Sriram,
This is funny. You have no idea of my experiences. You admit to that and you say that you are not commenting on them. OK fine.
Could that be the first hint of progress here?
You nevertheless keep saying that my ideas are wrong.
Yes.
My ideas are however based on my experiences (over a life time).
“…based on” – yes, just as my friend’s idea of a heart attack was based on his experience too. Keep going…
Now....how the heck could you or anyone else possibly know that my ideas (or interpretations) are wrong when you have no clue about my experiences?
Aw no – you were doing so well for a while there too. We know that your ideas are wrong when you attempt to reason them out and the reasons are false – as they always are. That’s why the doctor came up with a more accurate diagnosis than my friend – the experience of chest pain wasn’t challenged, but the reasoning my friend used to justify his idea “heart attack” was demonstrated to be wrong.
If my ideas contradicted some established theory of science, you might perhaps have a case. But when that is not the case, how can you possibly know that my ideas are wrong?
Actually they do often contradict the science, but you have a more serious problem than that to address (not that you ever will though) – namely that they “contradict" reason and logic too.
It is obviously wishful thinking on your part...
You're accusing someone
else of wishful thinking? The irony!
...born of a deep rooted fear of religious teachings and of what you call the supernatural.
Your paranoia is showing here. It’s no such thing. What it actually is is just the simple matter of identifying the various fallacies on which your reasoning to explain your experiences relies.
i am quite clear on that.
You are quite clearly wrong on that.
Get used to it guys. There is lots more to life than just the physical world.
Can you justify that statement without relying on various fallacious arguments?
Nothing to fear!
Nothing to take seriously.
Its all great fun actually....really. And you don't even need religions.
Why do you find being lost in a world of irrationality to be “great fun”?