In other words just because I think I am seeing an angel doesn't mean I am in the same sense or way I normally see my neighbor. The existence of angels raises very many fundamental questions that are not raised by the existence of another mortal.
The greater the claim, the greater the need for evidence to back the claim.
ClarkGoble wrote:Certainly it raises secondary questions, but phenomenally the encounter is the same as any regular encounters I have. (Here assuming for sake of argument the Mormon conception of angels as material being fairly similar to humans in some sense)
Well don't forget to ask to shake their hand.
Here you are not only unconcerned about subjecting the claim to any testing in the instance of it being a first hand experience, but you are unconcerned about testing the claim when it comes to you as a secondhand experience.
None of those would be necessary to answer from the encounter though.
If you would like to verify the encounter is what you are interpreting it to be, it might be important.
After all, all I could reasonably know is contained in the nature of the encounter which most likely wouldn't include such questions of energy. (For the record I'm not sure why you think there has to be energy from nowhere - nothing in LDS conceptions of angels demands that)
Are LDS conceptions of angels something other than resurrected beings now? Can a resurrected being die? It takes energy to move matter about, you know walking, talking and other forms of muscle movements. If not a hair of our heads is lost we do get our muscles back don't we? We get our cells back. They are designed to store and harvest energy in the form of ATP, etc. Makes a lot of sense for a brief mortal existence but not so much for an immortal existence that doesn't require any use of energy to function or to remain alive. How does this resurrected realm function when energy is constantly degraded with each use leading inexorably towards a heat death of the universe? Most physicists would see this as a contradiction sufficient to disprove the whole possibility of a resurrected realm. But you seem to be unconcerned about it in the least.
If I see a being floating in the air do some reasonable basic tests, am reasonably sure I'm not mentally ill then why should I question the experience?
Because what we've discovered in physics since the 1830's contradicts that possibility. Energy conservation wasn't discovered until the 1840's and a decent model of gravitation until Einstein. Looking ahead toward combining QM with GR will not change what we know from GR in its present form. GR reverts back to the same results obtained from classical mechanics in most situations. Only in certain areas is it necessary to use GR as for example to explain the precession of the perihelion of Mercury or to obtain the accuracy in the GPS system of satellites.
I don't know how the experience justifies all my beliefs about angels since of course that content isn't necessarily established in the experience.
All I'm really saying it that our standard empirical way of judging still holds. I'm not saying that merely because I see an angel that even in theory all my metaphysical beliefs are proved. Far from it. After all it could easily be that there are real angels but that my beliefs regarding the nature of angels are wrong. (Say it turns out hypothetically that angels aren't like Mormon conceptions but are more akin to the conception of Thomas Aquinas)
I read some of Thomas Aquinas and am not finding any model given that explains anything he believed or thought upon the subject. Please proffer a link if you feel this is that important to understand your point. Again we've learned a lot that contradicts the possibility since 1830 much less since the time of Thomas Aquinas. Think of the movie with Jodie Foster,
Contact. Even though she sees her father she says to herself "That's not possible." Why do you suppose that would be her reaction? Because it contradicts knowledge we've gained as a species in the last century or two.
Kolob’s set time is “one thousand years according to the time appointed unto that whereon thou standest” (Abraham 3:4). I take this as a round number. - Gee