Shamanic animism is false; that’s a pretty easy one.
So, you think that shamanic practices are not doing anything interesting? e.g. that altered states of consciousness, such as are claimed to be inherent in these practices, don’t really exist? (If so, that would seem to be falsified by the available evidence.) Or perhaps that practices and cognitive stances linked to shamanic animism are not in fact beneficial to those who pursue them (Such as the stance of striving to relate to the enduring ‘spirit’ of one’s ancestors, in order to heal a perceived psychological weakness or illness)?
So, you think that shamanic practices are not doing anything interesting? e.g. that altered states of consciousness, such as are claimed to be inherent in these practices, don’t really exist? (If so, that would seem to be falsified by the available evidence.) Or perhaps that practices and cognitive stances linked to shamanic animism are not in fact beneficial to those who pursue them (Such as the stance of striving to relate to the enduring ‘spirit’ of one’s ancestors, in order to heal a perceived psychological weakness or illness)?
Some of the practices may have effects, but generally not for the reasons claimed.