Being open minded is own thing, but having your brain fall out of that open mind is quite another. While we can admit, hopefully, that we are not in contact with the truth, it is incorrect to presume all claims have the same validity. And in this case, I think it simply illogical to leap to the most improbable, unsupported and unhelpful of the alternatives. It is a sad fact that most self-proclaimed seekers of truth are only seeking any seemingly plausible idea that fits in with their own beliefs.
Could we not jump into the dichotomy of if it is not white then it must be black, or if the neurology expert is correct then I must be fooled?
Er... I think you are rushing to your defensive outposts a little too fast...
I like to think that we have had enough schooling to know how to help ourselves from dishing out compulsive emotional reaction.
Exactly. But read through Ivan Seeking's post again, and notice that he is not attacking you. He is in fact attacking the neurology expert, and invoking the hard question of consciousness - that the inter-reaction of matter does not deductively lead to the experience of that illusion. It is a valid point, and one that at present, in my opinion, can only be solved by a leap of faith in anyone of a number of directions.
Enigma, with the greatest respect, I honestly find this egoistic tendency to belittle paranormal experience or spirituality in general very disconcerting. Granted all the paranormal experiences can be accounted for by the intricate bio-chemical reaction in our brain, can you say that science at current level is able to explain the mechanisam of matter inside out? "There is no phenomenon until it is observed".
No, science has not yet explained everything inside out. The great tragedy of education is in teaching science as a body of facts - which is what science has never been. Science is a process by which we learn more things, an attitude of wonder and skepticism with which we think. Science is about paring down the bushes of ideas to locate the right ones, the good ones.
It is not egotisitical to attack these "paranormal experiences". It is egotistical to grant them immunity from attack, and so hide them from recognition if they are true. There is simply no such thing as a paranormal phenomena, only normal phenomena we do not yet know. If we leave them immune from attack, these phenomena die, or grow into vast fallacies and trees of redundancy, and any real understanding, any real truth is lost.
A wise quote:
"If you meet the Buddha, kill him."