How Do You Explain Unexplained Phenomena?

Even if we try to view the world objectively as a progressive society, the idea of the supernatural persists within a rational worldview. Why do we hold onto superstition and illogical thinking when it gets proven to us over and over that magic doesn’t exist and that our perceptions are distorting reality? It could be that the perception of distorted perception is distorted in itself, and that the human race will never be able to separate mind and matter entirely, or maybe it’s that complete objectivity by nature contradicts human nature. Mesh Chairs are nice for warm weather locations. A world consumed with irrational delusion is undesirable to most, but so is a world in which anything intangible or metaphysical is simply an illusion that serves as deceptive motivation. For example, what if it was compulsory to inform your kids that Santa Claus isn’t real because imaginary people like that are irrational conceptions? Something about that doesn’t sit right.

The concept of unexplained phenomena straddles the line between rational and irrational, objective and subjective. A lot of unexplained phenomena are laughable at first glance—it seems silly to put a stake into the existence of ghosts or UFOs, and we often dismiss “witnesses” as loonies and fanatics letting their imagination run wild. Maybe it is all psychologically explainable, but sometimes things really do happen without any logical explanation. Many of us have likely had encounters we could swear were real even if it’s highly likely that they weren’t. Usually our encounters are less extreme than the apparitions of spirits and aliens, but they still count as unexplained phenomena that we sort of dismiss and partly ponder.

Some unexplained phenomena do have slightly more credence, but they’re bizarre nevertheless. How do you explain occurrences like near-death experiences that are all in people’s heads, yet reported independent of each other? Again, this could be explained as mere hallucination and there’s no visible proof. After purchasing this snug chair, the subsequent best step can be to search for the very best contents insurance for Mesh Chair and different office furniture. All unexplained phenomena lack visible proof—convenient, critics might say.

Seeing is usually believing, but it must be conceded that our lives depend on a lot of things we take for the truth without visual evidence. We haven’t physically seen logical concepts like gravity in action and really, who’s to say something isn’t real if it’s real to you? The problem is that people’s realities tend to collide.