Fortune Tellers...?!


Question: I recently went past this tiny shop on the street, and it was of this guy who "could read my future"...
so there was this page and it had a bit of infomation about him (eg. where his was born etc), and at the bottom of the page it said he was a qualified fortune reader.

Now i dont get that:

how can someone know wheather or not what you say is true of false?
How can they qualify you in the first place???
I mean, its just...unethical


Answers: I recently went past this tiny shop on the street, and it was of this guy who "could read my future"...
so there was this page and it had a bit of infomation about him (eg. where his was born etc), and at the bottom of the page it said he was a qualified fortune reader.

Now i dont get that:

how can someone know wheather or not what you say is true of false?
How can they qualify you in the first place???
I mean, its just...unethical

Hello

You can take courses & some of those courses give qualifications.

I run a tarot course which gives a certificate of achievement - but it does make the person qualified to guide others or ethical.

Fortune telling is a very outdated word & implies a circus act - so that would have put me off.

He may be a very clear channel, he may not - follow what your instincts tell you should you wish to visit him - but the qualification means nothing in real terms.

Pam

Hey don't try to read ur fortune bec if you really know it by someone you shall fall in problem.

trust me please....

now is ur matter :)

that is called stupidity

Qualifications are based on the human race. Anybody who would flaunt that is not what they seem. Only a person that gives advice when heard, in that instant the listener knows what is true or false. I personally don't think that a person should charge for readings or advice. I consider it a gift for helping mankind. That is why I have come to Yahoo. To give honest help and in site without getting paid. There is where the honestly lies.

The only way that someone can prove such an ability is with strict testing. This can eliminate those that lie along with any self-deception. Would a "psychic" that has passed such testing be more reliable than someone's say-so?

There is a million dollar prize that has been waiting for someone to claim it for over 10 years. This person simply has to prove any type of paranormal ability or event and it's theirs.

Some may say that they don't need the money. So give it to a charity. Think how many lives they can save by just proving what you claim. If psychics are real this should be easy. Or it could be self-deception. What is more likely?



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