home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.atheism
- Path: sparky!uunet!tcsi.com!iat.holonet.net!news.cerf.net!usc!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!hamblin.math.byu.edu!news.byu.edu!ux1!fcom.cc.utah.edu!cs.weber.edu!jhigbee
- From: jhigbee@cs.weber.edu (Jonathan C. Higbee)
- Subject: Anthropologically observerved "super-natural" events?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.002731.29956@fcom.cc.utah.edu>
- Keywords: Anthropology data super-natural
- Sender: news@fcom.cc.utah.edu
- Organization: University of Utah Computer Center
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 93 00:27:31 GMT
- Lines: 46
-
-
- Greetings:
-
- My anthropology teacher mentioned that in her field work she
- experienced some not readily explainable things such as rain
- dances working and knives bending against sternums in Bali. She
- mentioned that other anthropologists had observed similar data;
- that when such data is observed it's usually just recorded and
- set aside, since what's observed is outside the "normal
- traditional" anthropological data.
-
- Apparently the Zuni have rain dances on a scheduled and
- non-scheduled basis. The dances my teacher observed did appear to work
- (though she didn't observe them all dilligently probably because
- there's a tendency to set such data aside as she mentioned). Mabie the
- knife benders in Bali got ahold of Uri Gelders secret spoon bending cream,
- but maybie not. Since I'm not aware of intensive studies to verify
- the acuracy of Zuni rain dances or the integrety of the knife bending
- in Bali.
-
- She did volonteer one possibility that perhaps group belief had
- some bearing on what actually worked in a given religion, but she
- nor I know for sure how to explain these occurances.
-
- I don't know whether group belief with all participants in a given rite
- having to believe in what will happen actually explains what occurs.
- Perhaps there's extra parts to our being which we don't currently
- understand. Perhaps science will someday describe how these seemingly
- para-normal [yet actually fully natural] things happen
-
- No doubt that some things which occur are figments of peoples
- imagination and/or religious frenzy, but is every seemingly
- super-natural occurance to be dismissed? Given sufficient
- experience in the study of different cultures, does one observe
- seemingly super-natural things not currently explainable by
- science?
-
- I welcome your comments.
-
-
- Jon Higbee
-
- jhigbee@cs.weber.edu or icarus.weber.edu
-
-
-
-