It is not an unsupported belief. It is not just plucked from nowhere.
It is. I asked you what methodology you had to validate any evidence you had to support it, and you said you didn't have any. It is, by your own description, an unsupported belief - again, that doesn't make it definitively wrong, but it just doesn't give anyone else a reason to accept that it's right.
I have the instances of QM where observation (consciousness) influences wave-particle duality.
And you've had it explained to you that 'observation' does not need to be a conscious observer - again, that's an unfortunate metaphor.
I have Wheeler's participatory anthropic principle.
Which, whilst put forward by a very eminent scientist, was not in any way anything more than unsupported ponderings on his part. He defined it as speculation, and never submitted the idea in a peer-reviewed paper anywhere.
I have instances of documented NDE's.
Which, when investigated, have better supported explanations that don't involve spirits and which, even if you discount the conventional wisdom of science, still aren't supporting your theory, they're just not contradicting it.
Instances of documented reincarnation cases.
As above.
I have Chalmer's new ideas of panpsychism.
For which there is no methodology for testing or investigating, and no conventional demonstrations of validity.
I have ideas of Jung's collective consciousness.
For which there is no supporting evidence.
I have Eagleman's theories of the unconscious mind being larger and more powerful than the conscious mind.
Which is not really in question, but doesn't support your claim, it just doesn't contradict it.
I also have centuries of world philosophies where consciousness (Self) is considered as the real power behind the apparent events in the world.
And there are centuries of folk-wisdom to support ghosts, witches, black-magic, fairies, kelpies, naga, bakemono and who knows what else. Fairy tales are not a reliable source of data for determining the nature of reality.
You have a pyramid scheme, you have the MLM of woo. Your woo claims stand proudly on the shoulders of other woo-peddlers and hijack the idle speculations of people with actual credentials. None of what you've cited here is any better an indication of reality than me suggesting that the magic of Jesus is supported by the fact that Lewis Carrol wrote about Aslan and Tolkien wrote about Gandalf, therefore magic's real.
You need a methodology, you don't have one.
You need some basis for assessing whether that methodology produces valid results, you don't have one.
And then you need those results, and you don't have them.
You can suggest that these are possibilities, and no-one can argue strongly against that, but you're over-reaching the validity of your claims when you suggest that you've definitively identified a limit to the capability of conventional science to investigate a phenomenon or when you claim that your failure to accept the capabilities of the mechanisms that science has evidenced is therefore sufficient grounds to presume that some unrelated claim is valid.
O.