Sriram,
Hold on guys..!
When I feel (and sometimes see) energy movement around me why would I think it is something other than what it is?
You’ve overreached again. What you should say there is, “what I
think that it is”. Whether it actually is that thing is the point here.
More so when it has been confirmed by other people experiencing a similar thing?
First it hasn’t been “confirmed” at all. What you meant to say there was that some people with the same enculturating influences as you think that it’s the same thing that you think it is. Funnily enough, the incidence of the same causal attribution is much less in societies without those cultural memes. Why do you suppose that is?
Second, countless peoples in countless societies have believed things to be real that turned out to be no such thing, like tree spirits. What makes this specific belief so special?
Third, yet again you’ve collapsed into a logical fallacy – the
argumentum ad populum.
It also works very well in terms of my body and mental state at any point of time.
So does my belief in leprechauns. What on earth has that to do though with whether either auras or leprechauns are real?
Why are you guys telling me it could be 'something else' merely because it doesn't fit in with your world view?
More dishonesty. You’re being told that it could be something else because it
could be something else, not because of a world view. Do you think my experience of leprechauns could be something else because of your world view too? Why not?
Why should I wait for someone to invent a aura meter to tell me that indeed I am experiencing an aura...! That is ridiculous! Personal experiences need not be doubted to THAT extent. We don't need meters and instruments for everything.
You should wait for sound reasoning or evidence because without either you have no means to verify the claim, either to others
or to yourself. You’re just guessing.
Science may not have identified what it is...so what? It didn't identify gravity waves for so many years, does not mean it did not exist. It'll probably get there by and by.
You’ve had this stupidity explained to you many times now, so why do you repeat it? That lots of things weren’t discovered and then were discovered tells you absolutely nothing about whether auras (or leprechauns) are real. The status “might be” for your claims cannot be changed because
different phenomena have been found to be an “is”.
I agree that if we personally don't experience something, we tend to doubt it, but there is a limit to skepticism. Compulsive skepticism can be dysfunctional.
You’ve missed it again. It’s not that you “personally don't experience something”, it’s that you have
no means to verify what that something is.
Look, you’re clearly not much of a thinker and I don’t blame you for that (though your dishonesty is another matter). These arguments that undo you are very simple though, so you have no excuse for not at least trying to deal with them rather than ignore them in favour of repeating the same mistakes over and over again.
What’s stopping you?