UCE,
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Well, actually no. I get a very different view on this in my day-to-day life. I live in a city that is packed with mystics, pagans, artists and the like. Brighton is well-known for it. A surprisingly large number of people both believed me and were interested in what I had to say, some of them on a highly intellectual level.
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I have not much doubts about the intellectual level of mystics. I have read the writtings of some of them, they all seem to have strong curiosity and deep of thought.
But being intelligent and being of pragmatic nature are different things.
I am just saying that pragmatism (not materialism) make people reject revelations.
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There are reasons for why it appears like this. They are not so much influenced by previous ones, as they are all attempting to communicate the same things. Times change, so the format of the messages change, but ultimately they all try to serve a similar purpose.
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That's subjective. If you want to find common issues between revelations, you will sure find them. But what value give you to differences?
Are you underrating them because them could be human error introduced by the receiver of the message? This has important meaning as well; if you admit error in a revelation, you admit you don't know what it's true and what is not...
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Well, if one is the direct recipient of such a revelation then one is in a rather different situation. For a start, there is little room for doubting that the revelation is real. Other people can think I am telling lies, it is more difficult to tell myself that it didn't happen. Extracting meaning from them isn't so straightforward. There needs to be a context.
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Few people here will think you are lying. Most of them will think is illusion, chance, or a combination of both.
Your history is quite similar to the history one of my favourite fiction writters: Philip K. Dick.
All Philip 's books deal with reality being a complex, elaborate illusion hidding something much more important.
My surprise came when I read his biography. His books mostly are reflections of his own experiences, which have some resemblance with the ones loki mentioned. Some of the strange happenings in his life even has witness...
However, you seem quite sure about the world being an illusion, while Philip wasted all his life divided beween a full rejection or full acceptation of the received messages.
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There is a great deal I could explain about the mechanisms involved, and indeed the meaning. The problem is that materialists are totally incapable of believing the events themselves are anything more than elaborate fantasy, let alone being able to understand the meaning of the events. To be blunt, the materialists are being left behind to a certain extent. Vast numbers of people whose beliefs are routinely dismissed as nonsense by the 'skeptics' understand all sorts of things that the skeptics are quite incapable of grasping, because they lack the conceptual framework to make sense of them.
The skeptics see only the bathwater. They make no attempt to look for the baby.
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Skeptics are seeing a different baby...But as I said; this not a question of materialism, but of coherence. A pragmatic person can dismiss revelations because of his contradictory nature; there is no need to be a materialist.