Moderators: nickj, Lady of Mystery, Mandrake, bananafish, support
abraxus wrote:I quite like the carlyle line "I cannot read minds, but I can read the occasional thought..." paraphrasing obviously..
and told me that he got the name Peter, that my Dad should look after himself and that I can do what he (the medium) can do. Creepy stuff when one considers that my Dad, whose name was Peter, was dying in hospital from a stroke at the time and was not co-operating with anyone regarding his habilitation.
VoodooMick wrote:I think the sceptics are as much "shut-eyes" as the psychics that they accuse.. I went to an evening of "genuine" mediumship a few years ago expecting to witness nothing special, until he picked on me sitting in the audience.. and told me that he got the name Peter, that my Dad should look after himself and that I can do what he (the medium) can do. Creepy stuff when one considers that my Dad, whose name was Peter, was dying in hospital from a stroke at the time and was not co-operating with anyone regarding his habilitation.
I don't personally think this is as clear cut as "prove it if it's real". "Prove that there is life after death". I'm groping at the edge of something here but we can't scientifically "prove that love exists" either, but we all believe in it (don't we?).
cragglecat wrote:I would say that love is an abstract concept. Testing that a medium really is speaking to a known dead relative is surely something that can be tested? For example by asking questions where the answers are only known to the deceased and the relative hearing the reading and I don't mean questions like 'have you been looking at photographs of your recently deceased relative recently?". Although I am a sceptic I am NOT closed minded but the 'proof' that I seen offered up by believers does not convince me at all. As has already been mentioned, why do mediums never offer surnames?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests