What sounds familiar to me is...
how "convenient" as Gen-X would say, it is to accept Sam's explanation because it is grounded in his belief of being able to explain things (i.e. brain's need for reconciliation of events)
BTW people, it is I who am now playing devil's advocate with this entire thread. Originally I thought Gen-X would be the proponent (or someone with similar experiences) because his experience was more sustained than I recall any of mine. This leads to so-called "open mindedness" being somewhat equivalent to "never taking a stance". But that is for another discussion and I don't mean to offend anyone; I'm more interested in the Deja Vu component here.
denniswrenn also describes deja vu the way I have experienced it.
Gen-X, which "other thread" are you refering to?
An explanation for deja vu
I have had 4-10 deja vu experiences, starting when I was in high school and occurring over the next 5-10 years. The deja vu experiences I have had were a convincing feeling in my mind that I had previously lived through the present circumstances. It was the feeling that in my mind was an exact memory of a short period of time (20 seconds to a minute or so). The first occurred when I was in high school
In every one of my deja vu experiences, I knew that I had never lived though the events which were currently happening. The deja vu always terminated before I had a chance to predict what was going to happen next.
It is my nature to be to want to be as rational as possible, and I attempt to understand anything that seems potentially important. These experiences bothered me. Since I do not believe in the occult, clairvoyance, et cetera my instinctive interpretation was some brain malfunction.
As is my nature, I started researching the experience. I did not know a term for the phenomena. The best I could do was describe the experience to friends, teachers, et cetera. Finally somebody came up with the term deja vu, which allowed me to research it in a library. I was relieved to discover that the experience was not unique to me, and was not considered a symptom of any serious mental disorder.
Many years after my last experience, I read an article that made sense to me. It claimed that while the brain is making a record of what is happening, it gets momentarily confused and thinks it is remembering instead of storing data. Kind of like cross-talk between the read & write circuitry for your hard drive.
I do not believe that anybody really knows what deja vu is, but that explanation was the best guess I ever encountered.
It is my nature to flat out dismiss ESP-like explanations, so I have accepted the above idea in the absence of anything that looks more plausible to me. If anybody has a better explanation, I will be interested. I will be amused by, disbelieve, and not comment on occult or ESP-like explanations.
Not because of my experience.
dvst8
After rereading my Post, I understand how you could interpret my comments the way you did. However I did not mean to imply that I dismiss predictive deja vu because it never happened to me.
I dismiss it because I attribute all claims, anecdotes, et cetera relating to predictive abilities as coincidence (most likely), faulty memory, hallucination, retro-fit of events to prediction (EG: Nostradamus), deliberate exaggeration (lying), non-deliberate lying, stage magic.
In general, I do not view anecdotes as evidence. If I had some miraculous experience, it might convince me of the existence of occult phenomena, ESP, et cetera. However, I would not expect my telling of the experience to convince anybody else, and would not present it as evidence.
Re-Thinking about my theory
ViartuallyVB
I spent some time re-thinking about this. And this is what came to my mind:
If time can be bent, and time-travel is possible, then our player could be sent back in time. This could explain why not every-body u know share your same deja-vu's. But I also question myself ... who is sending us back?
Most of us believe that there is a "Higer Something" watching us from above. Most people call it GOD, other believe that they are the extraterrestial aliens, but most of us believe that something/somebody create us and is watching our lives. Maibe I take fiction movies to seriosly but, I remember an old one that have a similar situation. There was a world, with players who believed that there was something on a higer plane of existance. That movie was Tron. I'm not saying that we live inside GOD's playstation video games. But if the universe is infinite on every way, there could be a similar thing happening to us.
About repeated deja-vu's I really have not experienced such a thing. But I end up with this theory because on some Deja-Vu's esperiences, I had the usual feeling "I pass tru this before" and some other experiences I have a little diferent feeling: "I pass tru this before, more than once".
And there is something that doesn't change. Everytime I had one of those experiences, I have also the feeling that "I'm doing something wrong".
Ruben :)