I'll bite, Talia.
[quote author=Talia link=board=6;threadid=63;start=msg953#msg953 date=1056398753]
Am I the only person that believes that a crystal with its specific mineral properties
may just happen to have some form of useful property we cannot yet describe?[/quote]
I'm more of the skeptical and scientific nature myself (and yes, I still consider myself an eclectic Wiccan). The vast majority of scientists I've encountered are level-headed people who have open minds to the possibility that current theories might be wrong. The difference with scientists, though, is that they tend to be skeptical of a claim unless there is some sort of verifiable proof to support it.
Claims about crystals' "healing powers" could certainly be true, at least in some specific circumstances. At the moment there doesn't appear to be any scientific proof for any of those claims, though. If the proof isn't there, the proof isn't there. It's up to those making the claims to come forward with the actual evidence, or to convince scientists to divert their scarce monetary resources currently earmarked for other research to investigate these claims.
I do understand the frustration that scientists feel when non-scientists try to validate unsupported claims by pretending that it is scientifically backed -- throwing in some scientific-sounding terms or phrases to impress the uneducated has worked for snake-oil salesmen in the past, and continues to work today in all sorts of scams.
To quote a bit on scientific proof from the dreaded skepdic website (specifically from
http://www.skepdic.com/testimon.html )
If others cannot experience the same thing under the same conditions, then there will be no way to verify the experience. If there is no way to test the claims made, then there will be no way to tell if the experience was a delusion or was interpreted correctly. If others can experience the same thing, then it is possible to make a test of the testimonial and determine whether the claim based on it is worthy of belief.
Science is about being able to prove things are the way they say they are. Tests have to be performed and they have to work. And they have to work no matter who does the tests so long as they follow the method and circumstances correctly. Any claim, including that crystals can heal, should be possible to test. If it can't be tested then how can we be sure that it's real and not just a delusion?
As a Wiccan I want my spells to work. That means doing my best to understand what is going on in a situation and doing my very best to manipulate whatever forces are in play to my advantage, according to my religious path's ethics of course. I don't want to waste time on things that don't really have any effect. That's why science is important to me.
Using the explanation that everything is a psychological tool is a roundabout argument as well as it says that everything we believe is not real and just a psychological tool. If that is true then it doesn't matter if we call ourselves pagan or christian or jehovah's witnesses or join the solar temple because our opinions will all be wrong and just psychological tools anyway.
As a Pagan and a polytheist, I don't believe there is such a thing as a "One True Way" that is right for everyone. Where some would say, "they're all wrong!" I'd argue, "in some ways, each of them is right!" It's the old question about whether the glass is half-full or half-empty.
Regarding the opinion that at least some magickal tools such as crystals are really just psychological props... this is not really a new idea. Dion Fortune and Israel Regardie, as two examples that pop in my head right off the top, both considered magick to be more or less a form of operative or practical psychology. (They were both practicing psychologists working in the mental health field, I believe. I'm sure someone can correct me if I'm wrong on that.)
Whether the things work because of psychology or because of some other reason still means that they can work. Getting a better understanding of WHY they work, though, allows us to be that much more effective with them. If we know why they work, then we can fine-tune how we use the tools to take advantage of the real power in them instead of wasting effort with parts of their use that really don't do anything.
I'm not saying we are all right when we try to explain something, but I do think went we try to explain we can go too far. When we explain away other peoples opinions we can undermine our own.
That last sentence is quite interesting... and it is a double-edged sword. When scientific viewpoints are dismissed out of hand, why shouldn't nonscientific viewpoints also be dismissed out of hand? If we take one viewpoint seriously, shouldn't we keep our minds open enough to at least consider the other viewpoints?
Science has gotten humans a lot -- modern medicine, abundant and varied food, computers, the internet. It certainly has its problems too, but then so does the religious community. I just find it hard to dismiss science out-of-hand when it's clear that science is not just a matter of opinion and ego.