Sriram,
How can you possibly reason out on something for which you have no inputs what so ever?!
Easily, because I do have the “inputs”. Those inputs are the (occasional) arguments you attempt to justify the explanatory narratives you claim for you experiences, which are always wrong. They’re wrong because they rely on various fallacies – albeit that you just ignore that problem when it’s shown to you.
Your mistake here is that you’re still assuming the experience and your explanation for it are the aligned, when they’re quite likely not. See if this helps: a while ago a friend of mine experienced awful chest pains in the night and so convinced himself that he’d had a heart attack. After a bunch of tests though he was told that in fact he’d had severe indigestion, and there was no heart abnormality at all.
What can you learn from this? You can learn that even though there was only one experience (ie chest pain) more robust reasoning and evidence than he initially reached for gave him a very different explanation for it. This is essentially what you do – you have experiences, and then apply lousy reasoning to obtain your explanations for them. More robust reasoning on the other hand tells us that your reasoning is wrong, so you have no worthwhile argument to support your explanatory claims – they’re just unqualified guesses.
I have the inputs and I have reasoned it out quite well (to the extent possible)....thank you.
No you haven’t. You have experiences (as did my friend), but your reasoning to justify your explanations for them is appalling. Your problem though is that rather than address why it’s appalling when it’s explained to you you always run away.
What does this say about you do you think?