As a predictive art professional, I had to listen when a popular TV show recently broadcasted about whether psychology was a fraud or a true episode. Because of the relatively small in-depth investigation of mental abilities, the producers of the show took a safe stance that most psychologists were either fraudulent or geeks who were imaginative and overconfident about their abilities.
This special program includes its theme of spiritual media [talking to the deceased], handheld readers, some space cleaners and tarot card readers. Although I personally feel that most psychologists are not specific enough for my taste, I also know and experience the feng shui practitioners who are often handled very badly [and unfairly] by the media.
One of the main points that none of the psychologists interviewed mentioned is that we all have some free will. We seem to be ready to fire a metaphysicist who is not 100% accurate in 100% of the time, but predicting that art practitioners generally believe that nothing is "unchanged," and because of free will, there is no mind or astrologer or feng shui master. It can be predicted that there are no errors or omissions in the past, now or in the future. We cannot guarantee the results. For a certain proportion of the population, large pharmaceutical companies that produce drugs with significant side effects are not problematic. As a society, when it comes to the theme of integrity, we can criticize the accuracy of big companies and their "accuracy", just like a single person. When our local meteorologists encountered the wrong weather, we would not take him out of the city and call them liar.
Taking Feng Shui analysis as an example, we can describe the types of houses that can attract certain problems or situations for their occupants. But even in the most basic feng shui research, we can determine who might be doing better in the same house based on their unique birth data. Personal compatibility is very important. We can have two brothers and sisters living in the same house, even sharing the same room, and they may still have different experiences that interact uniquely with them in the same environment. Then, when we add this, some measure of free will, a modest and experienced consultant will admit that he can't keep up with everything.
Another irony that many skeptics believe is that if someone benefits from the advice of a psychologist or predictive art practitioner, the person must be highly suggestive [ie, a placebo effect]. The notion that everything is in one's heart is actually a very standard metaphysical principle, and you can use your mind to change your reality. In other words, skeptics can ridicule the idea that the energy of the room can only be changed with furniture, but they also verify a more mysterious theory that we all have "mental control." This contradiction can also be applied to holistic medicine. Skeptics may ridicule the use of homeopathy to treat colds, but they acknowledge that the mind [rather than the body that succumbs to infection] is responsible for our illness.
This is just an example of how a skeptic can easily contradict his skepticism without realizing it. Do we believe in these intangible forces?
As time went by, my own suspicions have been cured because I have countless participants in the "Blind Case Study" involved in my Feng Shui practice. The customer has installed remedial measures and has adjusted their family or business, and their spouse, children or colleagues know that the environment has not changed at all, or why. However, the target subject still receives benefits or predictable outcomes. For nearly two decades, I have been recording objective results, and almost everyone agrees that their space is "diagnosed." The only time you can't confirm immediately is when the customer has not moved into the location or just moved into the location. I can sincerely say that feng shui is a real phenomenon. It works most of the time, whether or not anyone believes it, or even knows that the name of Feng Shui is what they do.
Orignal From: The reputation and classification of feng shui as a predictive art
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