And I would add that even there his atheism doesn't really match up to the atheism of people today. While most atheists today would say that, for example, there's no such thing as Ares, Mr. Terrific knows that Ares exists. However, he simply sees Ares as a being of incredible power beyond humanity, but Superman is as well.Mr. Terrific is pretty much the only real atheist we see, widespread acceptance of aliens, religions, etc.
I do want to point out that at least ghosts are often metaphors in GOOD fictional settings, they're not always good fictional settings thoughIt works in a normal fictional setting, because the metaphor is subtext, but in this genre style you take LITERALLY that they are talking about ghosts, which kills the Metaphor aspect.
That said, I think that that may in a certain extent be at least like what I was saying, but I feel like almost 30 years of cultural change have effected what the phrase 'believe them' means in this context. What I think you and I are talking about is 'believe them' as in to give someone the help they need, whereas what I think the person in the documentary really did mean was "Believe that they are 100% right about what they say because ghosts are real." That said, even then, I do feel like 'believe them' would have at least carried 'Believe that they are experiencing weird things and aren't lying to you or something.'
Frankly, I think a lot of the things about the ghost story just didn't work because of the format. They did a good job with faking the realism of the presentation, but both the skeptical character and the believer came off kind of fake. Especially the believer. When you use a mockumentary, the audience assumes much more that everything they don't know is like reality.
I disagree. People in the ancient world didn’t think lightning was magic, they thought that lightning was something controlled by the gods. But a lot of things were treated as controlled by the gods that weren’t treated as magic. A typical pagan household would have a god of the entranceway, and you’d want to give the threshold god some sacrifices from time to time or else you’ll fall over and crack your head. That doesn’t mean you tripping was magic, it was the will of the Gods. Lightning was rather like that.I have become more skeptical of the supernatural over time but my big issue is either side treating science and the supernatural as completely separate instead of treating the latter as just a placeholder term for parts of the former not discovered yet. our ancestors thought lightning was magic, who's to say things like ghosts aren't the same way?
We treat the Supernatural as different from the ‘natural’ because if it is real, our understanding of the laws of the universe are SO incomplete that we can’t really reach there from here. John Adams couldn’t understand an iPhone, but the understanding of science of the time would have allowed for many aspects of iPhones to exist. We could, so to speak, get there from here, even if we’d be damned if we knew how.
But the supernatural goes beyond the laws of physics of 2020 in a way that an iPhone doesn’t go beyond the laws of physics in 1820. If ghosts are real, we’re missing SOMETHING so big that we can’t really integrate them. And indeed, ghosts may be real, but exist in a way that human beings could never comprehend them the way we can iPhones. That is one possibility for the supernatural.
Yeah but that’s just an example of human biases, and also in no small part an example of how human beings operate on the internet. It’s not uncommon for someone to argue vociferously for something, then change their mind LATER once the interaction is over. Sure some people are dumb, but that’s not really relevant.maybe not the actual scientist part but I've seen it plenty of times by laymen on the internet who wouldn't know if something is good evidence of the paranormal or not because they want to dismiss it.
And you say people won’t know good evidence of the paranormal, but... There kind of CAN’T be good evidence of the paranormal. Without something done under extremely measured conditions, there’s almost always going to be a reasonable alternative.
Take for example... Aliens. Let’s suppose that tonight, Neil DeGrasse Tyson is kidnapped by aliens, who take him to another planet and show him around, then return him home in the middle of town, rather than his own bed. Let’s suppose that this REALLY HAPPENED. Tyson might then believe in aliens. But if he did so, he wouldn’t do so as a scientist, and he wouldn’t do so because aliens are the most rational conclusion for him to reach. There’s lots of evidence of people mistaking dreams for reality or remembering things that didn’t happen, while there’s a lot less proven circumstances of alien abduction. Even if it happened, it’s still not very good evidence.
Okay, but... Why?that too but I would also still suggest that the supernatural is a Clark's Third Law kind of thing.
And remember, I BELIEVE in the supernatural. I’m just not sure why you’d assume that we’ll ever be able to figure it out. My cat Pico is very smart. She knows, for example, that when I wake up I am going to get on the computer soon, and will go and turn on the computer for me, and then sit by the keyboard until I use it. She understands that when I’m playing Mortal Kombat, the bug lady with extra limbs is the one I want to win, and will bat at the screen to attack whichever one ISN’T the bug lady.
But no matter how smart Pico is, she doesn’t know what the thing I do with the keyboard is. She doesn’t know why I want the computer on. She can’t follow the cutscenes in Story Mode. I think that, if the supernatural exists, it’s entirely possible that we don’t have the ability to interact with it in ways that can be tracked and measured.