Themis wrote:Well there is public evidence surrounding what you want to call private evidence. Fence Sitter brought up some good points about seeing things nor really there. I also brought up that we could predict with some good accuracy how a person will interpret these private evidences based on their world view. That's good evidence people are not accurately interpreting them.
ClarkGoble wrote:I think I stated that experiences need to be interpreted and people can misinterpret them. So if you go back you'll see that I agreed with you there. But some experiences narrow the range of interpretation.
I thought my answer to the problem of mental illness was reasonable. If an experience is repeated and I can take reasonable step to try and discern hallucinations or mental illness then I think I'm justified in accepting the experience. If mental illness is such that I can't tell I'm thinking incorrectly consistently and no one else can then of course all bets are off. Not just for religious knowledge but any knowledge of anything.
First of all I should explain I am not by any means an expert in the field of mental illness, nor am I trying to imply that Clark's personal experiences derive from them. But the way Clark is painting mental illness is very black and white, as if it would be simple to test whether or not an experience is the result of an actual outside influence or visitation or if it was a result of mal functioning brain chemistry and or physically induced event through fasting, drugs, or other outside stimuli. It's not. Mental illness manifest itself in so many ways that it is very difficult to even diagnose correctly. Is the person schizophrenic, schizoaffetive, manic depressive or what? And getting into causes is another whole can of worms. Bottom line is that the affected vary in how their disease manifests itself from people who live a fairly normal life (more below) without knowing there is an issue to those who end up on the street or in an institution or dead, as is often the case in extreme untreated cases.
My wife's best friend, a lady who is in her 50's, that we have know for over a decade, who has a masters degree and has a successful long career in education is probably, in my uninformed opinion, suffering from mental illness, though it has taken me years to come to that conclusion. She talk to spirits, and it is fairly common. She believes she can see and speak with spirits and does so on a daily basis. She realizes this is unusual but thinks she is just "gifted" or "blessed" as did my wife initially. After being around her for years I have come to believe that she does not talk to spirits but has a mild form of mental illness with which she copes, at times rather badly, but most of the time, quite well. She is quite private about her "visions", so for the most part even those close to her are not aware of when one is going on.
If this was a hundred and fifty years ago she would be seen as some sort of visionary and her experiences would be believed by many. Today it is clear what she is dealing with a form of mental illness.
As far as jumping from religious knowledge being unknowable to
" If mental illness is such that I can't tell I'm thinking incorrectly consistently and no one else can then of course all bets are off. Not just for religious knowledge but any knowledge of anything."
Again one has to understand how mental illness is affected by culture to see this simply is not true. Here in the Christian dominated western hemisphere mental illness has a tendency to produce psychoses that are religious in nature, which I have seen on several occasions firsthand. (In one group session I attended an elderly lady was talking about her adult son who lived in her garage who had brought home for safe keeping two rocks that were he though were the petrified brains of Adam and Eve.) On the other hand in eastern countries where the is a much larger emphasis on groups and nationalities,where psychoses tend to manifest themselves with delusions centered on threats to society.
In other words the uncertainty one might have regarding a religious event is not expandable to the entire body of human knowledge.