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"Mad" Miles
09-26-2010, 09:45 PM
Exactamundo American Shaman,

Woo woo, that's the spelling, has been around to disparage, either affectionately or derisively, depending on context and delivery, since New Age spirituality/psychology reemerged in the early to mid-seventies.

Woo is just a more recent shorthand. I only learned it several months ago while researching Someguy's claims about the evils of vaccination.

I try to stay au courant in spite of my diminishing faculties and ripe old age of fifty-four.

Whoo hoo! (Different word/s)

podfish
09-26-2010, 10:14 PM
"..what does "woo" mean in this sentence?

This site (https://www.randi.org/) has a lot of commentary from a self-titled "skeptical" community. They use the term to identify non-science based doctrines or claims. Usually pejoratively.

It's a pretty high-quality online group, with a lot of interesting participants. Kinda like wacco, but more focused and less regional.

podfish
09-27-2010, 08:25 AM
I have other information from studies on placebos that differ from Jeff's opinion. ... If I read Jeff correctly, he wasn't denying the existence (or range) of what people call the "placebo effect". I think he was saying that the term itself is often misapplied. If my Latin's correct, it translates as "I please" and Jeff's explanation sounds like that's the key factor that's being controlled for.
Most people seem to use the term to cover any situation where the body is encouraged to heal itself.

Braggi
09-27-2010, 12:12 PM
... Most people seem to use the term to cover any situation where the body is encouraged to heal itself.

Right podfish. When a doctor prescribes something he or she knows won't help, it's not because the placebo effect is expected to help with the healing. It's because the doctor wants you to go home and get better (and leave them alone) and the prescription will probably give enough time for the illness to pass. It used to be antibiotics which most docs thought of as harmless. Now that we know better it's moving into the area of vitamins and "supplements." Of course, not all of those are harmless either, but that's the stuff of a different thread.

I think we all imagine a good, positive attitude helps with healing though the studies are contradictory on this subject. When a real doctor invokes the placebo effect, it's more about buying time than using a magical healing tool.

-Jeff

Braggi
09-27-2010, 12:20 PM
I meant to add, the study of the placebo effect is very difficult indeed. It might be more significant for some people than others (of course) and it might make more of a difference with some categories of illness. It's going to be a long time until a study can be devised where the placebo effect doesn't figure in at all. Double blind studies are good in a lot of cases, but they're not perfect either. Imagine doing a double blind study using LSD.

-Jeff

Braggi
09-28-2010, 10:23 AM
A friend gave me a copy of this (don't know the author) but thought it was worth sharing to this thread that doesn't seem to end........

'REALITY" is what we take to be true.....
<snip>
So....We create our own reality......

So please explain to me how the six year old child that was just shot in a drive by shooting created her own reality? Please be specific. I just heard about it on the radio and wish to know the details.

-Jeff

jesswolfe
09-28-2010, 10:36 AM
So please explain to me how the six year old child that was just shot in a drive by shooting created her own reality? Please be specific. I just heard about it on the radio and wish to know the details.

-Jeff

This could be a whole new topic and probably is. I guess for me, I do think that we do create our own "experiences." How we ascribe meaning to what happens to us is all up to us. We decide if its good or bad or whatever. Its part of our makeup to look for meaning. But the nature and origin of reality is something much more complex than we can ever imagine or understand.

Jess

podfish
09-28-2010, 11:54 AM
So please explain to me how the six year old child that was just shot in a drive by shooting created her own reality?.. your point is taken, but although Pickles gave us the Parade Magazine version, his point is valid. It's extremely unlikely that people are equipped to identify the "true" reality, or even if that's a concept that has much meaning. Most people would indeed agree on a huge range of things that together make up reality; physical injury ranks up there. But even that's not something that people can come to perfect consensus on, as you can see in some of the discussions here regarding health & wellness (cleverly coming back to the thread's theme!!). Sometimes one person's perceptions are accurate, meaning they correspond to a strongly-provable and highly shared reality, while the others are merely subjective, meaning they correspond only to an inner reality experienced by that person. I suspect that most people spend most of their lives living in their subjective experience, though, where it's not particularly relevant whether or not their experience matches anyone else's. It guides their actions and feelings, and is expressed in ways that -do- become more objective reality for the rest of us - but it's their own.

It's extremely difficult to express this clearly without stumbling on weird semantic distinctions. I can't say I'm all that happy with how closely I've come to expressing the ideas. Recently I've been reading Bertrand Russell on the meaning of Einstein's ideas and his examples influence my thinking here. One thing I like about his approach is that he's a physicist - a natural philosopher - trying to come up with ideas and tools that describe the world as objectively as possible. This is different than more purely philosophical approach where things like solipsism come in to play. He points out very clearly that our bodies and minds are extremely poorly equipped to understand the universe we live in, in a very real sense, so by definition we really can't know reality. Instead we come up with functional descriptions that work for us as if they were true.

The cool thing about the physicist's approach is that he can effectively prove that some of the definitions of reality we use can't be right, but that there are very good reasons that they're good enough. And that's what we do with more quotidian reality - we mostly act as if we're perceiving pretty much the same things, thus defining a reality that the more pragmatic among us define as duh-obvious. Questions like what each person perceives when he says a thing is blue seem frivolous; most people agree that something IS blue, however they perceive it, and those who can't agree are considered to be unable to perceive something real.

I guess my point is that we're talking about a very smooth continuum, where a bullet wound is about as real as it gets (as Mike Krukow says, "real as a heart attack"), but the subjective impression of colors is somehow unreal - unknowably different for everyone.

So maybe this clarifies why I'm so interested in the scientific method? It's the only way to pin down something that we can all agree is functionally equivalent to reality.

"Mad" Miles
09-28-2010, 11:54 AM
Re: "Creating Our Own Reality"

I just watched this linked youtube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1vR6Cc00lU) yesterday. It's about politics, but it's also about the issue of our relationship to the world around us, and he specifically addresses the idea that our attitude and mental/emotional/spiritual intentions/efforts/actions create/determine/shape our experiences and world.

This younger than me by decades guy encapsulates reams of difficult social theory and political philosophy into a few minutes of very accessible and clear speaking. He gives me hope for the future, in a world that we are messing up so badly it's hard to find cause for such hope.


Pod, you posted as I did, here's a reply. You put it very well and touched on issues that have been part of the history of Western Philosophy for centuries. I found it fascinating stuff when I was a Philosophy undergrad. The whole empiricism debate among the English Empiricists (Berkeley, Hume and Locke), in response to Descartes, hashed and rehashed the whole, "what is a color and how do we know it?" question.

I find, along with many more accomplished thinkers before me who are the source of my thinking, that the more important question is about language. Since all linguistic communication is referential, when I say "blue" I'm not directly transferring my concept, let alone my experience, of the color blue to you, I'm referring to an idea/experience that we have consensually agreed (by we I mean the generations of humans, who in this case speak English) to call blue.

It's not a consensus we decided upon in a facilitated meeting last week, it's a consensus we inherited. Because we are individuals, in relatively similar bodies/minds, with shared culture, history, biological existence, and cognitive/linguistic skills on this planet, we can communicate, but we do so with techniques that are inherently limited by our separation and the nature of linguistic referentiality.

This makes us uncomfortable, we're social beings who seek community and intimacy. So we come up with ideas, which on an abstract level are true enough, such as: We're all one. We share the same history, genetics, planet, solar system, universe, web of life, so our separation is an illusion. And while that's true, we also experience what we experience as separate entities with separate minds/bodies and histories.

The play of meaning between those varied states/experiences/"realities" is what makes for the amazing array of creative takes on the whole, whatever it/this is! And there's the fun.

Key point, all description is by necessity abstraction and generalization. So nothing is exactly what it refers to (talking here about language and systems of meaning, called Signs/Signified in Semiology).

Meaning, reality, "The Truth", is by necessity referential and conveyed secondarily. (Yes, I just said this above, it bears repeating.) But that doesn't mean it (Truth, Reality, Oneness, etc.) doesn't exist. It's just not a simple as we like to think it is.

Of course, the counter-argument is from my favorite early literate childhood fictional character:

"I said what I meant and I meant what I said."

Horton Hears A Who, T. S. Geisel / Dr. Suess.

Please watch the video folks, The Punk Activist really does a good job of describing how we create our collective reality, in a way that is accessible to Science.

Cheers,

Pickles
09-28-2010, 03:06 PM
So please explain to me how the six year old child that was just shot in a drive by shooting created her own reality? Please be specific. I just heard about it on the radio and wish to know the details.

-Jeff


Have you never been caught up in someone else's "reality"?

Life can be very messy, as all our so called "realities" mix and mingle and invariably there are those who get caught in the crossfire, that in turn affects their reality or those surrounding them. It's all about learning and growth, so we can choose a better reality. Realities are ever changing....that's what makes life interesting and gives us purpose for evolving. If everything and everyone was perfect, what would be the point?

American Shaman
10-01-2010, 04:01 PM
So please explain to me how the six year old child that was just shot in a drive by shooting created her own reality? Please be specific. I just heard about it on the radio and wish to know the details.

-Jeff

Point well taken.

I also understand the power of "white lighters", people who envelop themselves in a powerful aura of white and pure light. With this they are able to live lives of innocence in even the harshest of places, and very little bad happens to them. Their realities are affected by it, their freinds have never been arrested, and not once have they ever gone to bed hungry.

These people are not my tribe, I have wanted to belong with them, but my reality is simply too different. My reality allows for innocent people to be murdered, and for people to suffer. I also don't believe in an all powerful god, although I have met and communicated with many different dieties.

I think there is a mistake made about what reality is and isn't, especially within the foundations of "new age thought". We all like to believe that if we simply imagine away all of our darkness, it will be so.

This is the same reason why "the Secret" fails for most people. We all have dark realities and wish them to be so. We intend for a comfortable life, and yet everything that we are is unsuited for such a life.

We created her reality for her.

jesswolfe
10-01-2010, 04:17 PM
[QUOTE=American Shaman;122685]
I also understand the power of "white lighters", people who envelop themselves in a powerful aura of white and pure light. With this they are able to live lives of innocence in even the harshest of places, and very little bad happens to them. Their realities are affected by it, their freinds have never been arrested, and not once have they ever gone to bed hungry.

These people are not my tribe, I have wanted to belong with them, but my reality is simply too different. My reality allows for innocent people to be murdered, and for people to suffer. I also don't believe in an all powerful god, although I have met and communicated with many different dieties.
/QUOTE]

We have so many beliefs and judgements about darkness and light. One being bad, the other good. I guess from the perspective of spirit, there is no good or bad. It all just is. And we come here to experience what its like to be in a body. I remember asking a guide once if I knew what I was getting into when I came to this world. I couldn't imagine that I would choose abuse (another reason to not like the Secret). What I was told is that we are all so intent on the experience, that we have no judgement about what we are jumping into. We are here to experience everything.

I don't think I would change the life I have lived. I wouldn't be the person I am now, helping others learn and grow from their own experiences. I have learned that being a witness to all of what life has to offer, the "good" and the "bad", is really grace. I can live with that. :)

Jess

Clancy
10-01-2010, 05:03 PM
This is the silliest, most narcissistic, bordering on solipsist development in so-called New Thought philosophy of all. Taken to its inevitable conclusion, there's no point in interfering with child abuse, because the child obviously 'chose' to come here to be abused. If you interfere, you're depriving them of their experience. Same goes for rape, torture, war, etc etc etc.

Psychopathic killers must love this philosophy: But Judge, I was only providing the lesson the victim came here for!


We have so many beliefs and judgements about darkness and light. One being bad, the other good. I guess from the perspective of spirit, there is no good or bad. It all just is. And we come here to experience what its like to be in a body. I remember asking a guide once if I knew what I was getting into when I came to this world. I couldn't imagine that I would choose abuse (another reason to not like the Secret). What I was told is that we are all so intent on the experience, that we have no judgement about what we are jumping into. We are here to experience everything.

I don't think I would change the life I have lived. I wouldn't be the person I am now, helping others learn and grow from their own experiences. I have learned that being a witness to all of what life has to offer, the "good" and the "bad", is really grace. I can live with that. :)

Jess

podfish
10-01-2010, 06:03 PM
I guess from the perspective of spirit, there is no good or bad. It all just is. And we come here to experience what its like to be in a body.
Although Clancy's take on these attitudes is a reasonable one (because the quote does say that there is absolutely no such thing as good/evil or right/wrong) I have a different objection.
It's practical - how on earth could you know such a thing?? How can you possibly know so specifically why we're here, or have any understanding of what "spirit" would be to have such a perspective?
I understand the search many/most people take to understand forces that seem to lie beyond our perceptions. I certainly agree that our perceptions aren't adequate for us to understand everything that's real. But along with that I can't accept that anyone "just knows" the rules of the spirit world, or who's controlling it.
Doesn't it give you pause that there have been uncountable people through history who paint absolutely incompatible pictures of the non-physical/non-rational world with incredible detail and conviction? Why would you think they're all wrong and you're not???

jesswolfe
10-01-2010, 06:21 PM
Wow. Interesting judgements. I did not say that we should not intervene when someone is being abused. I did not say that we know everything that will happen to us when we get here. I did not say that we "choose" to be abused. I did not say that everyone who is abused in any way has to put up with it because of some weird sense of fate.

I guess I have two responses. The first is, as I said before, we have no idea what the nature of reality is. We don't know what all happens in the spirit world. And there is no way of knowing whose version of cosmology is the right one.

The place I am coming from, and anyone who knows me really gets this, is that part of our way of trying to heal abuse is to find some sense of meaning. Because if we just believe its senseless and random, then there is no way to regain our own power. I know that for me it was pivotal to really realize that the way to my own healing was to find out more about what this experience meant to me and to the people around me. In healing pretty horrific abuse, I learned a lot about my own gifts, my own medicine, my own place in the world. I learned that I was not seperate at all. That I was not along. It has given me purpose. And I know that those experiences in a way give comfort to others who have been abused as well, because they are not alone. And there really is a way to heal and grow and thrive. Each person has to find their own meaning. I can't choose that meaning for them. No one can.

In truth, do I believe I chose to be abused? No. I don't. I think that we have some kind of agenda when we come, but that each person has free will. They get to choose the things they do and we get caught in other people's stories. I would never choose the life I have lived. But I have found peace in the fact that beyond what happened to me, I have a very solid, very bright core that has kept me alive thru things that many people would die from. I didn't die. And I wonder if it would have been possible for me to know that without those experiences.

Maybe the next time you have a reaction, it might be more productive to ask questions to find out more about the other person's experiences and viewpoint. As others have pointed out, its so easy to make assumptions about a person from just words on a computer. There is very often more to the story.

Jess

Sara S
10-01-2010, 06:58 PM
Hmmm. Clancy is again making up the "inevitable conclusion" that he can denigrate rather viciously.

I certainly haven't gotten there yet, but Tibetan Buddhism posits the highest state as one in which we can see "the inseparability of samsara and nirvana". This is rather like your statement that there's no good or bad in the spirit.


Wow. Interesting judgements. I did not say that we should not intervene when someone is being abused. I did not say that we know everything that will happen to us when we get here. I did not say that we "choose" to be abused. I did not say that everyone who is abused in any way has to put up with it because of some weird sense of fate.

I guess I have two responses. The first is, as I said before, we have no idea what the nature of reality is. We don't know what all happens in the spirit world. And there is no way of knowing whose version of cosmology is the right one.

The place I am coming from, and anyone who knows me really gets this, is that part of our way of trying to heal abuse is to find some sense of meaning. Because if we just believe its senseless and random, then there is no way to regain our own power. I know that for me it was pivotal to really realize that the way to my own healing was to find out more about what this experience meant to me and to the people around me. In healing pretty horrific abuse, I learned a lot about my own gifts, my own medicine, my own place in the world. I learned that I was not seperate at all. That I was not along. It has given me purpose. And I know that those experiences in a way give comfort to others who have been abused as well, because they are not alone. And there really is a way to heal and grow and thrive. Each person has to find their own meaning. I can't choose that meaning for them. No one can.

In truth, do I believe I chose to be abused? No. I don't. I think that we have some kind of agenda when we come, but that each person has free will. They get to choose the things they do and we get caught in other people's stories. I would never choose the life I have lived. But I have found peace in the fact that beyond what happened to me, I have a very solid, very bright core that has kept me alive thru things that many people would die from. I didn't die. And I wonder if it would have been possible for me to know that without those experiences.

Maybe the next time you have a reaction, it might be more productive to ask questions to find out more about the other person's experiences and viewpoint. As others have pointed out, its so easy to make assumptions about a person from just words on a computer. There is very often more to the story.

Jess

sharingwisdom
10-02-2010, 03:52 PM
There is a difference between accountability and blaming. Understanding at a higher level of what is being experienced and learned is not holding the abused at fault or that they should be victimized. Nor is it allowing the perpetrator to continue such acts. We are learning how to rise beyond the victim/perpetrator paradigm if we really want to see a difference in the world. If we stay in this paradigm of blame, then war, hate, rage, projection will continue.

What I sense in what Jess has written is that she has come to forgiveness, which is a state of grace. It is not about forgetting what happened nor allowing it to occur again. It's a transformational place. At an unconscious level, in attempting to protect and defend ourselves, we leach and connect our own power and energy to another who has hurt us so badly, and when the process of forgiveness is complete, our energy and power returns to us. We can be free to operate in our own sovereignty and know that we are safe and so can others. We have our full power to really be present for ourselves and others, to take action if we choose w/o fear but true strength and courage, rather than continue to project our unhealed feelings and expect different results.

I, too, have been abused as a child to the point of having several near-death experiences. And I have chosen the process of forgiveness for each person who hurt me. It has made all the difference in my life. It is freeing and empowering. This doesn't mean that I want those people back in my life or that I must allow such reconnections. And I still have option to speak the truth about what the perpetrators did when it feels appropriate, but there isn't a charge. In fact, I have a great deal of compassion for them. I have pulled the plug out of the electrical socket, discharged from them, and the power is mine. I hold this as a possibility for everyone, because this is what will change the world.


This is the silliest, most narcissistic, bordering on solipsist development in so-called New Thought philosophy of all. Taken to its inevitable conclusion, there's no point in interfering with child abuse, because the child obviously 'chose' to come here to be abused. If you interfere, you're depriving them of their experience. Same goes for rape, torture, war, etc etc etc.

Psychopathic killers must love this philosophy: But Judge, I was only providing the lesson the victim came here for!

JimGleaves
10-20-2010, 05:28 PM
I know this thread has basically died, but then i saw this excellent comic on the subject:
https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/the_economic_argument.png

Sara S
10-21-2010, 06:54 AM
This is great! Where did you find it?





I know this thread has basically died, but then i saw this excellent comic on the subject:
https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/the_economic_argument.png

Braggi
10-21-2010, 07:04 AM
I know this thread has basically died, but then i saw this excellent comic on the subject:


One thing not included in that chart is black magic. The military most certainly uses it and a lot of Christian groups use it. It's not about "woo woo" supernatural forces turning reality against an enemy. It is all about turning the dark forces that live in the fear places of the practitioners' minds against the enemy. Imagine what Fred Phelps and his family must do to prepare themselves before they go out to "protest." If that isn't black magic, I don't know what is.

-Jeff

JimGleaves
10-22-2010, 12:34 AM
I'm sorry, I should have included the URL. It is from a site called XKCD, very popular in some circles:

https://xkcd.com/

Here's another good cartoon about science, although it might be a little small in this forum


The link to the full version is:

https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/beliefs.jpg
You can find the larger version at


https://xkcd.com/154/