Bruce Burleson wrote:Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Sorry to cherry-pick your post, Bruce, but something jumped out at me.
If something relates to true information that is transmitted apart from the logical process, it is arational. That does not mean that you cannot go back and subject it to rational analysis - it's just that it originated by something other than rational processes - like when you hear the phone ring and know who it is, and then pick it up and your revelation is confirmed.
(My emphasis)
'Revelation'? I would prefer to describe it as 'guessing right'. Or are you arguing for some brand of telepathy here? We tend to remember the times that we are correct in guessing who is on the other end of the phone because they stand out. Far more often we are wrong and don't even remember or think about it. This is called the
Von Restorff Effect.
Perhaps you just chose a bad example but this doesn't endear me to your theory of aratioanlity.

I agree with you. It wasn't a good analogy. We do tend to remember the hits and forget the misses. I'll give you another example from a discussion with an atheist named Duckphup (some other forum). He related an experience when he says that he knew when his father died, even though he was thousands of miles away. He confirmed the fact by contacting his family. This is different than the telephone analogy. Information was transmitted to him by some means that cannot be described by the Von Restorff effect. It wasn't by logic or reason or objective evidentiary analysis. It was "arational." Now, it could be confirmed by rational means (calling the family), but it was not received by rational means. It was immediate, proximate, and non-deductive. That is an example of revelation or intuition. Previously I have called it the "Duckphup Effect" in his honor, and will continue to do so.
I don't know the guy - although a quick google shows that he has posted on RD.net in the past.
All I have in evidence for this 'arational' event is a second hand anecdote. Either or both of you could be lying, could have confused details or misremembered timelines. You give no details about the status of his father's health at the time, whether, perhaps, he phoned his family several times a week because of a 'feeling' and this time he was correct - in which case this could very well be an example of the Von Restorff effect again.
There are eye-witness accounts, often 2nd, 3rd hand or worse, of the most bizarre and preposterous events, from UFO abductions to miracle cures, from levitation to spontaneous human combustion. Do I believe all of these? No. Do I believe
any of these? No. I simply utilise Occam's razor and keep an open mind while standing firmly in the sceptical camp. My stance on the Duckphup Effect is similar.
You will have to come up with a far better example. Or have your friend Duckphup provide
proof of his revelation that will convince me that he is not lying, mistaken, delusional or misquoted.