Recognizing gravity means knowing that some force is pulling you down when you fall. Almost all humans in the world (baring a few thinkers perhaps....once they are old enough) will not know of even notice that something is making them fall down. It is not about the mechanism....which I think even today we are not completely sure of.
Falling down, not flying, birds flying, monkeys jumping up trees....are all a normal part of life that no one questions. Even if someone questions, it will be attributed to God's plan. Similarly with bacterial and viral infections.
No, people wonder why these things happen and if they can't find other answers they attribute things to god/spirituality/fate. We've just got better, over time, at finding those answers.
Point being that even today we could be influenced and surrounded by so many forces that we are not aware of....even though evidence for them could be readily available. We need to acknowledge this.
We already have, science's output is always provisional.
Spiritual experiences are personal and cannot be shared with others.
And therefore at best questionable. The overwhelming majority of us experience the sensation of vision, but we have no direct way of comparing those entirely subjective experiences, so we develop a common framework of calibrated references to define concepts like colour and shape, and then machinery that can objectively measure those colourse and shapes and then we have some confidence of an independent confirmation of those concepts. If you want to throw 'spirit' into the mix you need an equivalent to spectrophotometer.
But the experience can be discussed and understood by people who have had similar experiences.
The fact that so many people don't experience it can also be discussed and understood, and conclusions drawn from that evidence.
This is well known practice in spiritual circles. Based on these experiences, we come up with philosophical interpretations which could be accepted by others within the circle. We are not concerned with mechanisms or the detailed microscopic aspects of the experience.
Which is why you have no valid basis for presuming that any of your conjectures is an accurate account, and why no-one here is under any obligation to take what you say seriously.
But some research findings such as NDE investigations, reincarnation cases documented by Jim Tucker, could confirm these interpretations.
Except that they've all been fairly thoroughly refuted, repeatedly.
It is not that I am definitely correct but that the ideas are necessary to explain certain experience and also some of these research findings.
No, they aren't necessary at all. They aren't even warranted for most of us who don't have these experiences that, themselves, have been given undue consideration in your assessment.
Problem however is that scientists and science enthusiasts have this problem with anything that could indicate possible non physical phenomena.
Not ideologically, they don't. They have a problem with claims being made without sufficient basis, and you don't have a reliable methodology for moving from your concept to validation. Scientests are rigorous people, they quantify their claims. If you want to suggest that something's somehow intrinsically beyond science's remit (despite the claim that it somehow elicits a sensory responsed, at least in some people) then you're going to have to provide a methodology for testing it or it's going to be ignored.
This results in summary dismissal of such ideas.
It isn't a summary dismissal, it's a reasoned dismissal. You have a claim, you have a logic, but you have not methodology for testing, so all you have is a claim, and no way to differentiate your claim from any other baseless assertion. The claim is dismissed, the idea remains a vague possibility awaiting a methodology.
This is what creates the divide.
No, what creates the divide is the expectation that because you believe everyone else should lower their rigorous standards and just accept your claim.
If scientists even accept the possibility of such phenomena existing, it will reduce the ideological gap somewhat and pave the way for possible research and investigations....in whatever way it is possible.
I expect pretty much every scientist in every field is open to the possibility of new phenomena, but if you want to suggest that there's something centuries of the most capable people on the planet have missed you need something more than your tingly feeling.
O.