ekim,
(1) There is nothing in what I said which suggests that. You agree that experience can have a subjective value but this does not mean that one has to eschew thinking. It's not an either/or situation, it's a both/and situation i.e. the inner value of joy can be experienced even when thinking is in process.
The point here is that "personal experience" provides only beliefs, opinions. "My practices led to an immense sensation of oneness" is fine, but tagging "therefore Ra" to it isn't.
To the extent that individuals find sensations or altered mental states have value to them, well and good. Sriram's mistake though is to overreach - he jumps straight form
beliefs ("aura", "biofield" etc) to a claim of
knowledge ("therefore these things are objectively real"). And that fails because, absent some means to verify the belief, there's no logical path from one to the other. That is, Sriram cannot meaningfully claim knowledge when he has no means to know whether he actually has knowledge rather than just belief.
To the extent that he tries to justify the leap from one to the other ("lots of other things that once weren't known about were discovered later on, therefore...errr..." etc) the effort always collapses immediately into vary bad reasoning.