the reincarnation type, none of which, to my awareness, involved brain damage.

Synchronised brain frequencies seem of little relevance to these cases too: there does not seem to be a "brain" with which the brain of the current life remembering the past life could synchronise - the only potential brain being already deceased.

OK, but what about the general idea: that it is possible in general for one person to acquire the behavioural traits of another person via ESP or other anomalous means?

Sure, there could be possibilities here. For example, maybe the behaviour/personality is downloaded from the putative Akashic records which you also bring up separately.

One question here though is: why would a child - subconsciously, presumably - download a whole "person", including memories, behaviour, and personality, from the Akashic records, and then identify this "person" as their past life, when that person, presumably, wasn't their past life? It doesn't seem to make a lot of sense, whereas reincarnation as an explanation does make a lot of (and a lot more) sense.

Another point worth making (again) is that Ian Stevenson has affirmed that, mostly, these children showed no evidence of ESP abilities aside from any putative ESP associated with their recall/personation of the past life - which lessens the likelihood that they are accessing Akashic records via ESP.

Of course, you could vehemently object: "Whatever, whatever - it can't be ruled out though."

Sure, but that doesn't stop us from forming provisional conclusions: that, so far, reincarnation is the best explanation of the data.

A diversion: the endless posing of alternatives, and the provisional nature of the current best conclusion

Regarding the "we can't rule out all sorts of alternatives" approach, and along the lines of what I suspect the anti-"hyper-skepticism" argument raised by @nbtruthman was getting at (although I didn't read much of the long page at the link he supplied): at some point, this approach becomes a little farcical.

For example, you could say to me, "I had lunch with my friend yesterday", and I could then respond: "Oh, we can't be sure of that. You could have hallucinated it. It could also be a false memory inserted by another living person via psi. Another possibility is that somebody else impersonated your friend. None of these possibilities can be ruled out."

So, you say to me: "OK, let me prove it to you. Here, I'm ringing my friend on speakerphone so that he can confirm to me in your presence that we had lunch together yesterday."

You do that, and your friend confirms it, but then I respond: "Oh, but that doesn't definitively confirm it. It's possible that our memories of that just-gone phone call were inserted into each of our minds by psi by the same living person who inserted the original false memories of your lunch with your friend. It's also possible that the person on the other end of the line is the same impersonator whom you mistakenly believed to be your friend at lunch, and who, via hacking skills or social engineering, has taken over, or at least gained unconditional access to, your friend's phone."

And on and on it goes, with the most plausible conclusion being consistently doubted via ever-more-ingenious elaborations of hypothetical alternative scenarios.

Granted, given that reincarnation is already an anomalous phenomenon, it's a lot more reasonable to posit other anomalous phenomena as alternative possibilities than in the case of "an everyday lunch". At some point, though, it seems to me, a person would have to accept that the alternative possibilities have been excluded to a reasonable extent.

A further diversion on your evidential requirements

So, at what point would you accept that reincarnation has been adequately tested, and can confidently be claimed to be true, albeit that, as in all empirical science, absolute proof is unattainable - that even an adequately tested hypothesis might later be falsified by new data? What more do you need? We have a clue in this:

(2022-08-31, 05:10 PM)Durward Wrote: I feel that in order to test this, we need a method that bridges the gap between death and rebirth. The death scars are impressive and come close to this. The markings of certain cultures on the deceased that show up in the next life are impressive. But we can't rule out intent and other forms of creating these in a child, yet. And we don't have this as a certain condition, it doesn't always show up, all the time, in everyone equally.

OK, this is interesting. It's fine if you don't have an answer to this, but: how do you propose that we test this? Which method or experiment do you suggest?

A third diversion: on mediums contacting dead spirits who supposedly are currently reincarnated

(2022-09-01, 07:08 PM)Durward Wrote: Then, we get mediums claiming they are talking with a dead person, a spirit, someone known to the person they are speaking to, and at the same time some child is repeating the same memory and claiming it as a past life

Can you give us an example of this?

Your unique alternative hypotheses

Moving on:

Comparing the two lists above, the hypotheses you've raised that Ian Stevenson didn't seem to address explicitly are:

Psychic ability (post #87), Akashic record retrieval (post #87), steering by psychic or medium parents (post #89), psychic force by another living person (post #87), leftovers of the once-living (posts #99 and #133), demonic interference (post #87), and herd intoxication (post #108).

Considering the first two

Let's consider the first two - psychic ability and retrieval from the Akashic records - together, since they both amount to the same idea: some sort of clairvoyance allowing direct access to information, whether from Akashic records or elsewhere. My own response to this is: OK, this is possible, but it doesn't explain the birthmarks*, it doesn't explain how this could occur when, in Dr Stevenson's observation, the children generally weren't psychically talented, and it doesn't explain, as I wrote above, what would motivate a child to (subconsciously, presumably), access this information, and treat it as a past life when it isn't.

* Maybe, though, you'd suggest that the child began accessing the information at conception, and incorporated it into its body plan? That would seem to me to be a bit of a stretch, but, OK, it's possible.

Now, you will probably want to emphasise my acknowledgement that this is a possible alternative hypothesis, and can't be definitively ruled out, and I in turn emphasise that reincarnation nevertheless remains the far better and more plausible explanation, especially for cases with birthmarks.

Considering the next two

Let's again consider the next two - steering by psychic or medium parents and psychic force by another living person - together, since both are based on the same core mechanism of one or more living humans, whether parents or otherwise, psychically forcing ("installing") memories and behaviour/personation of the past life individual into the child.

Presumably, birthmarks would be explained on this hypothesis by the forcing agent similarly installing them at conception or during gestation using psychic or even psychokinetic talents.

The first question that occurs to me, as for the prior two alternative hypotheses, is: why? What would motivate a person to do such a thing? And would it be deliberate or unintentional? In either case, it seems like a strange thing to want to do to a child.

Do we have any evidence that such a thing is even possible to the extent required: for one person to psychically install a whole bunch of memories, behaviours, and personality matching a deceased individual into another living being, and, at the same time, psychically install into that other living being the belief that all of that belongs to a life (s)he formerly lived? Even if so, does it really occur as often as would be required for it to explain all cases of the reincarnation type?

Also: why do the past-life memories tend to fade around the same time in these cases? Would you perhaps suggest that the psychic installers might install the past life data once only, early on in the child's life, and not ever reinforce them, such that they naturally fade over time? Why would they all (uniformly) take this approach?

Also: why only in children, or at least predominantly in children? Is the psychic installation process too difficult to perform on adults?

Considering the fifth

Re your "leftovers of the once living" hypothesis: as you acknowledge, this is kind of like possession. I defer, then, to Ian Stevenson's points above re possession.

Considering the sixth

Re your demonic interference hypothesis: this is similar to the two hypotheses above where the mechanism is a forced installation via psi, with the only difference being the nature of the conscious agent performing the installation. Obviously, the question of motivation no longer applies, since demons have an interest in generally messing with us, either for the sake of it, or to deceive us. This would probably be the most likely alternative hypothesis for a Christian to chose, with the additional hypothesis being that the aim of the demons is to deceive us into believing in reincarnation so as to lead us away from the Gospels.**

The remaining questions of that earlier section seem applicable though.

** I'm not sure though whether there even is an explicit rejection of reincarnation by Christ in the Gospels. @Brian, as the board's resident Christian, do you know of any such thing, or in general of good reasons to believe that reincarnation is incompatible with Christianity, and in particular with the Gospels?

Considering the seventh

I don't understand this herd intoxication hypothesis, so I can't analyse it.

Summarising

Some of these hypotheses are stronger than others, but, in my view, they are all less plausible than the reincarnation hypothesis. I understand that you seek a higher standard of evidence before definitively concluding that reincarnation is the best hypothesis. I asked you above to clarify a little as to what that evidence might be. I'm curious to know this though: let's say that for some reason you were required to pick which hypothesis you currently think best fits the data. Would you pick reincarnation?

A few postscripts

(2022-09-02, 12:27 AM)Durward Wrote: Sick bunch, and many of these scientists are not any better, believe me. They are so negative, about everything, while not comprehending that the negative approach already kills the results of many tests. They literally block things on purpose with strong disbelief in advance of testing. Yet that isn't psi phenomena at all to them. Deny, deny, deny.

To which scientists do you refer here? Can you share a few examples? Maybe name some names if you feel comfortable. Are you talking about "skeptic" scientists (whose aim is purely to debunk) posing as parapsychologists, or parapsychologists proper (who generally are open-minded yet critical), or non-parapsychological scientists (who typically know nothing about the field), or...?...

I assume you mean the first type, but it would be helpful to get your clarification, and some names would be even more helpful, just to get a clearer idea of what you're talking about.

Penultimately, a cheeky little quip (emphasis in the quote added by me):

(2022-09-04, 05:45 PM)Durward Wrote: I have to assume you disagree with everything you just mentioned and that you blindly accept Stevenson's conclusions, ideas, theories at face value. I assume this because you have not asserted your own pro or con here.

Huh. I'd gathered from your criticism of Ian Stevenson that ASSUMPTIONS were a very bad thing. Wink

Finally: thanks for your contributions so far to an interesting discussion.
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Absolutely amazing and extensive. Wow! Thanks, I will be working on this for days.

The only way I can answer these is to take individual portions and respond. If I don't, I will be accused of rambling, or it is too long for the short attention spans, and they will complain again. So that might take some time. This sentence is likely too much for them already.

Thank you very much for this. I see we agree on many points, and there is not really that much deviation.

Some likely points i see right away are based in terminology, expression, POV context. So not really any disagreement.

As I have expressed before: I don't have any problem with reincarnation or past life memory.
Some people in this forum seem to enjoy twisting what I say and claiming that I do have a problem with reincarnation and past life memory, just because I don't share that THIS COLLECTION of 1966 reports by Stevenson (CALLED SUGGESTED by him) is perfect, or his conclusions are perfect. And YOU just said the same thing.

I said that we need to keep an open mind about what is really reincarnation, what is actual past life memory, and what is psi phenomena data acquisition.

Damn, Stevenson said close to the same thing in this book, yet it appears that many members just glaze over that part. Obvious God status.

Saying that in my opinion, Sudduth's critique was valid from a science point of view, when it wasn't even my critique, set people off. 
Showing that none of us are allowed to have any opinion. If we do and it isn't mainstream or what they want, watch out, troll attack.
Sudduth followed the letter of science, and that is all that is, however harsh. It isn't my work, or my critque, but as far as science is concerned, it is what it is.

Another point of contention being that people who don't experience psi phenomena don't understand how personal and integrated into your psyche these experiences can be, so deep to the point of owning them, because they feel like they are your personal experiences and memories. 

You would think I was speaking blasphemy, when I was speaking from my own experiences, which people then try to discredit or deny, as if they are the boss of my own life, memory, and experience. 

I don't think anyone has to totally agree with everything Stevenson or anyone else has conjured together as explanations or reasoning. 
And I see that you agree with some of the same points others have made, and that I agree with. 
So we are not in total disagreement on what it is that I was using to make my point.
(2022-09-09, 06:24 PM)Laird Wrote:
Quote:I have to assume you disagree with everything you just mentioned and that you blindly accept Stevenson's conclusions, ideas, theories at face value. I assume this because you have not asserted your own pro or con here.
Huh. I'd gathered from your criticism of Ian Stevenson that ASSUMPTIONS were a very bad thing. Wink


We could start right here at the end... I was poking aggravated fun at my favorite use of ASS U ME. Seems to have flown right over some heads.

My point was, most members didn't (until now) insert thier own agreement or disagreement with the subject, the content, or within the context of something I posted. They troll attacked me instead of sticking to the conversation, the subject matter, or being reasonable.

All I got were different versions of "that's wrong."  or "You talk too much" or "You ramble and I don't agree", or they would quote me and say something disconnected, twisted, and wrong about it, putting me into this horrible context that wasn't even true. 

Trying to force me into a corner, intimidate me, bully me into silence, which just makes me have to explain the context, which they blow right past again like they have one brain cell, or missed the whole subject here, and then right back into attack mode, while never defending what it is they think they are defending. Never stating any opinion. Never actually contributing to anything except trying to hammer me.

Thus my comment about assuming that you have no opinions one way or the other. You likely did just as others did, just drop in and poop on me with things unrelated to the subject matter or out of context, no explanations, no opinion, no debate, no "I'm for this idea, or against that on." My favorite there was forum members arguing with me about things that Stevenson said, SO NOT EVEN MY OWN WORDS. Wow... Take it up with Stevenson people.

I have very little patience for kindergarten.

Then they want me to dig into my research data and prove this, prove that, show me, wah wah wah, while never doing this to support whatever troll garbage they are trying to generate. It was pretty obvious that none of them actually read Stevenson, or went back to refresh. So just being trolls, and not actually doing the homework or knowing what it is they are talking about. We saw that "I can't remember" show up... yet you want to argue with me? What part of that is difficult to comprehend?

What it was they disagree or agree on, and why, is usually never clarified as a debate point. 
The forum rarely stated any actual opinions or conclusions, just ripping up what other people have said, and flushing it down some toilet, without any other reasoning behind it.
(2022-09-09, 06:24 PM)Laird Wrote: Alternative hypotheses (to reincarnation) considered by the author (Doctor Ian Stevenson):

 
  • Fraud (pages 331-333). [Neither reread nor summarised because nobody in this discussion seems to consider this to be a valid hypothesis anyway.]


  • Cryptomnesia (pages 333-342). [As above.]

Correct and agree, where I ass-u-me it would have been helpful to include any fraud he did discover. But not my call and not included in the subject of Stevenson or the forum subject, which was Sudduth's critique.
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(2022-09-09, 06:24 PM)Laird Wrote: Genetic memory (pages 342-343).

     
  • The hypothesis: Memories are inherited from ancestors.


  • The author's response: Doesn't account for the majority of cases, in which the putatively prior-life person is not an ancestor of the person living the current life.

Again I agree, no problem.
Notes: Correct, as far as we know, and obvious not in some cases, or highly unlikely. 
Where this was not as obvious in the Alaska people, where certain skills can have the same family tree. (Just being open to possible, not saying it is, before the trolls take this out of context.)
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From time to time I feel the need to add some of my own perspective.

Much of this discussion revolves around information, I suppose things like names of people or places. The sort of stuff that people memorise in order to win trivia quiz games. I suppose in the Leininger case such information plays a significant part.

However, I'd like to suggest a different perspective. What if there is no such data, so that the idea of acquiring information from other means whether mundane or psychic shifts out of scope? How does the concept of reincarnation even have relevance to us?

That is where I found myself at one point in my life, not concerned with mysteriously-acquired information. That had never even occurred to me. I was wrestling with something else, something less abstract but more immediate and personal. In modern terminology, it could be labelled as PTSD - post-traumatic stress disorder. I don't think that terminology was in use, perhaps yet to be coined at the time. And the problem I was wrestling with was having some sort of PTSD without having any previous trauma. PTSD without any T.

That was something I tried to come to terms with over a number of years, and eventually, having exhausted all possible causes in this life, began to consider that maybe it came from a previous life. That was the point at which I opened up my thinking to the possibility of reincarnation as a real explanation for what I was experiencing.

So for me, this is and has always been the most powerful evidence (in my own life) of having lived in some previous life.

It also was very much about identity and self. If I feel suffering and distress, this is me feeling it, living it, it isn't something I'm acquiring by psychic means. Whatever it is, it is simply a part of myself. Very much about the continuity of self.

By the way, those things happened to me (in this life) many years ago now. I'm not struggling or wrestling with that stuff nowadays, thankfully.
(This post was last modified: 2022-09-25, 10:05 AM by Typoz. Edited 1 time in total.)
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