The Question said:
I'm not talking about anything that major. I'm talking about altering one tiny, seemingly insignifigant thing, but causing a chain reaction that ends with a huge result.
Actually, any rip in time and space may cause a cascade. However small. You're still removing a part of one dimension, and forcing it into another.
The Question said:
I never said that they "generated" them. Nor did I say that the aproach to doing this was at all scientific, or that it was even inentional.
If it isn't scientific, then it wouldn't follow any laws of the universe, and hence, be against the laws of science.
And generate would be the word you're looking for. Manifestation and generation are similar. Though manifest would be totally against science.
The Question said:
We're not talking about creating multiverses or people in any physical sense. And you're assuming that for a conscious mind to directly effect the physical world, it has to know exactly how that works. Most reports of such phenomina have the person in question not entirely aware of what they're doing, so this may not be the case.
I'm assuming that, because the mind recorded has yet to show anything but that. While the mind is an extremely complicated instrument, it doesn't seem to do anything but simple little tasks like pumping a heart, or making sure your nervous system is fine.
While it might be possible that the brain does more than that, it doesn't seem to extend past the body.
The Question said:
Never said that it was creaying energy from nothing (and I never talked about mass). It coul'd easily be energy moving around from somewhere else.
I almost pushed on that point in my last post, but didn't, as that was talking about atomic energy reactions and such (not that I wasn't before.) Ambient energy around Earth would be a fine power source. However, the energy required to do these things would be so massive, that it would push everything around it to almost 0 Kelvin, and basically just destroy all matter around it, since the requirement of energy is great.
The Question said:
I never suggested that the universe was sentient. It may have sounded that way, but that's not what I meant. I don't really know how to explain it if I'm not on some kind of mind altering substances, but the best way I can explain it is to think of the universe as a computer (which it is probably not like at all, but it fits the analogy), and the collective willpower of all of those people is sending it a messege as to how things should be on a very small scale (and if you think about it, Earthly pagan dieties would work on a very small scale compared to the rest of the universe), and the universe making the apropriate changes.
Don't stress it about the mind altering substances thing. I know what you're talking about not explaining it that well. I usually don't understand half of what I'm talking about unless I'm in my conceptual state of mind.
Either way, the universe as a computer analogue fits the bill of what you're trying to say to the point you're trying to say it to. However, you're talking about altering trillions, possibly quadrillions of miles of space by something that you couldn't even see with an electron microscope with proportionate means. Think of it this way. If one atom of your body decays and "dies", does the rest of your body follow suit? The universe is huge. Infinitely huge just about, and growing more by the moment. Almost faster than the speed of light. The universe probably wouldn't even know how to respond to something as small as a simple human request.
And of course, I could easily (but I'm not, seeing how this is meant to be controlled) go into bombs, and how that destroys my argument. But then, using bombs isn't really bending anything. It's refracting of chemical reactions and such. But we can go into that if you want.
The Question said:
Again, that's assuming that these beings would be made up of such a massive amount of energy. For all we know, they wouldn't be at all.
Then they wouldn't really be science anything.
The Question said:
I never said anything about starting and stopping them.
That would be the only way to really change the environment around you. Numbers do not bend.
The Question said:
There doesn't have to be. There might be. And it might be that poltergeist activity really is what people think it is. It's a maybe. I'm simply, for the sake of this arguement, assuming that it does work.
For it to be considered science, yes, there does. If there is no reason, or proof of it ever happening, then it really wouldn't be considered science.
The Question said:
I'm not sure that's true. They may not fully understand how it works, but they may have simply discovered that it did work through whatever means that they did and apply it to their practices.
This I can agree with. But if they didn't understand how to really make it work in the first place, then they really wouldn't be able to do it again. (Notice how I love using lasers) Lasers were not an accidental discovery. That took years of research and understanding photonic values.
The Question said:
No. Science is a methodology. Physics is a feild. The laws of physics are natural laws of the universe. Science, and the scientific mindset, are not the same thing as the laws of physics. Something can be physically possible without being scientific. I know this is just semantics, but clearing this out now will avoid confusion later on.
This, I heavily disagree on. Science is science. It's not a human invention, it's our name for it. Like a tree is a labelled a tree. The application of science is a methodology. Science itself is nothing more than science.
However, I will not accept that something is physically possible, but not scientifically possible without some form of example.
The Question said:
That is true. But, while you can study those things (hell, you can study anything), that doesn't mean you can understand everything through scientific methods. As I said, science is based on the idea that you can take the role of an objective observer sitting outside of what is going on and recording data. When dealing with ideas of the human consciousness, objectivity is impossible. And when dealing with the idea that simply observing something can effect and alter reality, then non interference is also impossible.
Actually, objectivity is still possible even when dealing with humans, as long as a proper scientific method is being observed. A scientific method is really nothing more than a hypothesis, a test, corrections to the hypothesis, and retest. The method repeats itself until something is either found to be defunct, or a law.
What you're kind of explaining in the end, is the ever increasing popularity of the "Butterfly Effect." But that doesn't just go with observation, that also go with talking, or waving your hand.
The Question said:
Maybe. Except, as I have said many many times, there are documented cases where the human consciousness can effect environment. Now, again, assuming that these cases are true, then we can also assume that the human brain and the human consciousness can, to some degree, maniulate energy. Of course, this would take a very special kind of person. And, of course, all of this is basically speculation.
I guess this needs to be explained out. Since we're now trying to really dwelve into human effects, non outward physical, on the environment, we'll be requiring these documented cases. Or at least a website that can somewhat tell me what we're more or less dealing with here. And for the moment, I'll assume the possibility.
However, what we're still talking about is a massive manipulation of energy. Manipulate a little energy, and nothing much happens. The universe doesn't bend that much, nobody cares, it might even heat up a little around where you're trying to bend energy. Change something physically, and we're talking about a whole NEW set of rules. The energy requirement for burning things would be immense. The energy to grow things is massive. A little bit of nigh detectable energy would be nothing. And the energy to punch a whole in time and space, or bend things around would be counted in the mass amount of solar masses of chemicals needed.