To be fair, believing in supernatural phenomena based on seemingly good photographic evidence rather than on the basis of faith is at least a step in the right direction. But refusing to examine the flaws in the evidence is the problem, good example of motivated cognition there.
Have you seen the photos in question? The girls cut them out of a children’s picture book and it shows. There is no chance anyone could take them seriously without previous belief.
To be fair, believing in supernatural phenomena based on seemingly good photographic evidence rather than on the basis of faith is at least a step in the right direction. But refusing to examine the flaws in the evidence is the problem, good example of motivated cognition there.
Have you seen the photos in question? The girls cut them out of a children’s picture book and it shows. There is no chance anyone could take them seriously without previous belief.