Hello All,
Recently I came across the writings of Paul Eno, famous paranormal researcher
I've never heard of him.
"Nearly four decades of "in the trenches" research has led me far away from the two-dimensional, 19th century vision that most people cling to when it comes to the paranormal. For example, I don't believe that ghosts are spirits of the dead. I don't believe in death at all.
I'd say that belief in the existence of ghosts and the idea that they are spirits of the dead are excellent examples of the survival of premodern folk belief, beliefs that in these cases probably originated in prehistoric times.
The survival of these kind of beliefs is fascinating from an historical and anthropological perspective. It's obviously relevant to religious studies as well.
When I deal with the paranormal, and ghosts in particular, I experience a vast "multiverse" in which we (bodies and all) function on multiple levels in multiple, parallel lives. In my experience, ghosts are living beings functioning in close parallel worlds that are just as physical as ours.
That's an interesting speculative theory. It might form the basis of a science fiction novel. But is there any reason to take it seriously?
And why would believing in a 'multiverse' theory justify not believing in death at all? If I die in this universe, I die in this universe. We can speculate that there might be another alternative me in another universe, but that wouldn't change the fact that this particular me died in this universe.
Thinking this way also seems to be importing a particular kind of view of what the different universes in a 'multiverse' are. This writer seems to assume that the universes are like science-fiction's time-travel stories' alternative time-lines, consisting of different ways that the same events might unfold. I have a fatal accident in this universe, but live to a ripe old age in that one. (That raises all kinds of philosophical problems about trans-world identity. How different can the 'me' in another universe be and still be identifiable as me in that universe?)
Another problem is that there's more than one kind of multiverse theory out there. There are multiverse theories associated with cosmic inflation and multiverse theories associated with particular interpretations of quantum mechanics. I suppose that time travel would introduce a third variety. Different theories make different suggestions about how multiple universes would differ from one another and about how one might hypothetically travel between them. There's really no reason to assume that they have to contain alternative versions of the same events. Perhaps different universes contain different laws of physics or something, and have radically different contents. Different universes may not be parallel universes at all.
On two occasions in the late 1970s, when my cases were nudging me closer and closer to multiverse thinking, I encountered two shamans of two different traditions in two different parts of the world. Both said that they had known other shamans, many years before, who had literally gone into "the other world" and brought back people who had died -- bodies and all...
The stories, as this guy tells them, do seem to suggest the science-fictionish 'parallel universes' theory that he apparently favors. Of course, they are being related to us through his interpretive lens. And I'm still not convinced that these events actually happened.
Given what appears to be the nature of the multiverse, there is no reason whatsoever to believe that "returns" such as these are impossible.
What could justify somebody saying that?
Assuming that a 'multiverse' even exists, which is still speculative, next to nothing is known about the physics of what separates and differentiates universes, about what different universes might contain, or how one might go about burrowing into another one.
Citing "paranormal experience" as the method is basically the same thing as invoking magic.
In the multiverse, all possibilities exist. ALL possibilities.
That's one spin on what 'multiverse' might mean, I guess.
Maybe we should stop asking "why?" and start saying "why not?"
That's a prescription for the worst sort of credulity.
What do you guys think of the above?
Is it something serious?
It's a rather interesting speculation. It might be a good conceptual basis for a science-fiction novel.