Archived Newsletters 2011-04-18 The Sixth Sense - Extrasensory perception
The Sixth Sense -
Extrasensory perception
ESP involves reception of information not
gained through the recognized physical senses but sensed with the mind. The term was coined
by Sir
Richard Burtonand
adopted by Duke University psychologist J. B. Rhine to denote psychic abilities such astelepathy and clairvoyance, and their trans-temporal operation
as precognition or retrocognition.
ESP is also sometimes casually referred to as a sixth sense, gut instinct or hunch,
which are historical English idioms. The term implies acquisition of
information by means external to the basic limiting assumptions of science,
such as that organisms can only receive information from the past to the
present.
Parapsychology is the scientific study of
paranormal psychic phenomena, including ESP.[1] Parapsychologists
generally regard such tests as the ganzfeld
experiment as providing compelling evidence for the existence
of ESP. The scientific community rejects ESP due to
the absence of an evidence base, the lack of a theory which would explain ESP,
and the lack of experimental techniques which can provide reliably positive
results.
History
J.B. Rhine
In the 1930s, at Duke University in North Carolina J. B. Rhine and his wife
Louisa tried to develop psychical research into an experimental science. To
avoid the connotations of hauntings and the seance room,
they renamed it "parapsychology". While Louisa Rhine concentrated on
collecting accounts of spontaneous cases, J. B. Rhine worked largely in the
laboratory, carefully defining terms such as ESP and psi and designing
experiments to test them. A simple set of cards was developed, originally
called Zener cards (after their designer) - now called ESP cards. They bear the
symbols circle, square, wavy lines, cross, and star; there are five cards of
each in a pack of 25.
In a telepathy experiment,
the "sender" looks at a series of cards while the
"receiver" guesses the symbols. To try to observe clairvoyance, the
pack of cards is hidden from everyone while the receiver guesses. To try to
observe precognition, the order of the cards is determined after the guesses
are made.
In all such experiments
order of the cards must be random so that hits are not obtained through
systematic biases or prior knowledge. At first the cards were shuffled by hand,
then by machine. Later, random number tables were used, nowadays, computers. An
advantage of ESP cards is that statistics can easily be applied to determine
whether the number of hits obtained is higher than would be expected by chance.
Rhine used ordinary people as subjects and claimed that, on average, they did
significantly better than chance expectation. Later he used dice to test for
psychokinesis and also claimed results that were better than chance.
In 1940, Rhine, J.G.
Pratt,
and others at Duke authored a review of all card-guessing experiments conducted
internationally since 1882. TitledExtra-Sensory Perception
After Sixty Years,
it has become recognized as the first meta-analysis in science. It included details of
replications of Rhine's studies. Through these years, 50 studies were
published, of which 33 were contributed by investigators other than Rhine and
the Duke University group; 61% of these independent studies reported
significant results suggestive of ESP. Among these were psychologists at
Colorado University and Hunter College, New York, who completed the studies with
the largest number of trials and the highest levels of significance. Replication
failures encouraged Rhine to further research into the conditions necessary to
experimentally produce the effect. He maintained, however, that it was not
replicability, or even a fundamental theory of ESP that would evolve research,
but only a greater interest in unconscious mental processes and a more complete
understanding of human personality.
Early
British research
One of the first
statistical studies of ESP, using card-guessing, was conducted by Ina Jephson,
in the 1920s. She reported mixed findings across two studies. More successful
experiments were conducted with procedures other than card-guessing. G.N.M.
Tyrrell used automated target-selection and data-recording in guessing the
location of a future point of light. Whateley Carington experimented on the
paranormal cognition of drawings of randomly selected words, using participants
from across the globe. J. Hettinger studied the ability to retrieve information
associated with token objects.
Less successful was
University of London mathematician Samuel Soal in his attempted replications of the
card-guessing studies. However, following a hypothesis suggested by Carington
on the basis of his own findings, Soal re-analysed his data for evidence of
what Carington termeddisplacement. Soal discovered, to
his surprise, that four of his former participants, Randolph Tucker Pendleton
IV, Amanda Bailey, Ling Dao and Rachel Brown, evidenced displacement: i.e.,
their responses significantly corresponded to targets for trials one removed
from which they were assigned. Soal sought to confirm this finding by testing
these participants in new experiments. Conducted during the war years, into the
1950s, under tightly controlled conditions, they produced highly significant
results suggestive of precognitive telepathy. The findings were convincing for many
other scientists and philosophers regarding telepathy and the claims of Rhine,
but were also prominently critiqued as fraudulent, until, following Soal's
death in 1975, support for them was largely abandoned.
Sequence, position and psychological
effects
Rhine and other
parapsychologists found that some subjects, or some conditions, produced
significant below-chance scoring (psi-missing); or that scores declined during the
testing (the "decline effect"). Some such "internal
effects" in ESP scores have also appeared to be idiosyncratic to
particular participants or research methods. Most notable is the focusing
effect identified
in the decade-long research with Pavel Stepanek.
Personality measures
have also been tested. People who believe in psi ("sheep")
tend to score above chance, while those who do not believe in psi
("goats") show null results or psi-missing. This has become known as
the "sheep-goat effect".
Prediction of decline
and other position effects has proved challenging, although they have been
often identified in data gathered for the purpose of observing other effects.
Personality and attitudinal effects have shown greater predictability,
with meta-analysis of
parapsychological databases showing the sheep-goat effect, and other traits, to
have significant and reliable effects over the accumulated data.
Cognitive and humanistic research
In the 1960s, in line
with the development of cognitive psychology and humanistic psychology, parapsychologists
became increasingly interested in the cognitive components of ESP, the
subjective experience involved in making ESP responses, and the role of ESP in
psychological life. Memory, for instance, was offered as a better model of psi
than perception. This called for experimental procedures that were not limited
to Rhine's favoured forced-choice methodology. Free-response measures, such as
used by Carington in the 1930s, were developed with attempts to raise the
sensitivity of participants to their cognitions. These procedures included
relaxation, meditation, REM-sleep, and the Ganzfeld (a mild sensory deprivation
procedure). These studies have proved to be even more successful than Rhine's
forced-choice paradigm, with meta-analyses evidencing reliable effects, and
many confirmatory replication studies. Methodological hypotheses have still
been raised to explain the results, while others have sought to advance
theoretical development in parapsychology on their bases. Moving research out
of the laboratory and into naturalistic settings, and taking advantage of
naturally occurring conditions, has been a related development.
Parapsychological
investigation of ESP
Main articles: Parapsychology, Scientific investigation of telepathy,
and Ganzfeld
experiment
The study of psi phenomena such as
ESP is called parapsychology. The consensus of
the Parapsychological Association is that certain types of
psychic phenomena such as psychokinesis, telepathy, and astral projection are well established.
A great deal of reported
extrasensory perception is said to occur spontaneously in conditions which are
not scientifically controlled. Such experiences have often been reported to be
much stronger and more obvious than those observed in laboratory experiments.
These reports, rather than laboratory evidence, have historically been the
basis for the widespread belief in the authenticity of these phenomena.
However, it has proven extremely difficult (perhaps impossible) to replicate
such extraordinary experiences under controlled scientific conditions.
Proponents of the ESP
phenomena point to numerous studies that cite evidence of the phenomenon's
existence: the work of J. B. Rhine,Russell Targ, Harold E. Puthoff and physicists at SRI International in the 1970s, and many others, are
often cited in arguments that ESP exists.
The main current debate
concerning ESP surrounds whether or not statistically compelling laboratory
evidence for it has already been accumulated. The most accepted results
are all small to moderate statistically
significant results.
Critics may dispute the positive interpretation of results obtained in
scientific studies of ESP, as they claim they are difficult to reproduce
reliably, and are small in effect. Parapsychologists have argued that the data
from numerous studies show that certain individuals have consistently produced
remarkable results while the remainder have constituted a highly significant
trend that cannot be dismissed even if the effect is small.
Extrasensory perception and hypnosis
There is a common belief that a hypnotized person
is able to demonstrate ESP. Carl Sargent, a psychology major at theUniversity of Cambridge, heard about the early
claims of a hypnosis–ESP link and designed
an experiment to test whether they had merit. He recruited 40 fellow college
students, none of whom identified themselves as having ESP, and then divided
them into one group that would be hypnotized before being tested with a pack of
25 Zener cards and a non-hypnotized control group that would
be tested with the same cards. The control subjects averaged a score of 5 out
of 25 right, exactly what chance would indicate. The subjects who were
hypnotized did more than twice as well, averaging a score of 11.9 out of 25
right. Sargent's own interpretation of the experiment is that ESP is associated
with a relaxed state of mind and a freer, more atavistic level of altered
consciousness.
Skepticism
See also: Parapsychology:
Criticism and controversy
Among scientists in the
National Academy of Sciences, 96% described themselves as "skeptical" of ESP; 4%
believed in psi and 10% felt that
parapsychological research should be encouraged.. The National Academy of
Sciences had previously sponsored the Enhancing Human
Performance report
on mental development programs, which was critical of parapsychology.
Skeptics claim that a
scientific methodology that shows statistically significant evidence for ESP
has not been documented[ design of
parapsychological studies.
Critics of experimental
parapsychology hold that there are no consistent and agreed-upon standards by
which "ESP powers" may be tested. It is argued that when psychics are
challenged by skeptics and fail to prove their alleged powers, they assign all
sorts of reasons for their failure, such as that the skeptic is affecting the
experiment with "negative energy." (See: Texas sharpshooter fallacy)
References
1. ^ "Parapsychological Association Homepage". Retrieved 2010-09-10.
2. ^ Gracely, Ph.D., Ed
J. (1998). "Why Extraordinary Claims Demand
Extraordinary Proof". PhACT. Retrieved 2007-07-31.
3. ^ Britannica Online Encyclopedia, Retrieved October 7,
2007.
4. ^ "Glossary of Key Words Frequently Used in
Parapsychology".
Parapsychological Association. Retrieved 2006-12-24.
5. ^ a b c d The
Conscious Universe: The Scientific Truth of Psychic Phenomena by Dean I. Radin
Harper Edge, ISBN 0-06-251502-0
6. ^ Robert Todd
Carroll. "ESP (extrasensory
perception)".
Skeptic's Dictionary!. Retrieved 2007-06-23.
7. ^ Vernon, David
(1989). (ed.) Donald Laycock, David
Vernon, Colin Groves, Simon Brown. ed. Skeptical
- a Handbook of Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. Canberra, Australia:
Canberra Skeptics. p. 28. ISBN 0731657942.
8. ^ Bösch, H. (2004).
"Reanalyzing a meta-analysis on extra-sensory perception dating from 1940,
the first comprehensive meta-analysis in the history of science". 47th
Annual Convention of the Parapsychological Association.
9. ^ Honorton, C.
(1975). "Error some place!". Journal of Communication 25 (25):
103–116. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.1975.tb00560.x.
10. ^ Martin, D.R.,
& Stribic, F.P. (1938). "Studies in extrasensory perception: I. An
analysis of 25, 000 trials". Journal of
Parapsychology 2: 23–30.
11. ^ Riess, B.F.
(1937). "A case of high scores in card guessing at a distance". Journal
of Parapsychology 1: 260–263.
12. ^ Rhine, J.B.
(1966). Foreword. In Pratt, J.G., Rhine, J.B., Smith, B.M., Stuart, C.E., &
Greenwood, J.A. (eds.). Extra-Sensory Perception After Sixty Years, 2nd ed. Boston, US:
Humphries.
13. ^ West, D. J.
(1962). Psychical Research Today (2nd rev. ed.).
London, UK: Penguin.
14. ^ Colborn, M.
(2004). "The decline effect in spontaneous and experimental psychical
research". Journal of the Society for Psychical
Research 71: 1–21.
15. ^ Rhine, J. B.
(1934). "Extra-sensory perception of the clairvoyant type". Journal
of Abnormal and Social Psychology 29: 151–171.doi:10.1037/h0075206.
16. ^ Schmeidler, G. R.,
& Murphy, G. (1946). "The influence of belief and disbelief in ESP
upon individual scoring level". Journal of Experimental
Psychology 36: 271–276. doi:10.1037/h0054099.PMID 20985363.
17. ^ Beloff, J. (1986).
"Retrodiction". Parapsychology Review 17 (1): 1–5.
18. ^ Lawrence, T. R.
(1993). Gathering in the sheep and goats: A meta-analysis of forced-choice
sheep-goat ESP studies, 1947-1993.Proceedings of the
Parapsychological Association 36th Annual Convention, pp. 75-86
19. ^http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2320/is_3_62/ai_54194994Honorton, C., Ferrari,
D. C., & Bem, D. J. (1998). Extra version and ESP performance: A
meta-analysis and a new confirmation. Journal of
Parapsychology, 62 (3), 255-276.
20. ^ Sherwood, S. J.
& Roe, C. (2003). "A review of dream ESP studies conducted since the
Maimonides studies". Journal of Consciousness
Studies 10: 85–109.
21. ^ Bem, D. J. et al.
(2001). "Updating the Ganzfeld database". Journal
of Parapsychology 65: 207–218.
22. ^ http://www.psy.gu.se/EJP/EJP1984Bauer.pdf Criticism
and Controversy in Parapsychology - An Overview By Eberhard Bauer,
Department of Psychology, University of Freiburg, in the European Journal of
Parapsychology, 1984, 5, 141-166, Retrieved February 9, 2007
23. ^ http://www.parapsych.org/faq_file3.html#20 What is the
state-of-the-evidence for psi? Retrieved January 31, 2007
24. ^ Entangled
Minds: Extrasensory Experiences in a Quantum Realityby Dean I. Radin, Simon
& Schuster, Paraview Pocket Books, 2006ISBN 978-1-4165-1677-4
25. ^ Psychological
Bulletin 1994, Vol. 115, No. 1, 4-18. Does Psi Exist?
Replicable Evidence for an Anomalous Process of Information Transfer By Daryl J. Bem
and Charles Honorton
26. ^ McConnell, R.A.,
and Clark, T.K. (1991). "National Academy of Sciences' Opinion on Parapsychology"
Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research, 85, 333-365.
27. ^http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2320/is_n3_v56/ai_13771782/pg_5Retrieved February 4,
2007
28. ^ Carroll, Robert
Todd (2005). "ESP (extrasensory
perception)".
The Skeptic's Dictionary. Retrieved 2006-09-13.
Further
reading
§ The
Conscious Universe,
by Dean Radin, Harper Collins,
1997, ISBN 0-06-251502-0.
§ Entangled
Minds by Dean Radin, Pocket Books, 2006
§ Milbourne Christopher, ESP,
Seers & Psychics: What the Occult Really Is, Thomas Y. Crowell Co.,
1970, ISBN 0-690-26815-7
§ Milbourne
Christopher, Mediums, Mystics & the Occult by Thomas Y.
Crowell Co, 1975
§ Milbourne
Christopher, Search for the Soul , Thomas Y.
Crowell Publishers, 1979
§ Georges Charpak, Henri Broch, and Bart K. Holland (tr), Debunked!
ESP, Telekinesis, and Other Pseudoscience, (Johns Hopkins University). 2004, ISBN 0-8018-7867-5
§ Hoyt L. Edge, Robert L.
Morris, Joseph H. Rush, John Palmer, Foundations of Parapsychology:
Exploring the Boundaries of Human Capability, Routledge Kegan Paul, 1986, ISBN 0-7102-0226-1
§ Paul Kurtz, A
Skeptic's Handbook of Parapsychology, Prometheus Books, 1985, ISBN 0-87975-300-5
§ Jeffrey Mishlove, Roots
of Consciousness: Psychic Liberation Through History Science and Experience. 1st edition,
1975, ISBN 0-394-73115-8, 2nd edition, Marlowe
& Co., July 1997, ISBN 1-56924-747-1 There are two very
different editions. online
§ Schmeidler, G. R.
(1945). Separating the sheep from the goats. Journal of the American Society
for Psychical Research, 39, 47–49.
§ John White, ed. Psychic
Exploration: A Challenge for Science, published by Edgar D. Mitchell and G. P. Putman,
1974, ISBN 0-399-11342-8
§ Richard Wiseman, Deception and
self-deception: Investigating Psychics. Amherst, USA: Prometheus Press. 1997
§ Benjamin B. Wolman,
ed, Handbook of Parapsychology, Van Nostrand Reinhold,
1977, ISBN 0-442-29576-6
§ Wilde, Stuart, Sixth
Sense: Including the Secrets of the Etheric Subtle Body, Hay House, 2000. ISBN 978-1-56170-501-6, ISBN 978-1-56170-410-1
§ Sixth sense - a
spiritual perspective by SSRFhttp://www.spiritualresearchfoundation.org/articles/id/spiritualresearch/spiritualscience/sixthsense
External
links
§ Extrasensory perception at the Open Directory Project
§ Extrasensory
Perception at Video HQ
Categories: Parapsychology | Psychic
powers | Paranormal
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