Given the part you quoted and how you are commenting about a non-quoted part of my post, you are wrong on both counts.
Sorry sunshine. Back to school you go.
Given the part you quoted and how you are commenting about a non-quoted part of my post, you are wrong on both counts.
Not my fault in post #79 you said the proof science gets results are its results. That is circular.
If ten million people had random, very infrequent paranomral powers, but we could observe and study them, we would learn how to control them better. Like we did with things like steam machines, internal combustion engines, fission, rockets, vaccines. When we start with something completely new, we always start with a small experimental system involving a small number of researcers and subjects (where applicable). Our beginning attempts are often crude, we get things wrong, stuff in the lab explodes/dies/falls apart. But we refine our procedures.So if one out of ten million people had random, very infrequent, uncontrollable paranormal powers we'd, "have already had a very good confidence they exist and were using them practically in large capacity."
Please explain EXACTLY how that would be so. ...
Sorry sunshine. Back to school you go.
If ten million people had random, very infrequent paranomral powers, but we could observe and study them,
In the meantime I just blew your conclusion out of the water.![]()
It seems to me that an "exact" description would be impossible,
Correct. And you haven't been able to defend your assertion. It's your claim to flesh out, not mine.
Except, of course, that I didn't make the assertion to which you seem to be referring.
You haven't clarified the circular logic, just dodged it by pointing out stuff a third of the way back in the thread.Like I said, I get it: You continue pointing at stuff a third of the way back in the thread that has been clarified since. We're done.