I tend to think that "unexplained" material phenomena occur all the time and that human subjects more often than not project a greater degree of complexity into them than is actually there. Environment and collective experience can be highly suggestive, and over time sensory perceptions can congeal into surprisingly persuasive memories.
How can objects exude morbidity or malevolence? These aren't actual essences.
Exactly! We are talking about anecdotal evidence on physical phenomena. It's silly. Although I do think it's fun
All phenomena can be considered anecdotal.
I wouldn't call the scenario a product of environment or "collective" experiment. In fact, it could be an example of the exact opposite. To compare and contrast, when my brother and I were older by probably 5+ years, we had to attend a small church out in the country with an actual small/old graveyard behind it, incidentally surrounded by woods/containing a couple trees and lit by a similar security light. No "experience" whatsoever from it. There was also another church we visited a few times in the same time frame as that experience that did have a grave yard next to it, and the church was even older and in a fair amount of dis-repair. No experience.
How do we know?
It doesn't need to be a graveyard. Playing hide and seek is incredibly suggestive; furthermore, this happened when you were less than ten years old. Your memories have had plenty of time to morph and combine.
Well, I think you've made this point multiple times in our own conversations. There is no essential morbidity or malevolence since any such essence must be seen to be working in its own interest; to itself, it isn't malevolent. Universalizing these concepts as real essences is simply an illusion.
The story has remained unchanged over the years as far as I can recall, obviously distinct from whether or not was accurate. I was at least 10, yet younger than 13. Either way, I don't think age really has anything to do with it. That would assume some level of a lower threshold of suggestibility, which if we were in were the other areas containing some more suggestive physical constructions/experienced a less personally relevant phenomena, I would probably be inclined to agree in retrospect.
Right. But that doesn't change the perception/phenomena externally. Whatever "it" is giving off whatever "it" is, it's being received individually/subjectively obviously. I have to assume that my father in law was not perceiving it, but I can't know that for sure. Not to mention differences in sensitivity are not proofs against something. Some people are more aware than others, respective to many different spectrums.
It isn't your age per se, it's the amount of time that has passed. Your memory remaining "unchanged" is something that will always seem subjectively true to you; that's how memories work. Memories aren't files that you can pull out of a drawer and verify for authenticity. They change subtly, and over years and decades these subtle changes pile up. You don't realize it; no one does. We can't remember the specifics of things that happened to us at the age of ten or thirteen by the time we're twenty-five.
But you claim that due to incidents occurring in certain places, it will emit inherently "good" or "bad" vibes. So a place where many people were murdered were somehow gives off negative vibrations. I don't follow that logic.
Not generally. But that story in particular has been told more than once, and I reference the same words/construction each time. The more often the recall/more frequent, the more likely some semblance of continuity will be retained.
I'm already familiar with the studies on the "memory" referencing recalls of recalls.
Well of course we don't have to classify the drowning of children or slaughter of people as "bad". But we generally do. I perceived the vibes prior to learning it's history. Not after. That differentiation is not insignificant.
None of that is conclusive or convincing, and there's no proof that frequent recall improves or retains a memory. Even if the story was told multiple times, there may be details that your brother disagreed on but didn't say anything, and instead adopted your own testimony. You may have done this yourself and simply forgotten. There's very little that is convincing about recall ability over such a lapse of time.
It's insignificant because you're exploiting the history in your own way. In the aftermath of such a sensation, the history of a location served as an applicable explanation. In concurrent instances, you're already pre-programmed to associate that location with such sensations.
It's interesting to me you don't see the logical fallacies necessary/inherent in that approach. Obviously skepticism is warranted, but to dismiss in that it *must* be explainable through some [known] other phenomena is no more or less intellectual than to assume I made contact with the Afterlife.
It's interesting that you caveat the limitation of encounter to "severely limited", which is neatly ambiguous and subjective. Many of our daily experiences are severely limited or individual, yet no one questions us if we recount the majority of these events, even though nearly (or in fact) everything is impossible to verify given the arguments/understanding about perception and memory. To appeal to the fact that many of these are "common" fails on two points:
1. An appeal to majority/tradition.
2. If our experiences/memories are highly undependable, then no matter how many experience something, it is no more or less worthy of consideration, whether experienced communally or in isolated cases.
Edit: TBC on skepticism, the last thing I should expect is for someone to come away from this discussion with the opinion that "Well goshgolly, Overwatch says he saw an apparition once so they must exist." But there's a difference between skepticism and outright rejection.
There are no fallacies in what I'm saying, and your obsession with fallacies gets a bit redundant. I'm actually not making an argument about what you saw, I'm merely questioning your confidence.
Not once have I dismissed your claim outright; I'm saying that it's more likely that some material explanation exists rather than your specific interpretation of supernatural energies. I'm not dismissing anything; I'm merely trying to suggest that there are other ways to read your experience, and you seem to be downplaying them.
As far as "severely limited" goes, you're right about everyday experience; but most of the incidents/experiences that people occur are not cognitively estranging (i.e. normal activities such as going to the bathroom, eating a snack, etc.). It's entirely plausible to believe that such events occur; or rather, there is no reason to question them unless they interfere with some extraneous factor that requires clarification.
An encounter with a supernatural essence is not something that occurs on a regular basis; it is cognitively estranging, and is something that most people don't have access to as a kind of habitual occurrence. There is a far greater plausibility in questioning one's anecdotal encounter with a ghost as opposed to one's anecdotal encounter with his toilet after a night of heavy drinking.