RE: What exactly is a ghost?

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What exactly is a ghost?

in haunted •  7 years ago  (edited)

Hello. As a new Steemian, I've only just read some of your posts. I enjoyed several, so I am following you now.

This posting, however, contains numerous assertions for which I wonder how you could possibly have evidence. Examples:

"In fact, ghosts are everywhere." ¶ "There seems to be a close association between aspects of the dead person's life and the manifestation as a ghost." ¶ "Ghosts can interact with the living, perform purposeful activities and respond to ongoing changes in the environment." ¶ "Ghosts may try to complete tasks or projects they failed to finish before death." ¶ "Some ghosts appear solid as living people because they do not know they are dead. Others manifest as partial apparitions because they are confused about the transition from life to death." ¶ "Some ghosts create odors or sounds, associated with their habits, like cigar smoke or singing." ¶ "Most times, ghosts remain in a particular place because they are emotionally attached to a building, a room, or special surroundings that affected them during their lives, or played an important role in their death."

How did you reach these conclusions? Even if you have evidence that some ghostly encounters represent a genuine phenomenon, how can you claim to know what ghosts do or don't know, and whether they are confused, and about what, if so?

Guessing the mental states — even of living persons — can occasionally be difficult. Surely the task is that much harder when the mental state you seek to identify belongs to an entity whose existence is nebulous, on a plane whose reality is in dispute.

If I seem too dismissive, I apologize. I don't claim to own any maps of reality's borders. What's more, I have seen an apparition or three myself, though even at the time I doubted they were ghosts, exactly. And I'm aware that folklore has worth, to some extent.

Nevertheless, I like to stay within lasso range of actual evidence, just so we can work out how deep the quicksand is where we're standing.

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Hello @custone,

Thanks for this detailed comment. Our team has not only seen ghosts in old, dilapidated buildings. We also experienced the phenomenon in supermodern, futuristic buildings. That's why I claim that spirits can be everywhere. For earthbound spirits, we assume that they retain many of their human qualities that they had during their lifetime.

Of course, to deduce the state of mind, I have to start from the human qualities. If it comes to a ghost apparition, first the history of the place where the appearance occurred must be checked. Let´s take the Amityville case as an example. Ed Warren knew that children in this house had died. He probably also knew where in the house these children had preferred to play. So he put his camera in the place where they are most likely to appear as ghosts. In this way, he managed to shoot the picture you see in the post.

The confusion arises from the nature of the appearance. If we assume that a spirit can think clearly, it is possible for it to make the decision to manifest itself. In this case, the manifestation is clear and complete. If the ghost is not aware of its state, it may not even plan to manifest itself or make that decision half-heartedly. Accordingly, the quality of the manifestation is worse.

But there is another theory here: To manifest, the spirit needs energy. For example, it can draw heat energy from the air. For this reason it is getting colder while the spirit manifests in a room. If there is not enough heat energy available, the spirit can not fully manifest. In this case, of course, the state of mind does not matter, that is pure physics.

I hope I could clarify most of your questions.

Thanks for your thoughtful reply. I hope you will keep sharing more about your team's personal experiences in further postings, as well as the evidence and reasoning behind any conclusions you draw.

Be sure I will do :-)