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SIT, TIP, Prophecy and Confession


Raf
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SIT, TIP, Confession  

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  1. 1. What do you think of the inspirational manifestations/"gifts"?

    • I've done it, they are real and work the way TWI describes
      14
    • I've done it, they are real and work the way CES/STFI describes
      1
    • I've done it, they are real and work the way Pentecostals/non-denominationals describe
      2
    • I faked it to fit in, but I believe they are real.
      1
    • I faked it to fit in. I believe it's possible, but not sure if it's real.
      6
    • I faked it. I think we all faked it.
      15


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It is true. I should have waited for another mod. Draw whatever conclusions you'd like. The thread is open again.

I locked the thread because we were BOTH getting out of hand. I don't think there's a single reader who would disagree with that. A cooling off period was in order. I stand by that. Had I been an observer and not a participant, I would have done the same thing.

I waited for you to get the last word and I had every intention of either reopening the thread myself or having another mod step in to do so.

I agree: it was an abuse of the mod authority, but only insofar as I did it myself and did not wait for someone else to step in. The other mods will determine my "punishment."

Edited by Raf
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So, getting back to the scientifically valid area of classification:

If we have an item with a set of known properties, such as a language, and an item with a set of unknown properties, such as a glossa, we can compare the properties (phonemic strata) of the unknown with the properties (phonemic strata) of the known. Goodman did this. Samarin did this. Other linguists and researchers did this. They have been unable to match glossa with known languages. We do not know if this was done with the anomalous case study. We need more data on that one. We have the researcher's conclusion, but it's not good enough. I don't accept his conclusion at this point even though it supports my position.

To my knowledge, no one has taken the "null hypothesis" approach and applied it to the hypothesis that "all SIT is free vocalization." Such an approach would not produce any statistically valuable result, because this is a question of classification, not hypothesis testing. It is enough to search for a glossa that DOES produce a language. THAT would be a meaningful result. The null hypothesis approach is a red herring that, if conducted, would produce a rejectable result. The science of classification is a better way to approach the subject matter we are discussing. It will and must always be acknowledged that not all potential samples will be examined. The result will never be final. But it never needs to be. We can stop when we find ONE glossa classified as an actual human language.

That's how honest people review research. They don't dismiss innate human abilities just because it threatens their predetermined conclusion.

Edited by Raf
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That's how honest people review research. They don't dismiss innate human abilities just because it threatens their predetermined conclusion.

This is getting quite pedantic.

I am not dismissing innate human abilities, like that of making up Pig Latin, making up gibberish sounds, making up sounds that could sound a little more like language, making up interpretations and prophecies, etc. I'm not dismissing the possibility of people faking a séance to get attention. I'm not dismissing an actual séance where people talk to spirit guides, I'm not dismissing those things.

What I am dismissing is labeling dissimilar things as similar for the purpose of research.

Now I see why a linguist who is NOT BORN AGAIN would do this. He sees things that are supposedly another language that wasn't studied by the speaker, then he sees someone SIT, someone faking it, someone making up sounds, reads an account of a séance. All these things seem the same to him. As a linguist, whose primary field involves classifying language, labeling this phenomena is the first step in studying it. All these things have in common that there was a speaker, one or more listeners, and the sounds spoken were not understood. THAT IS THE EXTENT OF THE SIMILARITY HERE.

Then I see ATTEMPTS to classify the sounds by laws of language. I see NO PROOFS, but I see conclusions reached like by Samarin that he marvels at the ability of the human mind to make sounds that sound like they could be languages. Could this happen by Samarin hearing ACTUAL SAMPLES OF GENUINE SIT? Yes it could. Would he be able to distinguish between GENUINE SIT and FAKED SIT? No he would not. He could not understand either utterance, and already has defined the term to include both genuine or faking AS THE SAME THING.

That in a nutshell is my issue with the term "free vocalization".

Now I'm hoping once everyone meditates, takes their meds, has a drink, has a good night sleep, or whatever else it is that they do to CALM DOWN and get over being mad that this logic won't escape them. But my hopes aren't very high.

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To my knowledge, no one has taken the "null hypothesis" approach and applied it to the hypothesis that "all SIT is free vocalization." Such an approach would not produce any statistically valuable result, because this is a question of classification, not hypothesis testing. It is enough to search for a glossa that DOES produce a language. THAT would be a meaningful result. The null hypothesis approach is a red herring that, if conducted, would produce a rejectable result. The science of classification is a better way to approach the subject matter we are discussing. It will and must always be acknowledged that not all potential samples will be examined. The result will never be final. But it never needs to be. We can stop when we find ONE glossa classified as an actual human language.

So here is another point that I have to consider. Does the scientific method apply? If not, how would it not apply?

In answering this question, we have to arrive at some kind of consistency. What I mean is, if the scientific method reasonably and logically would not apply for some reason, then the terms related to the scientific method such as "this is proven", etc. have to also be removed from the conversation. You can't mix and match terms from the scientific method and remain consistent.

One issue with the scientific method in identifying the language involved in the phenomenon is we may not be able to rule out all the languages. How many languages are alive and functioning now? 7000? How about during all of mankind's inhabitance of the world? 15,000? More? There is no one person that can identify all of them. There is no linguistic research society that claims to be able to identify any given language sample with a known language on earth. If we include extinct langauges, that problem increases.

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Respectfully, when you reject free vocalization as an innate human ability, then you deny the human ability to "(make) up sounds that could sound a little more like language." Because that is a big part of what free vocalization IS.

So if you're saying now that SIT can be faked with no spiritual implications, we are back on common ground and can continue the discussion on logical terms. But that is NOT what you said before.

The problem you're having is that you're doing exactly what you accuse US of doing: using circular reasoning to affirm that the utterances which are CLAIMED to be spirit-energized really ARE spirit-energized, then blasting the researchers for not being able to tell their output apart. It's rational and likely that the researchers can't tell the output apart because there's no difference in the output. Now, if one of these things were producing a known language, THAT would be a different output. But to get angry because Samarin can't tell an alleged case of xenoglossia from an alleged case of glossolalia? Rather than think both of them are faking it by free vocalizing, your default presumption is Samarin can't tell a devil spirit from a holy spirit and free vocalization is merely a label applied to his failure? That's ridiculous. Samarin is looking at the output. He's TOLD there's a distinction. He sees none. Ya think it's remotely possible it might maybe be because there is none?

A. Human beings are capable of stringing sounds together and, consciously or not, trying to make them sound like languages. That is an independent fact which you have basically just acknowledged.

B. Human beings claim to SIT. The spiritual energy behind it cannot be tested. The output can. There is nothing in the output that distinguishes it from free vocalization linguistically (Poythress).

C. Human beings have claimed xenoglossia through non-Christian means. The spiritual energy behind it cannot be tested. The output can. The opinion of the linguist we are reviewing fails to find any distinction between those utterances and SIT (Samarin), and SIT produces nothing that distinguishes it from free vocalization (Poythress).

This proves nothing. It merely demonstrates that to the extent we are able to review actual samples, they're all producing the same thing, linguistically. In other words, the concept (not the term) of free vocalization is a natural phenomenon, nothing extraordinary about it, that appears to account for the tested claims of glossolalia and a couple of tested claims of non-Christian xenoglossia.

No one has put forth the hypothesis that all non-Christian xenoglossia is free vocalization. I'd be willing to bet that's true, but I'm having enough trouble with glossolalia, thank you very much.

It's not that free vocalization was coined in order to lump these things under one umbrella. Rather, the properties of these different phenomena, recognized as producing the same result, were labeled by Poythress in the terms of their least common denominator: free vocalization as an innate human ability. Poythress did not equate SIT and free vocalization. I did that. That's my hypothesis. It is not proved. I never said it was. I have said that the research has failed to find linguistic distinctions between SIT and free vocalization (which Poythress almost reluctantly admits), and pointed to that as evidence in support of my hypothesis (which Poythress most certainly does not concede). But that's not the same thing as me saying "I proved it! I proved it!"

I can't prove it. I've said that from the beginning.

Poythress further subdivides free vocalization into separate categories. The only observable distinction between SIT (which he calls T-Speech) and competent (and spirit-free) free vocalization is the setting in which it is produced. It's not a measurement of a difference in output. It's an acknowledgment of a difference in location and mentality of input. He could not point to a difference in output, and only suggests the difference may exist, undetectably, on theological grounds. He leaves science when he makes such an assertion. He's writing an article on faith for a theological publication, so he's entitled to do that. But when he does, he leaves the realm of science and detached, unbiased observation.

That's why I originally labeled Poythress "ridiculously biased." That was unfair on my part, because I assumed this was a work of unbiased research rather than a work of theological interpretation. As a work of theological interpretation, Poythress' paper is quite UNbiased. It refuses to equate two phenomena when all observable indicators point to (not PROVE, point to) their equality.

Does the lack of a linguistic distinction between some cases of xenoglossia (not reviewed separately as a subject in this thread) and free vocalization mean there's no such thing as devil spirits? No. It only means that Le Baron LIED when he claimed to produce a known, human language. He did no such thing. When his output was analyzed, it was determined to NOT be a known, human language (Samarin). It should be noted that Samarin did not review a summary of the Le Baron story. He reviewed the actual output. (Read the flipping report). Samarin DID review a summary of another story of non-Christian xenoglossia. And he couched his finding there in terms that should be acceptable to all of us: "In addition to speaking and writing in two 'languages,' using a non-Roman orthography of her invention, while in a trance state, she also produced utterances in circumstances too involved to describe here which, if we understand the investigator's description of them, were glossolalic. [emphasis mine]"

In other words, it does not appear Samarin actually investigated what "Helene Smith" wrote. He's giving us a conclusion based on what he DOES know. But he gives himself wiggle room there. If Helene Smith DID produce a language, it only means Samarin didn't see enough evidence. If such evidence was provided, Samarin would be forced to withdraw the conclusion of the last line and concede that what she did was different from glossolalia.

You are free to reject Samarin's finding that Smith's utterance was glossolalic. But you can only move it, based on the evidence, to "inconclusive." You cannot argue that she produced xenoglossia merely on her say-so. Psychic fraud was RAMPANT in the late 1800s and the early 1900s (about the time modern SIT was "born," and not coincidentally, in my opinion). It remains rampant today. There's just more people calling BS today. I think Samarin's conclusion was probably correct, but I would be forced based on the limited information available to agree that it's inconclusive.

It sure as hell isn't a genuine demonstration of devil-spirit power until otherwise proved! A clever and detailed fraud is still a fraud.

The point is this: demonstrations of spiritual power that are empirically testable are not true until disproved. They are not untrue until proved. They are undetermined until proved one way or another. When a natural explanation exists to explain an alleged case of a demonstration of spiritual power, there is no rational reason to reject the natural explanation.

There is a rational reason to reject free vocalization as a natural explanation for SIT if SIT were to produce known human languages. But it hasn't. Not according to the findings of the linguists. You may speculate that the linguists missed a spot, but it's on natural terms. They are imperfect and capable of making mistakes. It is silly to accuse them of being unable to distinguish between demonic power and genuinely godly power when they see no evidence of ANY spiritual power whatsoever. They see free vocalization, a natural, human ability that does exist, sounds like language, but fails to match the phonemic strata of any known language.

Again, you may challenge the ability of linguists to identify and record phonemes because of aspirated or unaspirated "p's", which would lead to their failure to accurately classify a language they should otherwise have been able to detect. That is a natural, rational challenge to their findings. It has no basis. That is, you are not proving that they missed a language. You are, rather, speculating: suggesting that it remains entirely possible that they missed a language. No spiritual shenanigans or failure because they're not born again. Please. We're talking about empirical claims. If I'm producing a human language, I'm doing so whether you're Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, Hindu or atheist.

Is it possible Samarin missed a language? Sure it's possible. More than one? Possible, but less likely. Known languages in every glossa he reviewed? Possible, but venturing into real conspiracy theory territory here. Is it possible that all unbiased researchers who've investigated glossolalia have all missed actual languages in all the samples they reviewed merely because they were not born again? I submit that if you take that likelihood seriously, we have left the realm of a rational conversation and should just bid each other adieu.

This was never about proving my case. It wasn't about proving how widespread SIT fakery is. It was always about finding the one exception, the one case where one competent linguist reviewed one case of glossolalia and determined that, yes, this was an identifiable language. Swahili. And the person who produced it had no means of learning that language. And it was positively identified by a real speaker of Swahili (or whatever).

Every researcher who has investigated glossolalia has failed to identify a language.

Why? I say because there was none to identify, but that's merely suggested and demonstrated by the evidence. It's not proof (and I never said it was).

Every researcher who has investigated glossolalia has failed to identify a language.

Why? You say it's because they are spiritually unaware and incapable of the spiritual discernment required to see God in action. That's a theological response. You're entitled to it. I do not share it. Not with an empirical claim. Great for the new birth. Lousy for speaking in tongues.

OR: You say it's because the linguists aren't as sharp as they think they are when it comes to the ability to classify language. That's a wildly speculative response. But you're entitled to it.

What you have done, which you cannot do, is assume your speculation to be true and demand we account for it or explain it. No. You are entitled to speculate, but you are not entitled to a response that accounts for it.

What I have not done, yet you repeatedly claim I have, is point to the testable evidence as definitive proof of my claim that free vocalization accounts for all SIT. That claim is unprovable. It is only disprovable, and it can be disproved by reminding everyone where the burden of proof lies in the first place.

You say speaking in tongues produces a language. That is the claim that CAN be proved but hasn't been. Ragging on me for failing to prove my claim while demonstrating that you don't have the slightest idea how the burden of proof works in an honest debate (I'm sorry if that's insulting, but you've demonstrated it repeatedly and will do so again when you respond to this) misses the point. I can't prove my position. You can prove yours.

Your court.

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So here is another point that I have to consider. Does the scientific method apply? If not, how would it not apply?

In answering this question, we have to arrive at some kind of consistency. What I mean is, if the scientific method reasonably and logically would not apply for some reason, then the terms related to the scientific method such as "this is proven", etc. have to also be removed from the conversation. You can't mix and match terms from the scientific method and remain consistent.

The scientific method, as you have cited it, applies when you are testing a hypothesis. It does not apply to classification (unless you want to break it down into microsteps, in which case the scientific method is applied at every step. But I don't think that's what you meant).

If you have a leaf or a berry and don't know what kind of tree or bush it fell from, you look at the characteristics of the leaf you DO have and you compare it to the leaves and berries from known trees and bushes. Boring when you're talking about maple leaves. A little more interesting when you're talking about poison ivy. And vital when you're thinking of eating that berry you just picked up in the Alaskan wilderness (see: Into the Wild). You don't want a reasonable confidence interval that the berry is not poisonous. You want Certainty that it is not. Classification CAN and DOES prove identification, all the time. It's not a case of mixed-and-matched terminology to suggest something is proved just because the scientific method of hypothesis testing was not explicitly employed to properly classify the unknown item you are seeking to identify.

If I have 95% confidence that a berry I found in the woods is not poisonous, I'm not eating it. 99%, maybe, if the only other alternative is starving.

But rest assured: every step involved in classifying an unknown item utilizes the scientific method, just on a smaller scale than what you describe (If it's a maple leaf, it should look nothing like a pine needle. Hey! It looks just like a pine needle! It's not a maple leaf. Boom: next hypothesis).

Listen, we can remove "this is proven" from this conversation the moment you stop falsely accusing me of misapplying such an assertion. I haven't done it. Stop saying I have. I have an opinion that I have, from time to time, stated as fact (as you have as well, as anyone in a discussion involving disagreement is wont to do). I have never said that opinion was proven. You need to get over that. Look it up: in NONE of the examples you cited of me expressing my opinion as fact did I ever refer to that opinion as proved.

One issue with the scientific method in identifying the language involved in the phenomenon is we may not be able to rule out all the languages.

Correct in theory. We're just looking for the one case where they are able to make a match.

How many languages are alive and functioning now? 7000? How about during all of mankind's inhabitance of the world? 15,000? More? There is no one person that can identify all of them. There is no linguistic research society that claims to be able to identify any given language sample with a known language on earth. If we include extinct langauges, that problem increases.

THIS is an honest question. Kudos.

Once you start using phonemes, it's not hard to narrow down the list of available languages. Take the CH sound in Channukah. There are oodles of languages in which that phoneme does not exist. You can rule them out. The phonemic structure narrows down the potential list of languages to match against. Ultimately, you're down to a few where the utterance can be tested against the actual language.

The researchers never seen to get this far. They keep coming back to the primary language of the speaker, with maybe a few extra phonemes thrown in and accounted for by the speaker's exposure to other languages. Yes, the phonemic strata of English does match other languages. But not so many that it is impossible to check. If English and, say, Esperanto are a phonetic match, and the sample matches both phonemically, you just need to check the utterance against those languages for which there IS a match. So far, no luck.

We have a description of one case that does not fit this model. It was rejected as a language, but on what grounds? I want it to be rejected as a language. I am reassured to some degree that the researcher did so. But I don't know his basis. He has given me reason to think he erred. Need more input. More data will determine whether that one case proves me wrong or fails to prove me wrong.

Nothing can prove me right. Nothing can ever prove a null hypothesis right, and THIS subject doesn't lend itself to the kind of testing you described earlier, for reasons stated.

By the way, re-read page 56 of Samarin. It doesn't answer your question in its entirety, but it gives you some indication that the community of linguists is a shade more confident of its ability to detect languages than you are.

Edited by Raf
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(snip)

This thread has become about one person's rejection of free vocalization as an innate human ability. I can understand that, because it is evident to me that if free vocalization exists as a natural explanation for what we all did as SIT, it poses a fatal threat to the notion that SIT is real. No actual evidence distinguishes free vocalization from SIT, so naturally, free vocalization cannot be allowed to be taken as a given. But it is a given. It is an innate human ability. That is not one person's opinion. It is an observable and repeatable fact. It is proved everytime another person does it. (So is blowing bubbles underwater, I confess. But the attempt to belittle free vocalization through the use of absurd analogies will no longer be entertained by me). I will no longer discuss it or defend it, nor will I respond to that poster unless at least one other person agrees that a point has been made that deserves an answer.

If there's anyone reading this who does not believe that speaking in tongues can be faked without that fakery being spiritually energized, speak up and I will answer to the best of my ability. Otherwise, I will consider that discussion closed among those of us treating the subject matter honestly.

In fairness,

I think this thread has become about 2 things.

A) One person's rejection of free vocalization as an innate human ability.

B) One person's conflation of 2 subjects into one, namely,

1) the possible rejection of an innate human ability as not supernatural,

(if it is logical that modern SIT is free vocalization AND

that free vocalization is an innate human ability)

2) the possible rejection that God Almighty performs miracles or anything

supernatural whatsoever

if the modern SIT is not the Biblical SIT but rather

an innate human ability.

The second subject keeps on being introduced by the one person who claims

the first can be rejected.

(I wrote "the one person who wants the first to be rejected" but erased

that because I myself WANT to reject the first but can't because I don't

have any evidence pointing where I WANT the evidence to point.)

=========================

Just to restate something.....

God Almighty is still on the throne and acts in miraculous

fashions all the time, even if all of modern SIT is hokum and wishful

thinking and completely false. Any fakery on behalf of humans, well-intentioned

or no, does not invalidate God one whit.

No one has claimed it has.

(For those who are convinced God Almighty doesn't act in miraculous

fashions all the time, I'm speaking from my own convictions there about

that and the existence of God Almighty. I'm doing it because the subject

of the thread gets muddied when mixed with the other subject.)

========================

BTW,

how would waysider and Raf feel about starting a new thread in Open or

someplace, specifically to get into "free vocalization" in all its forms

and why they're all the same thing,

then maybe how words and terms get invented?

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As long as you do not include all SIT or all alleged demonstrations of spiritual power in the definition of ” all its forms,” I don't see why anyone would object.

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I'm not sure where Chockfull stands on free vocalization as an innate human ability at this point. My last two posts were written on the assumption that he is finding a more sensible position here.

I still think he's making a mistake assuming the non-Christian xenoglossia described by Samarin to be true, when in reality Samarin appears to be calling them all out as faked BS. Just because I SAY I got a message from my spirit guide and it was in Middle English, doesn't mean I did, and doesn't mean it was Middle English. In fact, if you KNOW Middle English and are able to determine that my utterance was NOT Middle English, you would have the only testable indication available that the first half of my story, that I got this utterance from my spirit guide, was horse manure.

Albert Le Baron's story is horse manure. No one should be upset that a person who pretended to get a message from his spirit guide turned out to be a fraud. In fact, I would venture to say the opposite is true: we're on firm ground EXPECTING such horse manure to be horse manure. Not to dismiss it out of hand, but at least wait for proof and recognize proof to the contrary when you see it. (And when he gives you a language to check, you check, and it ain't that language, that's not just evidence. That's proof).

I have no problem lumping faked mediums, faked SIT and real free vocalization into the same linguistic category (the last one being a natural explanation and the first two being attempts to portray that natural explanation as something it is not).

But the very possibility of this appears to upset Chockfull so much that he is more willing to dispense with the true, documentable and self-evident reality of free vocalization rather than the phony, unproved and evidence-free UNreality of faked SIT and xenoglossia.

And I deliberately used faked SIT in that previous paragraph to distinguish it from real SIT, which, if it exists, doesn't seem to be showing up in any of these studies.

Edited by Raf
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As long as you do not include all SIT or all alleged demonstrations of spiritual power in the definition of ” all its forms,” I don't see why anyone would object.

Ok, I can accept that as a limit on the discussion.

Would you and waysider participate if I did? I'm hoping from input from

both of you, and cut-and-paste would be acceptable where it's relevant.

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I don't see why not.

A lot of edits in post 1430 between the time I first posted and now. If anyone read before, it might behoove you to read again.

Edited by Raf
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The problem you're having is that you're doing exactly what you accuse US of doing: using circular reasoning to affirm that the utterances which are CLAIMED to be spirit-energized really ARE spirit-energized, then blasting the researchers for not being able to tell their output apart. It's rational and likely that the researchers can't tell the output apart because there's no difference in the output. Now, if one of these things were producing a known language, THAT would be a different output. But to get angry because Samarin can't tell an alleged case of xenoglossia from an alleged case of glossolalia? Rather than think both of them are faking it by free vocalizing, your default presumption is Samarin can't tell a devil spirit from a holy spirit and free vocalization is merely a label applied to his failure? That's ridiculous. Samarin is looking at the output. He's TOLD there's a distinction. He sees none. Ya think it's remotely possible it might maybe be because there is none?

This goes back to our discussion of sample space again. I'm going to have to explain. Your misunderstanding of sample space just involves lack of completeness, it's not that your point is incorrect. The definition you focus on is sample space consists of "the entire range of possible values". How does this apply to the field of say, drug testing for FDA approval? So for a cancer drug, the sample space would be the entire population that has cancer. You select study participants based upon in part their qualification to the basic space. So for example, it would make no sense to allow a person without cancer into the study as it would prove nothing.

How does this apply to the possible values and/or possible people to include in Samarin's study? If he decides to include mediums in the study, then BY THAT DECISION he is opening up the sample space to include NOT ONLY THOSE FAKING IT, but also the possibility that they are in reality conversing in another language with a spirit entity. Likewise, to include those SIT in the study, he would have to include those that are at least possibly genuinely doing it in addition to those who are faking it.

The sample space here is TOO WIDE to prove one single occurrence one way or the other.

Sure it is remotely possible that both SIT people AND mediums are faking it.

A. Human beings are capable of stringing sounds together and, consciously or not, trying to make them sound like languages. That is an independent fact which you have basically just acknowledged.

I'm not so sure of the "consciously or not" phrase. But yes, humans are capable of stringing sounds together so that they can sound like a language, as much as you can identify what an unknown language WOULD sound like. We have major disagreements on Hockett's 16 criteria on what consists of a language, and only 5 of those attributes deal with the phonetic side of it.

B. Human beings claim to SIT. The spiritual energy behind it cannot be tested. The output can. There is nothing in the output that distinguishes it from free vocalization linguistically (Poythress).

The point I disagree with here is that IF there is spiritual energy behind it, that ABSOLUTELY distinguishes it from made-up sounds. The other point is, that unless the language is understood, there is no way an independent researcher COULD distinguish it from made-up sounds. Unless is was obvious gibberish, which WAS able to be detected.

So what there is failure to address with this point is that IT COULD BE SIT WITH A PERFECT LANGUAGE SPOKEN AND SPIRITUAL ENERGY BEHIND IT, and it still would be classified as not distinguishable from "free vocalization" or made-up sounds by Samarin, Poythress, or ANY OTHER RESEARCHER.

This point proves NOTHING.

C. Human beings have claimed xenoglossia through non-Christian means. The spiritual energy behind it cannot be tested. The output can. The opinion of the linguist we are reviewing fails to find any distinction between those utterances and SIT (Samarin), and SIT produces nothing that distinguishes it from free vocalization (Poythress).

Another way to state this is both Samarin and Poythress are reaching the conclusion "I don't understand either one of these samples, so they are the same to me".

Outside of measuring how often consonants occur, and looking at language constructs like sentences, phrases, etc. that's basically all they are saying and concluding.

Is this meaningful? NOT REALLY.

It's not that free vocalization was coined in order to lump these things under one umbrella. Rather, the properties of these different phenomena, recognized as producing the same result, were labeled by Poythress in the terms of their least common denominator: free vocalization as an innate human ability. Poythress did not equate SIT and free vocalization. I did that. That's my hypothesis. It is not proved. I never said it was. I have said that the research has failed to find linguistic distinctions between SIT and free vocalization (which Poythress almost reluctantly admits), and pointed to that as evidence in support of my hypothesis (which Poythress most certainly does not concede). But that's not the same thing as me saying "I proved it! I proved it!"

I really don't know why you are fixating on this "innate human ability" phrase. Did you read that in one of the studies, or just make it up? Can you find the quote for me if it is from someone else?

So it's an "innate human ability" that someone can run their mouth, not thinking about what they are saying, and someone else won't understand? STOP THE PRESSES, WE HAVE A SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGH. :anim-smile: I submit that this happens in school classrooms across the world every day.

From my perspective I can remove all the high-falutin' science language for you here. Humans can speak in various capacities where others won't understand them. There. That pretty much sums up what is meant by "free vocalization".

Poythress further subdivides free vocalization into separate categories. The only observable distinction between SIT (which he calls T-Speech) and competent (and spirit-free) free vocalization is the setting in which it is produced. It's not a measurement of a difference in output. It's an acknowledgment of a difference in location and mentality of input. He could not point to a difference in output, and only suggests the difference may exist, undetectably, on theological grounds. He leaves science when he makes such an assertion. He's writing an article on faith for a theological publication, so he's entitled to do that. But when he does, he leaves the realm of science and detached, unbiased observation.

Mostly because the science approach here isn't getting him anywhere. Kind of like we aren't getting anywhere with the science approach.

The point is this: demonstrations of spiritual power that are empirically testable are not true until disproved. They are not untrue until proved. They are undetermined until proved one way or another. When a natural explanation exists to explain an alleged case of a demonstration of spiritual power, there is no rational reason to reject the natural explanation.

I agree with this logic for the most part. My feeling on spiritual power demonstrated is that first of all, you have to have the components to detect this. This means to me that you have to be BORN AGAIN, or as the Bible states, things concerning the spirit will simply be foolishness to you. I also feel that someone has to not be closed off to consider spiritual sources. An extreme pessimistic viewpoint concerning all things spiritual in my opinion will put you in the same place that someone not born again is. An over-dependence on the 5 senses combined with a pessimistic science-fact-only based viewpoint is an individual making up their mind that spiritual things are foolish to them, regardless of whether they are born again or not.

This is the age-old Illuminati argument - science vs. faith as depicted in Dan Brown's novels.

There is a rational reason to reject free vocalization as a natural explanation for SIT if SIT were to produce known human languages. But it hasn't. Not according to the findings of the linguists. You may speculate that the linguists missed a spot, but it's on natural terms. They are imperfect and capable of making mistakes. It is silly to accuse them of being unable to distinguish between demonic power and genuinely godly power when they see no evidence of ANY spiritual power whatsoever. They see free vocalization, a natural, human ability that does exist, sounds like language, but fails to match the phonemic strata of any known language.

Let me state this for you in simple terms that remove the scientific mysticism from it. The minute you understand the language in SIT, it becomes no longer gibberish to you. Until then, SIT is just gibberish to you. This is no revelation, SIT is defined to be this way in the Bible. "He that speaks in a tongue, no man understands." It is also described as "foolishness" unless it is interpreted.

You are wrong in your "fails to match the phonemic strata of any known language" statement if you are trying to say anything beyond that it is not understood. Samarin himself marvels at the innate linguistic ability of man to make up sounds that incorporate so many elements of language. Could he be listening to a genuine SIT message there? ABSOLUTELY. There is nothing that would rule that out.

It would be the height of human stupidity to scientifically reach a conclusion that a genuine SIT message "fails to match the phonemic strata of any known language". And there is NOTHING IN ANY STUDY I've read to date that conclusively shows a sample doesn't meet the sounds that a language does, except for in Poythress study two gibberish samples were introduced, and detected IMMEDIATELY and discounted. However, these two gibberish samples were still classified in the "free vocalization" category.

Again, you may challenge the ability of linguists to identify and record phonemes because of aspirated or unaspirated "p's", which would lead to their failure to accurately classify a language they should otherwise have been able to detect. That is a natural, rational challenge to their findings. It has no basis. That is, you are not proving that they missed a language. You are, rather, speculating: suggesting that it remains entirely possible that they missed a language. No spiritual shenanigans or failure because they're not born again. Please. We're talking about empirical claims. If I'm producing a human language, I'm doing so whether you're Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, Hindu or atheist.

You are starting to sound here like linguists are able to identify and classify as a language a sample THAT THEY DON'T SPEAK, WRITE, READ, OR UNDERSTAND ANY VOCABULARY WORDS IN. I have not read anything to show me that is the case.

Is it possible Samarin missed a language? Sure it's possible. More than one? Possible, but less likely. Known languages in every glossa he reviewed? Possible, but venturing into real conspiracy theory territory here. Is it possible that all unbiased researchers who've investigated glossolalia have all missed actual languages in all the samples they reviewed merely because they were not born again? I submit that if you take that likelihood seriously, we have left the realm of a rational conversation and should just bid each other adieu.

Look if genuine SIT taps into 7000 known languages and includes 15000 extinct languages and interchanges between them in a given message, it's not necessarily conspiracy theory that it is not understood. I mean if the Bible says it's not understood, then I take that to mean that outside of special miracles going beyond what is written in the Bible, it is not going to be understood.

How is that possible? If God can select which language to energize, then HE pretty much would be completely in control of whether or not the language is understood.

This was never about proving my case. It wasn't about proving how widespread SIT fakery is. It was always about finding the one exception, the one case where one competent linguist reviewed one case of glossolalia and determined that, yes, this was an identifiable language. Swahili. And the person who produced it had no means of learning that language. And it was positively identified by a real speaker of Swahili (or whatever).

I'm only aware of this by individual anecdote. I've heard approximately 12-15 of those accounts, both inside and outside TWI. To me they would be considered a special miracle, like in Acts 2 at Pentecost. It's completely within my realm of possibility that God chooses when to energize a special miracle, and the terms surrounding that being that it never becomes a scenario where someone sees that first and then believes. The times to see it first then believe are OT times. In NT times, the sign we have is Jesus Christ's life itself.

You say speaking in tongues produces a language. That is the claim that CAN be proved but hasn't been. Ragging on me for failing to prove my claim while demonstrating that you don't have the slightest idea how the burden of proof works in an honest debate (I'm sorry if that's insulting, but you've demonstrated it repeatedly and will do so again when you respond to this) misses the point. I can't prove my position. You can prove yours.

Your court.

Actually, taking a step back here, it's not really up to me to prove it. It's up to God. He's the one that energized the writing down of the epistles that describe SIT. He's the one that stated it's use and purpose, that it is not understood. He's the one that would be energizing each of the messages.

So why don't you take up with God the whole "burden of proof" topic? Obviously you seem to think that God doesn't understand the concept of burden of proof any more than I do.

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"...... unless the language is understood, there is no way an independent researcher COULD distinguish it from made-up sounds. Unless is was obvious gibberish, which WAS able to be detected."

............................................................................

This conflicts with Newberg's study of blood flow during glossolalia, in which it was demonstrated that finite changes take place during speaking in tongues.. (University of Pennsylvania, 2006)

http://www.amebrasil.org.br/html/Newberg2006.pdf

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"...... unless the language is understood, there is no way an independent researcher COULD distinguish it from made-up sounds. Unless is was obvious gibberish, which WAS able to be detected."

............................................................................

This conflicts with Newberg's study of blood flow during glossolalia, in which it was demonstrated that finite changes take place during speaking in tongues.. (University of Pennsylvania, 2006)

http://www.amebrasil.org.br/html/Newberg2006.pdf

Well, whatever the conclusions there, my first comment is this paper is the first one I've read that is solid and sound from a scientific method perspective. So it's worth reading on that front if nothing else.

Newberg conclusively proves that there is different frontal lobe brain activity in glossolalia when compared to singing.

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Well, whatever the conclusions there, my first comment is this paper is the first one I've read that is solid and sound from a scientific method perspective. So it's worth reading on that front if nothing else.

Newberg conclusively proves that there is different frontal lobe brain activity in glossolalia when compared to singing.

Newberg is not the only one to measure functions (indirectly via blood flow, using MRI), with a view toward understanding brain activity during creative processes

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Halloween. See you guys tomorrow. Will decide then how much of Chockfull's latest post is safe to answer. Will try to limit myself to not rehashing.

By the way, I've lost count of the number of times he stated his opinion (Samarin failed to recognize languages, for which Chockfull has ZERO evidence) as fact. Considering that he's been ripping me to shreds and whining about it every other post, I think I am entitled to point out the continued hypocrisy.

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By the way, I've lost count of the number of times he stated his opinion (Samarin failed to recognize languages, for which Chockfull has ZERO evidence) as fact. Considering that he's been ripping me to shreds and whining about it every other post, I think I am entitled to point out the continued hypocrisy.

You're losing me. Samaring DID recognize the languages somewhere?

I was just pointing out that the fact that Samarin didn't recognize the languages did not mean that he was ruling out the possibility of it being an existing human language in use or extinct language. Did he state somewhere that he was ruling out the possibility of ALL languages that I missed? Because that is one that I CERTAINLY would like to see the evidence on.

Halloween. See you guys tomorrow.

I'm out too, off to scare small children. See you guys tomorrow....

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You misread my post. I know, shocking, right?

Here, let me use smaller words.

You keep saying, as fact, that Samarin had languages in front of him but failed to detect them. This is not a fact. It is your speculation. I am not obliged to account for your speculation.

And what is it about "a glossa is never a human language" that you don't understand?

Last thing for the night: are we going to just act like this is the first time anyone's mentioned Newberg's study, like we never demonstrated why it doesn't address this thread like dozens of pages ago? Because I've seen this movie before. I know how it ends.

Newberg did not consider the question of fakery. Does the frontal lobe activity of a person faking it look any different from a person doing it for real? Can those differences, if they exist, be accounted for by intent of the speaker ( the emotions would presumably be different). Can one person be compared to another? Or can a subject only be compared to himself during a different activity.

Newberg's study IS interesting. But it doesn't address the first thing about this thread. Nor, I suspect, can it.

I think I know how much I'm going to need to post tomorrow.

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Ok, things are a lot more calm than they were 24 hours ago. Thank you all.

I keep saying I've run out of patience, and I keep allowing myself to get drawn back in to answer just one more thing.

But the just one more thing is invariably something that's already been answered. We're now just finding new ways to answer the same old questions, rehashed, repackaged, and most certainly reheated.

In the most recent substantive post, chockfull asks a bunch of questions and makes a bunch of the same old accusations.

At one point this argument was moving in circles. Which, I guess, is fine if you like merry go rounds.

Now I get the sense we are not moving at all. It's not a constructive use of anyone's time.

Please, it's not that I can't refute the last post. It's that on the majority of points made, I've already addressed or refuted them. Just because the questions keep getting asked doesn't mean they haven't been answered. I submit neither of us will persuade another person either way.

So, ok. God won't participate in a satanic study. The linguists are incompetent. They don't know a devil spirit from the holy spirit. Free vocalization doesn't exist. The term "innate human ability" doesn't matter. Stating an opinion as fact is a bad, bad thing. When Raf does it. Perfectly ok when Chockfull does. Samarin was an incompetent hack who conducted shoddy research that gets quoted as an authority on the subject by everyone studying glossolalia to this day. Shoddy shoddy shoddy. But Matthew C. Landry, a geologist who was a college student minoring in religious studies when he wrote a class paper that clearly took sides on the issue and was more biased than a Rush Limbaugh radio program, a paper that quoted Samarin so far out of context it made Samarin look like he was saying the 180 degrees opposite of what we know he concludes-- Landry deserves protection from any criticism. Noting that he was a college student is an ad hominem attack. Renouncing Samarin's findings because he's not born again is not an ad hominem attack. No, that's spiritually astute.

You know what? Enough. It is impossible to argue with someone when the common ground shifts every 5-10 posts. No mas.

I've said my peace. I've presented the only evidence I have access to at this time. If I learn more, I'll present more. But to paraphrase the Monty Python crew, we haven't been having an argument. We've just been having contradictions. No, we haven't? Yes, we have.

Count me out. Peace.

Edited by Raf
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I'm looking over the Newberg paper to see if he addresses any of the issues I raised when we reviewed the same study (we already did this, oodles of pages ago) off news accounts. After all, who trusts the media to get it right? We have a peer-reviewed research paper here!

The first thing that amused me is that the very first expert he cited in connection with glossolalia was Samarin. I wonder if he knows what a shoddy researcher Samarin was. He should have relied on Landry!

Next thing to note is that none of the hypotheses Newberg tested involved any comparison of genuine SIT to admitted fakery. He lists his hypotheses at the end of page one and beginning of page two.

In his first hypothesis, he takes for granted that there is a loss of intentional control. Depending on exactly what he means by that, it could be problematic. TWI's version of SIT did not involve a "loss of control" per se, but it did involve a surrender of control over the specific string of sounds uttered (the Sspirit gives the utterance, we control the body). So "loss of intentional control" might be a sound presumption, if that's what Newberg means. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, I think it's safe to proceed without worrying too much about whether that wording poses a problem.

Hypothesis 2: He expects glossolalia to demonstrate different mental changes compared to meditation. I don't see why this would not be the case. They're very different activities, in enough ways to expect a different outcome. No problem there.

Hypothesis 3: He calls SIT "a highly active state." Again, we have a potential terminology issue. I don't think SIT as practiced in TWI can be described by a layman as "highly active." But maybe Newberg's definition is different from a layman's. We proceed, as in hypothesis 1, with some concern, but not nearly enough to dismiss the results.

Hypothesis 4: He calls SIT "a very emotional state." In three of the four hypotheses, Newberg describes SIT in terms that, as laypeople, we can all directly challenge, if not contradict. Again, what does he mean by emotional? What does he mean by very emotional? Would he have had different results if all his study subjects were TWI glossolalists? I don't know. I'm inclined to believe he could. But I'm also inclined to believe it could not affect his test results. It could go either way. "Emotional" can mean different things to different people. It's hard to measure. Newberg acknowledges this. By the way... so does Samarin.

To summarize: In none of Newberg's hypotheses do we see any attempt to validate or invalidate SIT. We merely see attempts to describe it and to see what it looks like to the brain performing it. Fair enough. Let's go!

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Glossolalia was perceived to be non-voluntary by the subjects.

Interesting observation. Directly contradicted by our experience.

He makes a casual observation about the phonemic structure of the glossolalia, pretty much matching Samarin (and any other respectful observer). We've already noted on this thread that phonemic structure proves nothing more than the fact that the person speaks, pauses, stops, etc., just like we do when we're speaking our native language. To paraphrase another poster's review of another study: Duh.

Now, onto the good stuff...

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Hmm. A decent summary of the raw data. Some really good analysis of the psychoanalytic history of glossolalia (much of it reflecting the issues I just raised in going over his hypotheses. Well done).

First hypothesis predicted a decrease in frontal lobe activity from singing (with the understanding) to glossolalia. That prediction was validated (big shock. Speaking with the understanding uses the frontal lobe. Speaking without it does not). What distinguishes it from non-spiritual fakery? The study doesn't consider that question. (Can I say free vocalization again? Or is that going to get challenged every time I bring it up?)

Second hypothesis predicted a difference between glossolalia and meditation. That difference was confirmed. I'm confident that if he had sought a difference between glossolalia and a monastic intonation of the Lord's Prayer, he would have found that too. This should surprise no one.

Third hypothesis predicted an increase in thalamic activity based on SIT being a "highly active state." This was not confirmed. He goes into some detail about what he DID find, and there's a bit more work to be done. But interesting that I found a problem with the hypothesis as it was stated, and that he evidently failed to confirm the hypothesis, no? I may have overstated that last line. You really need to read it in the original.

And the last hypothesis did confirm an increased emotional state. But that could very well be because the subjects were emotional. I'm sure five TWI followers at their third fellowship of the day might have shown different results. But whatever.

***

So what do we learn, definitively, from Newberg?

Well, it does appear that when you're speaking in tongues, you're not pre-thinking the sounds coming out.

Duh. No one said we were.

This study says NOTHING about fakery, nothing about distinguishing between an actual lack of control and a perceived lack of control (whatever either term means).

You know what would have been interesting? Brain scans of people interpreting and prophesying, and comparing it to those same people discussing the Word or merely praising God with their understanding, extemporaneously, no pre-planning involved. I wonder if there would be decreased frontal lobe activity then? And if so, what would it prove?

My overall point is that Newberg's study is interesting, but hardly applicable to the subject we're discussing. I made that observation earlier based on news accounts, and now, with his actual study in hand, I repeat that observation.

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Newberg is not the only one to measure functions (indirectly via blood flow, using MRI), with a view toward understanding brain activity during creative processes

Limb introduces an interesting word we can apply to our discussion as an alternative to free vocalization (which is a perfectly acceptable term in my view but seems to create conniption fits in other(s?).

Innovation. The human brain is an innovative machine. A musician who innovates a sequence of notes AS he is playing, no pre-planning, isn't automatically believed to be under spiritual influence.

What we've been referring to as "free vocalization" can also be described as a kind of vocal innovation: bringing forth a series of sounds with no cognitive pattern. With a piano, we call it improv.

I hope I don't have to prove that the brain is capable of improvisation. I really hope I don't have to prove that.

Let's see if anyone else uses the term "improvisation" or a variation of it while discussing SIT.

I'll be gosh darned:

http://www.christianity-guide.com/christianity/glossolalia.htm

http://books.google.com/books?id=UjUulaAocmoC&pg=PA217&lpg=PA217&dq=glossolalia+improvisation+Samarin&source=bl&ots=Jj6bGZWK9c&sig=Ag_MNnnTCu4K9TrwBh54YSqbGq0&hl=en&sa=X&ei=_IaSUKiZBYjYywHAz4G4Aw&ved=0CFkQ6AEwBzgK#v=onepage&q=glossolalia%20improvisation%20Samarin&f=false

That's all I could find in a few short minutes, and I had to dig for them.

What I would likely do next is hunt down any differences between free vocalization (as defined in Poythress and used on this thread) and vocal improvisation, free improvisation, vocal innovation and other such words. Not sure the overlap is 100%, but willing to be it's significant.

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Newberg is not the only one to measure functions (indirectly via blood flow, using MRI), with a view toward understanding brain activity during creative processes

Limb introduces an interesting word we can apply to our discussion as an alternative to free vocalization (which is a perfectly acceptable term in my view but seems to create conniption fits in other(s?).

Innovation. The human brain is an innovative machine. A musician who innovates a sequence of notes AS he is playing, no pre-planning, isn't automatically believed to be under spiritual influence.

What we've been referring to as "free vocalization" can also be described as a kind of vocal innovation: bringing forth a series of sounds with no cognitive pattern. With a piano, we call it improv.

I hope I don't have to prove that the brain is capable of improvisation. I really hope I don't have to prove that.

Let's see if anyone else uses the term "improvisation" or a variation of it while discussing SIT.

I'll be gosh darned:

http://www.christianity-guide.com/christianity/glossolalia.htm

http://books.google.com/books?id=UjUulaAocmoC&pg=PA217&lpg=PA217&dq=glossolalia+improvisation+Samarin&source=bl&ots=Jj6bGZWK9c&sig=Ag_MNnnTCu4K9TrwBh54YSqbGq0&hl=en&sa=X&ei=_IaSUKiZBYjYywHAz4G4Aw&ved=0CFkQ6AEwBzgK#v=onepage&q=glossolalia%20improvisation%20Samarin&f=false

That's all I could find in a few short minutes, and I had to dig for them.

What I would likely do next is hunt down any differences between free vocalization (as defined in Poythress and used on this thread) and vocal improvisation, free improvisation, vocal innovation and other such words. Not sure the overlap is 100%, but willing to be it's significant.

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