KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
The only direct evidence I ever encountered was a fellow who worked there and was part of a crew that quit within a week of being hired. One of the things he remembers is a pair of ladders they'd set up with a plank running between the two ladders across rungs, one of the ladders with no one touching it, folded and toppled the rig lengthwise. Work step ladders set in a triangular fashion have to lift to fold, they don't just do it by themselves. He also said he had incidents, painful ones, for weeks afterwards off site. But personally I've only heard anecdotal evidence.
That's not "direct evidence" it's anecdotal evidence, as you yourself indicated. Which is the flimsiest of evidence out there.
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Also being a skeptic of most things, "debunking" is often a good thing, when people are actively trying to disprove something, not supporting their own confirmation bias about something being nonexistant.
You do realize this applies to people who
want to believe in something as well right? Confirmation bias is rampant in the supernatural proponents department.
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Sure because the idiots on Ghost Adventures are the only ones who have reported unexplainable activity. Except they're not. There have been many contractors and crews who went to work on remodeling the Goldfield Hotel, they all quit, suddenly, reporting the same sort of activity that the Ghost Adventures crew talked about. There are reports of unexplainable activity, that fits the definition of a "haunted" location, going on there going way back. Also the people who go around and find evidence that a given place isn't haunted tend to be people called "debunkers", who go in having made the decision they're not going to believe a claim, then use the most flimsy "evidence to back their view up. Neither is scientific, but when it comes to a location like the Goldfield Hotel, I'm a lot more likely to put my money on reports from a great variety of people going back decades. Instead of buying to the theories of people who are bound and determined not to believe something.
You just used the Argument Ad Populum logical fallacy there. Saying "well hey, lots of people say it's happened, so it must be true." This isn't skeptical at all. Do you believe
everything that a lot of people say happens is what they say it was? What about UFO abductions, tons of people, over several decades report those, but do you give those stories as much validity as these ghost sightings? Or the report from...shit I forget the details of it. I think it was about 60 years ago? Possibly longer, and was somewhere in South America I believe. A large number of people in this one valley, were
reported (though there is some evidence that the number of people reported to have seen it was inflated for sensationalism), that the sun in the sky moved around of it's own power. Literally moved around, and they said it was a miracle. Now, nobody else on the planet reported this happening, and since this would be something that if it did actually happen, would've been globally witnessed. But hey, supposedly, dozens of people saw it, so it must be true right? My personal opinion is that there was sporadic cloud cover, and this made it look like the sun was moving in the sky, in relation to the clouds. I've seen this happen myself with the moon on various nights.
That's why you can't use the "lot's of people say it happened, so it must have happened" stance, if you are actually being skeptical. Because it's still nothing more than a collection of anecdotal statements. Which don't have any extra weight of evidence simply by being large in volume. At best it might suggest an investigation, as having multiple sources say "something happened here" would suggest that "something" happened. But what it was, should be left up to the actual investigation results.