Sriram,
The important point here is not about Eagleman or about any specific hypothesis. It is about the fact that we cannot and should not take hard and rigid positions about the realities of life. If science has taught us anything at all it is that the world is much more complex and strange than we imagine (or than we can imagine as someone has said). We merely need to acknowledge this fact.
No-one that I know of doesn’t acknowledge that fact (well, no-one aside from certain theists perhaps). You’re in “breaking news: the Pope’s a catholic” territory again.
And demanding that all experiences and all conjectures need to be validated by the hard methods of science is a mistake.
It would be if anyone did that, yes. So far as I know though, no-one does do that. That does not mean though that you can just assert a claim into a fact – if not for the tools and methods of science then you need
some other method to distinguish the claim from just guessing. That’s your problem with “aura”, “biolfield” etc remember?
The idea of possibiliniasm, if it does anything at all...is to challenge the idea of scientism. And this is the only aim of this thread.
It’s barely an idea (and certainly not a new one) as it’s so endemic in the scientific community anyway, and scientism (ie, the statement that all that can be known can only be known by the tools of science) is a position held by no-one that I know of.
I am glad that there are now many young science professionals who are thinking out of the box and looking at new ways of understanding reality.
I’m glad that you’re glad. There always have been though. That’s why people do science – to discover more.
The staid old school science is finally being challenged.....
What “staid old school”? That’s something else you’ve just made up. Many paradigm-shifting discoveries science has historically made have been achieved by people thinking "outside the box” as you put it.
…and that can only be a good thing.
Yes, it always has been.
Moving forward from a very Dawkinian 'if we have an open mind, our brains will fall out' nonsensical position to one of openness....is most welcome.
That’s a misrepresentation of what he actually says. Being told to have an open mind is fine, but opening your mind so far that you accept any assertion
of a fact
as a fact with no means of verification is the “brain falling out bit”. Again, that’s your problem remember?