Yes, it was, although I did not mean it in an accusatory way - just an exhaustive way. Disbelief is definitely justifiable - I would go so far as to say the most justified of those positions, from a perspective that has not had enough conclusive personal experience. I have heard of people talk about “shamanism” in glowing terms and then, upon having that term explained (uncensored) compare it disparagingly to faith healing. Which they’re justified in doing, in my opinion. While radical agnosticism is a purer skepticism, epistemically on this matter I think disbelief is probably the more responsible position. That is in terms of public epistemology though. In terms of private epistemology, I’d say belief in one’s own experiences is justified.
Example of what I mean: lucid dreaming. From a public epistemological standpoint (ie things “scientifically proven”) - lucid dreaming was not known to exist. It was always available for private epistemic proof - that is to say, people could simply learn how to do it and prove to themselves, but only to themselves, that it was indeed real. Then Stephen Laberge in the 1980’s strapped motion sensors on people’s eyelids, got them to communicate in morse code from a dream state, and heralded lucid dreaming into the public realm of known phenomena after thousands of years of being an exclusively privately proven phenomenon. Much of the claims in shamanism, I’d say, fall into private epistemic affairs - for now.
I’d probably disagree and say that telepathy would be a violation of physics as we understand it, I just think you may be reifying the “laws” of physics and so contrasting things like say telepathy or corporeal levitation as being in different categories. In either case, it would just be a phenomenon not yet accounted for by our present models of how the world works.
In terms of my own experiences: plenty both on and off psychedelics, and very, very definitive. I have spoken sentences in people’s minds and they heard the words. Made people laugh at jokes and then have them leap back in shock when they realized what happened. Peered into people’s minds and turned on a trip for them when neither of us had taken anything. I cannot do it on command, it is always spontaneously in the moment, but it has happened so many times throughout my life that I simply cannot deny it, and nor can the people who have experienced it with me, both while sober and on psychedelics. But it would be very difficult to replicate in laboratory conditions - not that it can’t in principle, but it’d be difficult. Maybe some people in the world can do it more reliably. I have heard of a select few rare monks in the Thai Forest tradition who could do it without difficulty, but, in that tradition they would be violating monastic codes to do it in front of anyone who is not themselves ordained. Claims of corporeal levitation have also been made. The monastic codes permit monks to tell stories about other monks. I hope someday it will be verified. As a private affair, the issue is settled for me. As a public affair, it would be epistemically irresponsible to believe without personal verification, and for my part as a private affair the converse is true. Agnosticism may not be as epistemically responsible, but I do appreciate the open mindedness
Full on belief without personal experience, would probably be my least preferred option.