Ha! Ha! Ha!....
What is cherry picking about....NDE's, phenotypic plasticity, epigenetics, unconscious mind, Copenhagen Interpretation of QM, anthropic principle, panpsychism, cosmopsychism, IIT, biofield, subjective nature of reality etc., that I bring up every now and then? (I have added a few more that you missed).
These are the areas that hint at the exotic nature of life and the universe. These point to those areas where, if we bother to understand and integrate them, we could have a better understanding of our mind, consciousness and life itself.....instead of the same rigmarole of convoluted 'explanations' born of scientism.
No, I didn't miss them, Sriram. I simply wanted to save you further embarrassment by limiting the number of areas that you have dabbled in with your rather sticky fingers.
However as you have brought them up, I feel obliged to remind you of some of the problems:
A) NDEs - All you have are anecdotal accounts. Yes, they undoubtedly happen, but When it comes to validation of your pet theories, you have nothing of any substance. Indeed,
a person who has experienced a genuine NDE, has gone through three main stages:
1) Consciousness in the moments before losing consciousness. At this point there is brain activity
2) Unconsciousness, which may include a period when brain activity flat lines
3) Consciousness in the moments following No 2. Again there is obviously brain activity
This whole event is a process, and there is no evidence that NDEs are only or even a phenomenon related to No 2.
B) Phenotypic plasticity - see
http://www.religionethics.co.uk/index.php?topic=17486.0 where your vague meanderings where brought to an abrupt halt by someone who has actually studied the subject(ProfessorDavey). See replies 15, 18, 23 and 30 in particular.
C) Epigenetics - see
http://www.religionethics.co.uk/index.php?topic=16546.0 where you were challenged on your ideas by several posters, including one very pertinent one in reply 5.
D) Unconscious mind - a fact that is very well known and has been discussed in great detail on several threads, especially involving Alan Burns. As NTTS succinctly put it in reply 2 on this thread in relation to 'free will' :
" As the endless discussion in the "Searching for God" thread shows, many people want to define it more along the lines of being able to have done differently (without any difference being random) which is simply incoherent."
E) Copenhagen Interpretation of QM - which is itself open to interpretation and, in the light of further experiments and discoveries, does not substantiate the idea that measurement has to be done by a conscious entity. You also fail to mention other more modern interpretations.
F) Anthropic principle - basically a very vague, non scientific idea(it can't be falsified) which doesn't necessarily imply even human life. Even its weaker form is no more than self evident(that the current Universe is of the form that allows intelligent observers.)
G) Cosmopsychism - an hypothesis, as is the idea of multiverses which could give some credence as to why we live in a universe which seems to be fine tuned but isn't.
H) IIT - even its proponents(Koch and Tononi) do not attribute consciousness indiscriminately to all things. "For example, if there are no interactions, there is no consciousness whatsoever. For the IIT, a camera sensor as such is completely unconscious…" (Tononi, 2008). You also seem to ignore the reasoning of critics such as the philospher, Searle or the computer scientist, Scott Aaronson.
I) Biofield - I simply refer you to the thread on Biofields(which you started)
http://www.religionethics.co.uk/index.php?topic=18038.0 and refer you to my response(Post 17) which you, very predictably, took exception to. Seems it's a classic case of you wishing to cherry pick, rather than take into account all that the article actually said.
J) Subjective nature of reality - I would direct you to the thread entitled 'tree in a forest' (
http://www.religionethics.co.uk/index.php?topic=16937.0) where the whole subject was discussed in some detail, and in which you met a range of views which didn't quite correlate with your own(I'm being kind). I direct you to replies by Jeremy(reply 23), Nearly Sane(reply 31), Bluehillside(replies 41 and 49), NTTS(replies 46 and 82), Gordon(reply 51), Outrider(replies 60 and 94), Bramble(replies 67 and 71)
K) Although you didn't mention this, I would also add 'Evolution'. I refer you to the thread(that you started) entitled 'Evolvability'and would point you in the direction of a reply by NTTS(post 15) in particular.
What seems to come through in all these threads is not that you are necessarily wrong, but that you have an inclination to ignore or to be averse to criticism and to learn from it. Far too often you seem to retire into your own closed personal position often without thinking through valid points made by others but simply carrying on regardless. I say that as a person who is not devoted to 'scientism' a term which Blue makes clear, and ask you again:
What method and reasoning would you use to convince me that your views hold merit? I basically asked you that in post 40, but, so far, you don't seem to be able to give an answer.