P
pixelsmith
Guest
this should be good. the problem is that no one can prove he was a fake.
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A.LeClair said:It's possible that what informed me on the case was biased. I see this happen in regards to other paranormal events.
This guy did surgeries with his bare hands right? If not, not the same person. Magicians showed how this could be done. I don't recall hearing or reading anything about 2 million people being healed by him, or even that Fuller was involved. Nor that a knife was used, it was his barehands. I may have been ill informed. I'll listen to the show without bias and hear from a supporter. I didn't think there were many, if this is the same case that is.
David Biedny said:No, that must be someone else. Arigo used knifes, whatever was laying around, hence the title of the Fuller book. Dirty knives, yet no one EVER suffered from infections of any sort. Amazing stuff. The Fuller book is quite something, I highly recommend it.
dB
As a small digression, do you guys remember Seth from the 70's? Seth was a channelled spirit through, oh I can't remember her name. I read the book like a billion times though. I found it riveting. Later on, sometime in the 80s, I think she was discredited, or they discovered discrepancies in Seth's testimony. Say, that's got me thinking. It might be interesting for someone to revisit the Seth story, some 30 to 40 years later. I wonder how many of Seth's predictions have come to fruition, or have not come to fruition.
musictomyears said:There are many people who go around and say, "I don't believe in this sort of thing", then, for one reason or another, give it a half-hearted try, but finally walk away disappointed because "it did not work". They never seem to consider that they are part of the equation, and that they need to open their minds, souls and spirits in order to be reachable by powers from the beyond.
musictomyears said:Thoughts manifest as physical reality, and nothing can stop it.
Cause and effect. If I flip a lightswitch, the light comes on. I don't need to believe it will come on, it just does (unless the bulb's burned out or the fuse has blown). If I have a headache and take a tylenol, it goes away. Do I believe the tylenol will make it go away? Yes. Is that why it goes away? No. If spiritual healing worked, it would work all the time (or most of the time) whether or not it was believed in. Anything else falls neatly into the catagorey of placebo as far as I'm concened.
musictomyears said:That's a pretty bizarre point of view, if you don't mind me saying...
A.LeClair said:Wow. Rare I see him mentioned. I'm like the biggest Seth nut on the planet. I have every book. It changed my life and how I perceive things dramatically. It's been awhile since I read anything by Jane/Seth though.
Jane Roberts died in 84. To the best of my knowledge she was never discredited and actually was/is considered one of the best channelers of all time. It's the only thing of that nature archived at Yale. At least last I checked. Seth is often credited for giving birth to the New Age. Fred Alan Wolf and Deepak Chopra endorse the work along with many others.
There are some things that seem like discrepancies. Many times semantical ones.
If interested in Seth, check out Abraham-Hicks which is actually better in many ways. It was the main influence behind the first edition of the Secret (I don't care for the released one) but was later edit out completely.
Having said all that. I'm really not into channeling per say. What's funny is, a lot of the Seth students aren't either. Sort of the channeler for those who are weary of channelers.
Only thing negative I've ever read about the case was a preacher saying Seth killed Jane through possession. Which is absurd. The Way Toward Health is her last book she actually did in the hospital. She died either during or shortly after the book. Seth was his same ol self with the exception of saying, "I may or may not return" when closing sessions. Did he know Jane's time was near? Or a "probable" version of Jane hehe?
CapnG said:Cause and effect. If I flip a lightswitch, the light comes on. I don't need to believe it will come on, it just does (unless the bulb's burned out or the fuse has blown). If I have a headache and take a tylenol, it goes away. Do I believe the tylenol will make it go away? Yes. Is that why it goes away? No. If spiritual healing worked, it would work all the time (or most of the time) whether or not it was believed in. Anything else falls neatly into the catagorey of placebo as far as I'm concened.
If that were true we'd all be rich, healthy, paired with our ideal mates, immortal and beloved by all because everybody wishes they were those things to greater or lesser degree all the time.