As for me, and as to my personal decision policy, I am ninety-something percent confident. The scenarios where I'm wrong are mostly worlds where outright complex hallucination is a normal feature of human experience that humans are for some reason blind to. I'm not talking about normal human memory biases and biases of interpretation, I'm saying some huge fraction of humans would have to have a systemic disorder on the level of anosognosia.
Can you explain why you believe this? To me it doesn't seem like complex hallucination is that common. I know about 1% of the population is schizophrenic and hallucinates regularly, and I'm sure non-schizophrenics hallucinate occasionally, but it certainly seems to be fairly rare.
Can you describe your own experience with these gods?
ETA: To clarify, I'm saying that I don't think hallucination is common, and I also don't believe that gods are real. I don't see why there should be any tension between those beliefs.
I agree complex recurrent hallucination in otherwise seemingly psychologically healthy people is rare, which is why the "gods"/psi hypothesis is more compelling to me. For the hallucination hypothesis to hold it would require some kind of species-wide anosognosia or something like it.
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