Parapsychology and Sociology

Transcription

Parapsychology and Sociology
PARAPSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY.
A New Horizons Research Foundation Paper.
October 1987.
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INTRODUCTION.
T h i s paper i s w r i t t e n as an i n t r o d u c t i o n to a Conference
to be h e l d a t New Horizons Research Foundation i n November 1987.
As has been s t a t e d before i n other papers the science o f
parapsychology covers many d i s c i p l i n e s , such as p h y s i c s ,
psychology, philosophy, r e l i g i o n , and s o c i o l o g y .
Sociology
i s d e f i n e d as "The science that t r e a t s o f the o r i g i n and
e v o l u t i o n o f human s o c i e t y and s o c i a l phenomena, the p r o g r e s s
o f c i v i l i s a t i o n , and the laws c o n t r o l l i n g human i n s t i t u t i o n s
and f u n c t i o n s " . (Standard D i c t i o n a r y , C o l l i e r ) .
This,
o f course, covers a v e r y wide area and many aspects o f the
study o f s o c i o l o g y are not i n any way r e l a t e d to parapsychology.
But the body o f knowledge upon which the study of parapsychology
i s based comes from the i n d i v i d u a l experiences o f people
o f a l l races and throughout h i s t o r y .
I t i s a part of
the e v o l u t i o n o f human s o c i e t y , and so p r o p e r l y belongs
under the heading of s o c i o l o g y .
Throughout h i s t o r y people have been r e l a t i n g
events t h a t have happened i n t h e i r l i v e s f o r
f i n d no l o g i c a l or reasonable e x p l a n a t i o n .
have been g e n e r a l l y lumped under the heading
and d e a l t with a c c o r d i n g l y .
accounts of
which they can
These occurrences
o f parapsychology,
I n the b e g i n n i n g years of p a r a p s y c h o l o g i c a l r e s e a r c h these
s t o r i e s t o l d by people of strange events were accepted,
and they formed the b a s i s of much of the r e s e a r c h t h a t was
done a t t h a t time.
L a t e r r e s e a r c h e r s became more s c e p t i c a l ,
and they began to want more proof, more evidence, o f the
r e a l i t y o f these experiences, and above a l l they wanted to
be able to produce the e f f e c t s i n a l a b o r a t o r y s e t t i n g .
People's own p e r s o n a l s t o r i e s were l a b e l l e d " a n e c d o t a l " ,
and r e l e g a t e d to the back pages o f the j o u r n a l s and magazines;
parapsychology became a s c i e n c e , experiments had to be
done i n l a b o r a t o r y s e t t i n g s , and they had to be reproducable,
to g a i n c r e d i b i l i t y .
The very word "anecdotal" downgraded
the experience, and has done much to take away c r e d i b i l i t y
from the s u b j e c t as a whole.
Now the wheel has turned f u l l c i r c l e , and r e s e a r c h e r s
and experimenters are t u r n i n g again to those "anecdotal"
s t o r i e s , and r e a l i s i n g t h a t they have, f o r many years,
ignored a r i c h source o f knowledge t h a t may h e l p them to
understand the whole s u b j e c t o f p s y c h i c a l r e s e a r c h .
Perhaps a s t a r t should be made by u s i n g a d i f f e r e n t word
f o r p e r s o n a l experiences than " a n e c d o t a l " .
Perhaps t h a t
word should be reserved f o r the f o l k l o r e type of i n c i d e n t ,
and the words " d i r e c t experience" should he used f o r those
accounts that are p e r s o n a l .
The Forteans coined the
phrase ' f r i e n d o f f r i e n d s ' ( f . o . f . s ) to use f o r what we
would c a l l true anecdotal and f o l k l o r e m a t e r i a l .
This
k i n d of s t o r y cannot, u s u a l l y , he t r a c e d "back to i t s
origins;
i t can very o c c a s i o n a l l y be t r a c e d back to an
o r i g i n a l s t o r y that has been 'claimed* by many people
subsequently.
T h i s k i n d o f s t o r y i s u s u a l l y t o l d to the
l i s t e : ner as having happened to a f r i e n d , or a f r i e n d o f
a f r i e n d , or a d i s t a n t r e l a t i v e . I f the l i s t e n e r p e r s i s t s
i n t r y i n g to t r a c e i t s o r i g i n he f i n d s t h a t the f r i e n d
got i t from another f r i e n d , and that f r i e n d heard i t from
someone e l s e , and the o r i g i n can r a r e l y be found. However
the s t o r y i s always t o l d as a p e r s o n a l one.
Readers of
our p r e v i o u s paper Strange and Anomalous Phenomena (January
1985) w i l l remember that we wrote a chapter on Modern Urban
Lege -.nds and Rumours, when we d e s c r i b e d t h i s phenomenon
of modern f o l k l o r e .
C h a r a c t e r i s t i c a l l y one cannot p i n p o i n t
the exact date and p l a c e where the events happened, nor
can one i d e n t i f y the a c t u a l person to whom they happened.
But t r u e p a r a p s y c h o l o g i c a l phenomena are i n a d i f f e r e n t
category. There are thousands of people i n the world
today who have had p a r a p s y c h o l o g i c a l experiences, who are
q u i t e w i l l i n g to t e s t i f y p e r s o n a l l y as to what happened,
they can give dates and p l a c e s , and there are f r e q u e n t l y
witnesses to the events.
T h i s experiences should, i n our
o p i n i o n , be l a b e l l e d " d i r e c t experiences" and not confused
with "anecdotal" m a t e r i a l of f o l k l o r e .
As we have s a i d , o f r e c e n t years r e s e a r c h e r s have begun
t u r n i n g once again to a l l the d i r e c t experiences t h a t people
claim to have had i n t h i s f i e l d .
Lawrence Le Shan, i n h i s Book The Science o f the Paranormal,
The L a s t F r o n t i e r , Acquarian Press" 1987) > puts i t t h i s
way "a q u i e t and l i t t l e n o t i c e d process has been g a i n i n g
momentum i n western s c i e n c e . T h i s was the movement away from
the idea that o n l y one model of the u n i v e r s e was necessary
to e x p l a i n a l l of r e a l i t y towards the concept that d i f f e r e n t
models were necessary to d e a l with d i f f e r e n t aspects (realms)
of experience. I t s t a r t e d with Max Planck's demonstration
i n 1900 that the metaphysical system necessary to e x p l a i n
the microcosm (the world of t h i n g s too small f o r the senses
to observe, even t h e o r e t i c a l l y ) and to make i t s data
meaningful ( i . e . t<j» f i n d the laws r e l a t i n g to the data)
was a d i f f e r e n t one from the system necessary and v a l i d f o r
the realm o f experience o f t h i n g s a c c e s s i b l e to the senses.
In h i s words, we l i v e i n a two-tracked u n i v e r s e " . As the
p h y s i c i s t Erwin Schrodinger put i t :
:
'As our mental eye penetrates i n t o s m a l l e r and s m a l l e r
d i s t a n c e s and s h o r t e r and s h o r t e r times, we f i n d nature
behaving so e n t i r e l y d i f f e r e n t l y from what we observe i n
v i s i b l e and p a l p a b l e bodies o f our surrounding, t h a t no
model shaped a f t e r our l a r g e - s c a l e experiences can ever
be t r u e '
A few years l a t e r , E i n s t e i n showed that a t h i r d system, a
t h i r d model, was necessary f o r t h a t realm of experience which
i n c l u d e d t h i n g s too l a r g e , or going by too f a s t , to be
a c c e s s i b l e to the senses.
None o f these explanatory systems
c o n t r a d i c t each other. They are compatible.
None o f them i s
more or l e s s v a l i d than the o t h e r s : i t i s simply a c c e s s i b l e to
a realm of experience. I n Goethe's words, 'Nature has n e i t h e r
k e r n e l nor s h e l l .
T h i s means t h a t f o r the f i r s t time data
can be examined without preconceptions;
we can examine data
on t h e i r own terms and f o l l o w them to whatever laws they
l e a d us."
1
Our view of s o c i e t y i s coloured very much by our b e l i e f s .
The way we behave i n s o c i e t y i s very much a f f e c t e d by our
beliefs.
B e l i e f systems can be
p e r s o n a l or g e n e r a l , t h a t
i s p e r t a i n i n g to s o c i e t y as a whole.
Personal b e l i e f s
are o f t e n based on one's own p e r s o n a l experience, whereas
g e n e r a l b e l i e f s are based on the experience o f s o c i e t y as a
whole. F o r i n s t a n c e , a person who has experienced more than
t h e i r f a i r share o f p e r s o n a l v i o l e n c e may conclude t h a t we
l i v e i n a v i o l e n t s o c i e t y , and take p r e c a u t i o n s a c c o r d i n g l y ,
whereas s t a t i s t i c s may prove that the s o c i e t y we l i v e i n
i s not i n f a c t more v i o l e n t than i n p r e v i o u s ages, and so
there i s no need to be o v e r l y c a u t i o u s .
How does s o c i e t y
i n g e n e r a l d e a l with those people whose p e r s o n a l experiences
l e a d them to d i f f e r from the g e n e r a l b e l i e f s o f s o c i e t y i t s e l f ?
Sometimes we have the impression t h a t c r e d i b i l i t y i s measured
on a ' s l i d i n g s c a l e ' . Both as i n d i v i d u a l s and as a s o c i e t y
as a whole we have ' l i m i t s ' of b e l i e f .
While we can ' s t r e t c h '
our b e l i e f to c e r t a i n p o i n t s , we w i l l say, there are c e r t a i n
t h i n g s we cannot b e l i e v e .
These l i m i t s can v a r y both
with i n d i v i d u a l s and with the whole o f s o c i e t y .
The l a c k o f b e l i e f i n c e r t a i n p o s s i b i l i t i e s has, o f course,
hindered progress throughout the ages.
How many sentences
could one not w r i t e beginning "For many years i t was not
b e l i e v e d p o s s i b l e that
until
" A
good example was the four-minute m i l e .
U n t i l B a n n i s t e r proved
t h a t a man could run a m i l e i n f o u r minutes i t had been
b e l i e v e d impossible; s i n c e then i t has become commonplace
f o r a t h l e t e s to run a mile i n f o u r minutes.
What are the f a c t o r s t h a t l i m i t one's b e l i e f s , e i t h e r
p e r s o n a l l y , or as a member of s o c i e t y as a whole?
There
are many f a c t o r s i n v o l v e d of course, and we w i l l not be
able to l i s t them here, but perhaps we can touch upon some
that are most r e l e v a n t to the subject under d i s c u s s i o n .
F e a r o f the unknown i s o f course a l i m i t i n g f a c t o r ;
we
cannot b r i n g o u r s e l v e s to b e l i e v e i n something that we
do not understand or cannot comprehend.
F e a r i s a prime
f a c t o r i n the l i m i t a t i o n o f b e l i e f .
As i n d i v i d u a l s , and
as a s o c i e t y , we do not, g e n e r a l l y speaking, l i k e change.
I f b e l i e f i n a h i t h e r t o unaccepted idea w i l l e f f e c t
r a d i c a l changes i n our l i v e s , we would p r e f e r not to b e l i e v e
it.
We do not l i k e to b e l i e v e that some members of our
s o c i e t y might have powers, g i f t s , or a b i l i t i e s , d i f f e r e n t
from the r e s t o f us.
We p r e f e r to b e l i e v e t h a t we are a l l
b a s i c a l l y very much a l i k e .
But above a l l we f i n d i t d i f f i c u l t
to b e l i e v e anything that d i r e c t l y c o n t r a d i c t s the known
laws o f science and the universe as we know them today.
At any given p o i n t i n time, s o c i e t y as a whole, seems to
b e l i e v e that i f i t hasn't the answers to a l l problems, a t
l e a s t the problems are known and the methods o f s o l v i n g them
are at hand. I t seems d i f f i c u l t to b e l i e v e that there are
areas yet t o t a l l y unexplored, problems not yet even f a i n t l y
recognized, and answers q u i t e out o f range, that w i l l face
f u t u r e generations of humankind. I think i t was Frances
Bacon who remarked i n the seventeenth century that e v e r y t h i n g
was now d i s c o v e r e d , there was nothing l e f t to dot
However,
h i s t o r y has shown i n the enormous progress that has been made,
and continues to be made, that there are ever 'fresh f i e l d s
to conquer'. H i s t o r y has a l s o shown that, g e n e r a l l y speaking,
the people who are i n the vanguard o f discovery, those who
are p o i n t i n g the way to the next area of experimentation,
those who are l o o k i n g round the next bend, are g e n e r a l l y
derided, and they are not b e l i e v e d .
T h i s has c e r t a i n l y
been true f o r p a r a p s y c h o l o g i s t s , as i t has f o r many other
scientists.
So i n the l i g h t of these remarks, l e t us look at what
experiences some people are having, and see i f they can
g i v e an i n d i c a t i o n of where the science o f parapsychology
should be l e a d i n g us.
Frequency o f D i r e c t Experiences.
From time to time r e s e a r c h e r s i n parapsychology have
attempted to a s c e r t a i n what p r o p o r t i o n o f the g e n e r a l
p o p u l a t i o n experiences paranormal events, and a l s o which
type o f phenomenon i s most commonly encountered.
The f i r s t survey undertaken i n t h i s regard was the one
undertaken i n the v e r y e a r l y days o f the h i s t o r y o f the
S o c i e t y o f P s y c h i c a l Research and conducted by i t s
founders.
I t became known afterwards as the Census o f
H a l l u c i n a t i o n s , and the m a t e r i a l r e c e i v e d from t h i s survey
formed tne o a s i s o f many i n v e s t i g a t i v e r e p o r t s i n the
years t h a t f o l l o w e d .
The survey was undertaken i n the
y e a r s 1889-1892.
The main q u e s t i o n read as f o l l o w s :
"Have you ever, when b e l i e v i n g y o u r s e l f to be
completely awake, had a v i v i d impression o f seeing,
or being touched by a l i v i n g being o r inanimate
o b j e c t , o r o f h e a r i n g a v o i c e ; which impression as
f a r as you could d i s c o v e r was not due to any e x t e r n a l
cause?"
I t should, be noted that the e a r l y p s y c h i c a l r e s e a r c h e r s
were p r i m a r i l y i n t e r e s t e d i n p r o o f o f s u r v i v a l , and much
o f t h e i r r e s e a r c h was d i r e c t e d to o b t a i n i n g such p r o o f .
F o r i n s t a n c e , they s p e c i f i c a l l y excluded any attempt to
r e c o r d i n s t a n c e s o f t e l e p a t h y , which they regarded as
o u t s i d e the scope o f t h i s p a r t i c u l a r enquiry.
The i n v e s t i g a t o r s r e c e i v e d 17,000 answers to t h e i r
q u e s t i o n n a i r e , a very good response, p a r t i c u l a r l y a t t h a t
time.
Of the 17,000 answers 2272 were i n the a f f i r m a t i v e ,
but on r i g o r o u s l y s c r u t i n i z i n g the answers and e x c l u d i n g
those n o t f u l l y and c l e a r l y d e a l i n g with a l l the attendant
q u e s t i o n s , the i n v e s t i g a t o r s were l e f t with 353 cases
which they f e l t were t o t a l l y a f f i r m a t i v e .
As a matter
o f i n t e r e s t we might note that they excluded answers t h a t
d e a l t with h a l l u c i n a t i o n s o c c u r i n g duing i l l n e s s e s o f
a k i n d i n which d e l i r i u m i s known to occur;
dream images
and nightmares (even when p e r s i s t i n g i n t o the waking s t a t e ;
v o i c e s r o u s i n g the p e r c i p i e n t from sleep; v i s i o n s o f o b j e c t
seen with c l o s e d eyes; and a number o f other s i m i l a r catego
I t should be noted t h a t t h i s i n v e s t i g a t i o n was c a r r i e d out
on a p e r s o n a l b a s i s - the members o f the SPR (and some o f
t h e i r f r i e n d s ) c o l l e c t e d the i n f o r m a t i o n , and most o f the
people r e l a t i n g t h e i r experiences t o l d them p e r s o n a l l y to
the q u e s t i o n e r s . Some s t o r i e s were incomplete because the
person concerned had f o r g o t t e n some of the d e t a i l s and
so t h e i r experience was not i n c l u d e d i n the f i n a l count.
As i n a l l such i n v e s t i g a t i o n s the anonymity of the
informant was r e s p e c t e d .
As we have s a i d the r e s u l t s
o f the Census gave r i s e to many a r t i c l e s and hooks "being
w r i t t e n , and was a source of m a t e r i a l f o r many y e a r s .
We o u r s e l v e s are not aware of a s i m i l a r widespread
i n v e s t i g a t i o n b e i n g conducted u n t i l we o u r s e l v e s attempted
a s i m i l a r f e a t i n 1978.
T h i s was conducted d i f f e r e n t l y
from the o r i g i n a l Census o f H a l l u c i n a t i o n s by the S.P.R.
We arranged f o r a q u e s t i o n n a i r e to be p r i n t e d i n a weekly
newspaper which had a wide c i r c u l a t i o n i n North America,
The N a t i o n a l E n q u i r e r .
The q u e s t i o n n a i r e was accompanied
by an a r t i c l e e x p l a i n i n g the r e s e a r c h nature o f the
p r o j e c t and i n v i t i n g r e p l i e s which would be t r e a t e d i n the
s t r i c t e s t confidence. The questions were wide-ranging,
c o v e r i n g a v a r i e t y of paranormal phenomena, and the
informants were asked to d e t a i l t h e i r experiences on a
separate p i e c e of paper i n t h e i r own words.
The q u e s t i o n s
were as f o l l o w s !
1.
Have you ever seen, heard, smelled, f e l t , or t a s t e d
anything that was not due to any p h y s i c a l cause?
2.
Have you ever had a dream or v i s i o n which came true?
3.
Have you ever bent or moved an o b j e c t s o l e l y by u s i n g
the power o f your mind?
4.
Have you ever had the experience of f l o a t i n g away
from your body?
5.
Have you ever sent messages to someone e l s e or r e c e i v e d
messages u s i n g o n l y the power o f your mind?
6.
Have you ever acawately made a p r e d i c t i o n about an important
event prior to i t s a c t u a l occurrence?
7.
Did you ever get the strong f e e l i n g an event was a c t u a l l y
t a k i n g p l a c e a t t h a t exact moment and then found out l a t e r
i t d i d i n f a c t happen?
8.
Have you ever healed an i n j u r y , or s u c c e s s f u l l y t r e a t e d
i l l n e s s or ailment of someone e l s e u s i n g mind power?
9.
Have you ever seen o b j e c t s move by themselves, or seen
g h o s t l i k e f i g u r e s , or heard unexplained sounds?
10.
Have you ever had experiences or memories of a p r e v i o u s
life?
an
11.
Have you ever experienced, any other strange,
phenomenon?
unexplained
As we have noted the range o f t h i s q u e s t i o n n a i r e f a r exceeded
that o f the o r i g i n a l Census o f H a l l u c i n a t i o n s .
We r e c e i v e d
i n r e p l y a t o t a l o f 3,3^-0 l e t t e r s d e t a i l i n g 19,607 experiences
altogether.
( I t should "be noted that whereas the o r i g i n a l
Census o f the S.P.R. engendered 17,000 answers, only 2,272
r e l a t e d a f f i r m a t i v e experiences, whereas our own q u e s t i o n n a i r e
e l i c i t e d i n f a c t 19,607 t o t a l e x p e r i e n c e s ) .
Most o f the
r e t u r n e d q u e s t i o n n a i r e forms wen? accompanied by l e t t e r s
e x p l a i n i n g i n d e t a i l the w r i t e r ' s experiences.
As w i l l be
seen,a l a r g e number o f the respondents were able to answer
i n the a f f i r m a t i v e to more than one q u e s t i o n .
The answers
were d i s t r i b u t e d among the questions roughly i n the p r o p o r t i o n
we have o u r s e l v e s come to expect i n the p o p u l a t i o n a t l a r g e .
The f i g u r e s were as f o l l o w s :
F o r q u e s t i o n No 1.
2480 people
r e p l i e d i n the a f f i r m a t i v e ;
2. 2599 3. 366
4. 1721 ••
5. 2071 ..
6. 17^3 ••
7. 1886 ..
8. 837 ••
9. 2104
10. I k k 5 -•
11. 2355
Total
19607
G e n e r a l l y speaking we were not able to folbw up more than a
f r a c t i o n o f these s t o r i e s f o r f u r t h e r c o n f i r m a t i o n o r
a m p l i f i c a t i o n , ' and i n f a c t have not had the o p p o r t u n i t y o r time
to p u b l i s h much i n the way o f any r e f l e c t i o n on these r e s u l t s .
Approximately one q u a r t e r o f the r e p l i e s came from men (686)
as opposed to 2,619 from women, some people d i d not d i s c l o s e
t h e i r sex when r e p l y i n g .
I t h i n k i t f a i r to say we were
s u r p r i s e d by the number o f people answering a f f i r m a t i v e l y
to No. 3" "the P.K. question, as w e l l as by the number o f
people who claimed to have s u c c e s s f u l y made a p r e d i c t i o n o f
the f u t u r e . Question number 11 was a ' c a t c h - a l l ' question,
and i n c l u d e d many r e p o r t e d UFO s i g h t i n g s .
Other f a c t o r s which
s u r p r i s e d us were the number o f people who reported seeing
l i g h t s - b a l l s o f l i g h t , sparks o f l i g h t , - i n p o l t e r g e i s t
s i t u a t i o n s , a phenomenon with which we were only then becoming
f a m i l i a r , and a l s o the number o f people r e p o r t i n g t e l e p o r t a t i o n
experiences althqmgh we had not s p e c i f i c a l l y mentioned
t h i s phenomenon. We s h a l l r e t u r n to some o f the a c t u a l
s t o r i e s l a t e r i n t h i s paper.
F i n a l l y , very r e c e n t l y , on Sunday October 11th I 9 8 7 , i n
f a c t , Tom Harpur,. the r e l i g i o u s e d i t o r o f the S t a r newspaper
w r i t e s as f o l l o w s ;
" M i l l i o n s o f North Americans now say they undergo m y s t i c a l
o r p s y c h i c experiences, a c c o r d i n g to p r i e s t - s o c i o l o g i s t
Rev. Andrew G r e e l e y .
These range from ESP (67 p e r cent o f a l l a d u l t s ) to some
form o f c o n t a c t with the dead (42 p e r cent, up 24 p e r cent
from h i s 1975 p o l l ) .
My own r e c e n t i n f o r m a l p o l l i n g o f
r e a d e r s supports these f i g u r e s .
I n a column on J u l y 5 I
asked people to w r i t e s a y i n g whether or not they b e l i e v e i n
l i f e a f t e r death,
As w e l l , I asked, "Have you ever experienced anything that
amo unts to s o l i d evidence ajs f a r as you y o u r s e l f are
concerned?"
The response was almost overwhelming.
Only
about 5 p e r cent s a i d they thought such b e l i e f was nonsense
or w i s h f u l t h i n k i n g .
N e a r l y 200 l e t t e r s a f f i r m e d the deep
c o n v i c t i o n t h a t t h i s hope corresponds to an e t e r n a l r e a l i t y .
Of these, more than 50 p e r cent witnessed to an encounter
with dead l o v e d ones.
Some were more c o n v i n c i n g o r
i n e x p l i c a b l e than o t h e r s . But what s t r u c k me most
f o r c i b l y was the way the m a j o r i t y began with some form o f
the f o l l o w i n g ! "I have never t o l d t h i s to anyone b e f o r e ;
i t seemed too p r i v a t e o r e l s e l thought o t h e r s would t h i n k I
was c r a z y . I am only t e l l i n g i t now because you asked.
P l e a s e r e s p e c t my anonymity".
"
Again, Harpur's q u e s t i o n n a i r e l i m i t e d i t s e l f to p r o o f o f
s u r v i v a l o f death, and the c r i t i c i s m might a l s o be l e v e l l e d
t h a t h i s r e a d e r s h i p could q u i t e w e l l be b i a s e d i n f a v o u r
of b e l i e f i n s u r v i v a l , but h i s readers p r o v i d e d him with
what they f e l t was evidence, not j u s t testimony to t h e i r
belief.
I t i s a b s o l u t e l y t y p i c a l o f the m a j o r i t y o f these correspondents
t h a t they do not wish t h e i r i d e n t i t y to be r e v e a l e d ; they
are n o t seeking p u b l i c i t y ? they have a genuine f e a r o f being
thought crazy, and i n the m a j o r i t y o f cases they are seeking
some l o g i c a l and reasonable e x p l a n a t i o n f o r the events they
have experienced.
Some magazines and j o u r n a l s , i n p a r t i c u l a r FATE magazine,
p u b l i s h e d monthly i n Highland Park, I l l i n o i s , 60035, f e a t u r e
a r e g u l a r column d e t a i l i n g readers' experiences with the
paranormal.
The j o u r n a l s o f the s o c i e t i e s , (the S.P.R. and
the A.S.P.R.) c a r r y s i m i l a r accounts from time to time,
while the more s t r i k i n g happenings, such as v i o l e n t p o l t e r g e s i t
outbreaks may make the pages o f the n a t i o n a l P r e s s .
Yet, s t r a n g e l y , while the p u b l i c g e n e r a l l y w i l l b e l i e v e
most o f what i t sees i n p r i n t , s t o r i e s o f paranormal events
are l a r g e l y ignored. Those who have had such experiences
believe what they read about o t h e r s ' experiences', those
who have not had a p e r s o n a l experience tend to e i t h e r exclude
them from t h e i r t h i n k i n g o r s u b j e c t them to o u t r i g h t r i d i c u l e .
I t seems c e r t a i n that acceptance o f paranormal events i s
bound up i n one's p e r s o n a l b e l i e f systems, thus i n some
way r e l e g a t i n g them to the area o f r e l i g i o n r a t h e r than
s c i e n c e . And y e t these are not j u s t matters o f f a i t h , i n
f a c t they f r e q u e n t l y have nothing to do with p e r s o n a l f a i t h ,
they are matters o f r e a l i t y and a c t u a l experience.
S t o r i e s o f P e r s o n a l Experiences.
People's p e r s o n a l experiences range, as we have s a i d e a r l i e r ,
over a wide v a r i e t y o f types o f experience. They a l s o
range i n degree.
By t h i s we mean t h a t some people may o n l y
have one o r two experiences i n a l i f e t i m e , whereas others
may have had many many experiences.
I t has been our own
p e r s o n a l experience t h a t when a d d r e s s i n g an audience o f
some 30 people o r more one asks the q u e s t i o n "Have you ever
had an experience you cannot e x p l a i n by normal means?" a t
l e a s t % o r 3 people w i l l r e p l y i n the a f f i r m a t i v e , and
the events w i l l range from the a p p a r e n t l y t r i v i a l to events
which have chamged t h e i r whole l i v e s .
Over the years we have o u r s e l v e s been t o l d some hundreds
o f accounts o f strange t h i n g s t h a t have happened to people,
and the l i t e r a t u r e o f parapsychology c o n t a i n s many hundreds
more, most o f them w e l l a t t e s t e d , and many o f them having
been thoroughly i n v e s t i g a t e d .
We w i l l r e l a t e a few o f the
more t y p i c a l ones i n the f o l l o w i n g pages.
Perhaps the most commonly r e l a t e d experience i s t h a t o f seeing
a ghost, o r a p p a r i t i o n , and o f course many o f these are
s u b j e c t i v e experiences. A t y p i c a l s t o r y i s the f o l l o w i n g ,
which appeared i n the SPR Newsletter, January
1987.
E n t i t l e d The G l i d i n g Grey Lady, i t reads as f o l l o w s :
"In the l a t e autumn o f 1973 when I was 19 years o l d , I r e t u r n e d
one evening to the London H o s p i t a l , Whitechapel, where I
was t r a i n i n g to be a nurse.
I was walking down Houndsditch
towards M d g a t e from Bishopsgate.
I t was almost dark, j u s t
a f t e r n i g h t f a l l , and the s t r e e t was w e l l l i t with s t r e e t lamps.
I was f a i r l y a l e r t — n e c e s s a r y when walking through London s t r e e t s
alone a t n i g h t .
I t was a Sunday evening and there were a
few o t h e r people around. As I walked along I saw a woman walking
towards me.
She wore a c r i n o l i n e dress very f u l l and
e l a b o r a t e l i k e h e r h a i r s t y l e , with i t s r i n g l e t s and c u r l s
dressed high on h e r head.
I thought she must be on h e r way
to a fancy dress p a r t y but i t seemed strange t h a t she was on
her own.
As she approached and passed me I n o t i c e d s e v e r a l
more t h i n g s t h a t made me wonder i f she were ' r e a l ' .
Firstly,
no one e l s e i n the road looked a t her.
Secondly, she had a
v e r y s e r i o u s deadpan expression, which would have been unusual
i f she were 'dressed up'; t h i r d l y , she made no eye c o n t a c t
with me a t a l l - j u s t looked s t r a i g h t ahead (I would have
expected h e r to be s l i g h t l y embarrassed to meet someone as she
was l o o k i n g so s t r a n g e ) . F o u r t h l y she appeared to be grey a l l
over.
Under sodium l i g h t s c o l o u r s a l t e r I know, but h e r
appearance was very d i f f e r e n t from others I had passed d u r i n g
my walk.
Her c o l o u r i n g was a l t o g e t h e r p a l e r , and h e r h a i r ,
s k i n and c l o t h e s were a l l the same shade. F i n a l l y , the
s t r a n g e s t t h i n g I n o t i c e d was t h a t she had no g a i t a t a l l .
She looked as i f she had skates on under h e r voluminous s k i r t s
and was r o l l i n g along.
She went by as n o i s e l e s s l y as i f she
were g l i d i n g .
Once she had passed me I was q u i t e taken aback t r y i n g to f i t
a l l the images together. I should have turned around to look
a t h e r but I t h i n k a mixture o f shock and f e a r p l u s not wanting
to appear c h i l d i s h f o r s t a r i n g made me walk very q u i c k l y ahead.
I d i d glance around a few minutes l a t e r but could see no s i g n
o f her, only other p e d e s t r i a n s , a l l normal-looking.
I hope I have r e t o l d my experience a c c u r a t e l y and without
embellishment.
I have t o l d very few people o f my experience
because I cannot put i t under the heading o f 'ghost'.
However,
I have not experienced anything l i k e i t before o r s i n c e .
I have pondered on the mystery f o r 13 years and s t i l l
cannot decide i n my own mind i f she was a r e a l person o r not.
I wish I had had the presence o f mind to reach out and
touch her;
t h i s might have s e t t l e d the i s s u e . "
The l e t t e r i s signed with the w r i t e r ' s name and address i n
t h i s case. I n t h i s p a r t i c u l a r case i t should be noted t h a t
the p e r c i p i e n t h e r s e l f i s d o u b t f u l as to whether what she saw
was a 'ghost' o r not, but i n view o f the behaviour o f the
o t h e r people on the s t r e e t , and the o v e r a l l 'grey' c o l o u r o f
the a p p a r i t i o n , i t seems l i k e l y t h a t i t was no r e a l person
t h a t she saw on the s t r e e t .
I t i s not a t a l l uncommon
f o r people to have only one such experience, with no apparent
reason why they should see a ghost a t t h a t p a r t i c u l a r time.
I t i s important a l s o to r e a l i s e t h a t the g r e a t e r number
o f ghosts or a p p a r i t i o n s that people see are not o f the
dramatic v a r i e t y we are l e d to b e l i e v e when reading f i c t i o n ,
but are more f r e q u e n t l y taken to be ' r e a l ' people i n normal
surroundings, u n t i l something about t h e i r appearance, or
the circumstances, l e a d s the viewer to r e a l i s e that they are
not l i v i n g human beings. A l s o , although ghosts tend to
appear a t times o f s t r e s s , or i l l n e s s on the p a r t o f the viewer,
i t sometimes happens that there i s no apparent reason, as
i n the case mentioned above, f o r the person to see a ghost.
P o l t e r g e i s t outbreaks are much more common than i s g e n e r a l l y
realised.
I t i s o n l y the prolonged and v i o l e n t type o f
happening t h a t reaches the pages o f the d a i l y newspaper;
t h i s kind o f phenomenon i s d i f f i c u l t to conceal, but most
people who experience minor outbreaks w i l l go to almost any
l e n g t h to hide from t h e i r neighbours and f r i e n d s what i s
happening to them.
The people who s u f f e r such an outbreak
are u s u a l l y f r i g h t e n e d , uncomfortable, bewildered, and they
only want to know 'how to make i t go away'.
Sometimes we
have had as many as three or f o u r people a week seeking our
help and advice i n a p o l t e r g e i s t case. They come to us because
t h e y r e a l i s e we understand what i s happening, and we w i l l
not d i s b e l i e v e them, or t e l l them they are crazyj
Because
t h i s has been a s p e c i a l area o f study with us we have been
the r e c i p i e n t s o f a l a r g e number of v a r i e d s t o r i e s .
As
the reader w i l l know from our p r e v i o u s w r i t i n g s i n a l l the
cases which we have s t u d i e d over the years some form of
s t r e s s f u l s i t u a t i o n surrounding the people concerned i s
present.
The i n t e r e s t i n g t h i n g about p o l t e r g e i s t r y i s that i t can take
so many forms;
sometimes a number of the v a r i o u s phenomena
w i l l be present, a t others only one o f many p o s s i b l e phenomena
occurs.
We have l i s t e d i n other p l a c e s the many t h i n g s
t h a t can happen i n a p o l t e r g e i s t s i t u a t i o n , n o i s e s , sounds
o f f o o t s t e p s , o b j e c t s moving, b e l l s r i n g i n g , v o i c e s heard,
l i g h t s f l a s h i n g on and o f f , b a l l s o f l i g h t appearing, o b j e c t s
appearing and d i s a p p e a r i n g , and so on.
I t i s hard to choose
examples, but one o f the e a r l y accounts t h a t was given to
me was t y p i c a l .
I was at the time working as a c o u n s e l l o r
with a group of d i v o r c e d women who were needing help i n
d e a l i n g with t h e i r c h i l d r e n ' s response to the d i v o r c e .
One of these women came to me one day (she d i d not a t t h a t time
know o f my i n t e r e s t i n parapsychology, and indeed h e r s e l f
knew n o t h i n g of the s u b j e c t ) .
She r e l a t e d the f o l l o w i n g
event.
She and her husband had had a v i o l e n t argu?ment
two days p r e v i o u s l y , i n f r o n t of t h e i r teenage daughter,
who was very upset over the p a r e n t s ' impending s e p a r a t i o n .
The husband l e f t the house i n a rage, f o l l o w e d s h o r t l y
afterwards by h i s wife, l e a v i n g the daughter s i t t i n g alone
at the b r e a k f a s t t a b l e .
When the mother returned l a t e r
she t o l d me she found the g i r l , 'as white as a sheet' w a i t i n g
o u t s i d e the house. When questioned she s t a t e d that a f t e r the
p a r e n t s had l e f t a l l the doors i n the house opened and slammed
shut with a l o u d n o i s e , although there was no wind.
She
then s a i d t h a t her mother's bag ffif k n i t t i n g , which had been
s i t t i n g on a c h a i r i n the d i n i n g room, s l o w l y rose and f l o a t e d
through the open hatch i n t o the k i t c h e n and r e s t e d upon
the top o f the garbage c o n t a i n e r . When the mother went
i n t o the house t h i s was indeed where she found i t .
The
mother's r e a c t i o n was that the g i r l had become m e n t a l l y i l l ,
and needed p s y c h i a t r i c treatment.
She was q u i t e s u r p r i s e d
when I took the matter very calmly, and e x p l a i n e d about
poltergeistry.
I advised that i f the s i t u a t i o n of s t r e s s
w i t h i n the f a m i l y was r e s o l v e d , then there wwould l i k e l y
be no more t r o u b l e ;
t h i s was indeed the case. As a r e s u l t
of t h i s episode I was asked to g i v e a t a l k to t h i s p a r t i c u l a r
group about p o l t e r g e i s t phenomena, and the r e l a t i o n o f
s t r e s s to these outbreaks. I t was i n t e r e s t i n g to d i s c o v e r
t h a t q u i t e a number o f the members had had p o l t e r g e i s t
experiences o f one s o r t or another a t the times when the
s t r e s s o f t h e i r s i t u a t i o n was a t i t s worst.
Commonly
they r e p o r t e d t h i n g s such as l i g h t switches going on and o f f
as they passed, n o i s e s heard, such as f u r n i t u r e b e i n g dragged,
or f o o t f a l l s , and o b j e c t s being moved.
The above i s a very t y p i c a l example of p o l t e r g e i s t r y i n
a s i t u a t i o n where the people concerned have never been e s p e c i a l l y
i n t e r e s t e d i n the s u b j e c t ; indeed i n t h i s case they d i d
not even know the word, and they were t o t a l l y unable to
understand what was happening.
Such cases are happening a l l
the time.
An i n t e r e s t i n g f e a t u r e of many modern p o l t e r g e i s t cases i s
the f a c t that modern e l e c t r i c a l apparatus i s o f t e n put out o f
commission;
we have been f a m i l i a r f o r some time with tape
r e c o r d e r s m a l f u n c t i o n i n g i n the presence o f a p o l t e r g e i s t
person, and we are aware that strange t h i n g s happen a t times
with cameras.
More r e c e n t l y we have had r e p o r t s o f computers
m a l f u n c t i o n i n g d u r i n g a p o l t e r g e i s t episode.
S e v e r a l people
wrote o f t h i s phenomenon i n answer to our q u e s t i o n n a i r e .
The f o l l o w i n g case i s worth quoting i n f u l l ;
i t was p u b l i s h e d
i n J u l y 1987 i n the SPR Newsletter.
"Most o f the f o l l o w i n g events took p l a c e i n an o f f i c e
measuring about 14 f o o t by 9 f o o t with one door and p a r t i a l
glass partitioning.
They happened only when a young man i n
h i s "twenties ( h e r e a f t e r r e f e r r e d to as "X") was i n or near the
office.
S i m i l a r events occurred i n another a d j o i n i n g o f f i c e
when "X" was present'.' (There f o l l o w s a d e s c r i p t i o n of the
arrangements o f the o f f i c e , accompanied by a sketch).
"The f i r s t PK event was while I was s i t t i n g at my desk.
Suddenly the p l a s t i c cap o f a soap d i s p e n s e r f l e w p a s t me
a p p a r e n t l y from the d i r e c t i o n o f the doorway, f a l l i n g on the
f l o o r behind me.
As someone happened to be passing along
the c o r r i d o r outside at the time I assumed he had done i t f o r a
joke;
but when questioned he vehemently denied i t .
The cap
proved to have come from the t o i l e t behind the cupboards.
(Note: these cupboards were behind the w r i t e r ' s desk, and
opposite the door.)
From then on f o r about two weeks there
was a continuous shower o f small a r t i c l e s i n c l u d i n g c o i n s ,
most o f which were of the value o f 2p and o f date p r i o r to
t h a t o f the events.
I e v e n t u a l l y had q u i t e a c o l l e c t i o n o f
these a r t i c l e s which I kept i n my drawer. Along the c o r r i d o r
j u s t beyond the l a v a t o r i e s was a d r i n k s d i s p e n s e r f o r which
2p c o i n s were r e q u i r e d .
Three events I remember most v i v i d l y :
(1) I was s i t t i n g at the t a b l e i n the o f f i c e when before my
eyes about two f e e t away a piece o f wood m a t e r i a l i s e d out o f
t h i n a i r , and f l o a t e d s i l e n t l y to the ground.
I p i c k e d i p up
and found i t to be a p e r f e c t l y normal p i e c e of wood.
What
I n o t i c e d p a r t i c u l a r l y was that i t f e l l at constant v e l o c i t y , not
a c c e l e r a t i n g as an object normally does under g r a v i t y .
(2) I was s i t t i n g at my desk when there was a tremendous crack
l i k e a r i f l e shot, and a 2p c o i n f e l l to the f l o o r .
The
n o i s e unnerved me and I jumped up from my desk and moved
to the doorway.
There f o l l o w e d two more loud "cracks" and
two more 2p c o i n s appeared on the f l o o r , behind my desk. I
was q u i t e f r i g h t e n e d because I thought the c o i n s were h i t t i n g
the g l a s s p a r t i t i o n and I was a f r a i d the g l a s s would s h a t t e r .
However, w h i l s t standing i n the doorway there was another
loud crack and I was f o r t u n a t e to a c t u a l l y see a c o i n m a t e r i a l i s e
out o f t h i n a i r and slowly drop to the ground. I then
r e a l i s e d t h a t the noise I had heard was not t h a t Of c o i n s h i t t i n g
the g l a s s but t h a t of the c o i n s m a t e r i a l i s i n g .
(3) The f o l l o w i n g i n c i d e n t was perhaps the most s p e c t a c u l a r
of a l l .
A s e n i o r colleague o f mine came i n t o the o f f i c e .
I was s i t t i n g a t my desk and X was at the o t h e r end.
I t was
time f o r me to go to lunch so I rose from my c h a i r and moved
through the doorway i n t o the c o r r i d o r l e a v i n g my colleague i n
the o f f i c e .
At the moment when I had almost c l o s e d the door
and was standing i n the c o r r i d o r there was a tremendous crack.
I opened the door and I immediately n o t i c e d a t e r r i b l e smell
of r o t t e n eggs; and l y i n g on the f l o o r was a s t a p l e remover
which c e r t a i n l y had not been there a few moments b e f o r e .
I went to my desk, which was locked, opened the drawer where
I kept my s t a p l e remover and found i t was no longer there.
I am sure the one on the f l o o r was mine as i t had c e r t a i n damage
to i t which would be u n l i k e l y to be d u p l i c a t e d on another.
My colleague p i c k e d ib up and r e p o r t e d i t was at normal
temperature.
A f e a t u r e o f the phenomena was t h a t whenever X used the
computer t e r m i n a l i n my o f f i c e i t would e v e n t u a l l y "crash"
a f t e r a short time. My colleague reported t h a t once i n
h i s own o f f i c e he was t a l k i n g on the telephone when X came i n .
As he d i d so i n t e r f e r e n c e noise s t a r t e d i n the earpiece and
the n e a r e r X appraached the l o u d e r i t became u n t i l i t was
impossible to hear the person a t the other end of the l i n e .
I o f f e r no e x p l a n a t i o n of the above phenomena, but merely
r e c o r d what I saw and heard.
Needless to say*there were many
who r e f u s e d to b e l i e v e any of the events could a c t u a l l y have happened
and I count myself f o r t u n a t e that the major event occurred
while I was o u t s i d e the o f f i c e and i n the presence o f my
s e n i o r c o l l e a g u e who was an i n i t i a l u n b e l i e v e r .
To my layman's mind i t seems that d u r i n g PK a c t i v i t y when
an o b j e c t m a t e r i a l i s e s the process, whatever i t may be,
produces a loud noise s i m i l a r I suppose to the sonic boom.
So f a r as I am aware no o b j e c t s d e m a t e r i a l i s e d .
All
the phenomena ceased completely
when X l e f t the Company."
I quoted the above account as an i l l u s t r a t i o n of i n t e r f e r e n c e
with computers and telephones during a p o l t e r g e i s t outbreak, but
o f course, the reader w i l l have been aware that another
phenomenon was e s p e c i a l l y to the f o r e i n t h i s p a r t i c u l a r
case, that o f t e l e p o r t a t i o n .
On a c r e d i b i l i t y s c a l e t e l e p o r t a t i o n i s perhaps the most
d i f f i c u l t phenomenon to b e l i e v e . The most experienced
p a r a p s y c h o l o g i s t s f i n d i t a d i f f i c u l t p i l l to swallow, and
i t has been l a r g e l y ignored as a phenomenon f o r much o f the
time. But i t i s d i f f i c u l t to ignore. Accounts o f
t e l e p o r t a t i o n s occur c o n t i n u a l l y , r i g h t through the l i t e r a t u r e
and, as i n the case quoted a o o v e i n modern s i t u a t i o n s .
Moreover i t seems to happen i n i s o l a t i o n , i n much the
same way as many people r e p o r t j u s t one i s o l a t e d p o l t e r g e i s t
effect.
In t h i s paper f o r the sake o f c l a r i t y I w i l l
use the word t e l e p o r t a t i o n to cover both the i n e x p l i c a b l e
appearance, as w e l l as disappearance o f o b j e c t s ;
these
o b j e c t s are g e n e r a l l y r e f e r r e d to as 'apports*.
;
?
T e l e p o r a t i o n i s d i f f e r e n t from the movement o f o b j e c t s that
occurs i n p o l t e r g e i s t s i t u a t i o n s , although f r e q u e n t l y both
types of phenomenon are present.
A t e l e p o r t e d o b j e c t may
vanish, never to reappear, or by c o n t r a s t an o b j e c t t o t a l l y
u n f a m i l i a r to the r e c i p i e n t may suddenly appear b e f o r e h i s o r
her a s t o n i s h e d eyes, as i n the case r e l a t e d above.
We
have had some very p u z z l i n g cases reported to us over the
years by people whose honesty i n r e p o r t i n g i s impossible to
doubt. A s t r i k i n g case was t h a t o f a l a d y i n a small town
i n England some twenty years ago who t o l d us that she had
bought a new s u i t to attend a wedding, and hung i t i n her
wardrobe a few weeks before the wedding. On the day she
went to her wardrobe, o n l y to f i n d the s u i t had gone.
She
searched high and low, to no a v a i l .
The apparent t h e f t
was r e p o r t e d to the p o l i c e , although n o t h i n g e l s e was taken,
and they had not been aware o f a b r e a k - i n .
Some months
l a t e r the f a m i l y moved,: and the wardrobe was to go with the
furniture.
I t was emptied, and the c l o t h e s packed separately?
the wardrobe was too l a r g e to be t r a n s p o r t e d down the s t a i r s
i n one p i e c e , so i t was dismantled, and reassembled i n the
new home. When the l a d y opened the door i n her new home to
r e p l a c e her c l o t h e s , to her astonishment there was her new
wedding s u i t , hanging alone i n the wardrobe. Of course the
moving men d e c l a r e d i t was empty when they had reassembled
the wardrobe i n i t s new s i t u a t i o n .
A neighbour o f ours
here i n Toronto, who has no p a r t i c u l a r i n t e r e s t i n parapsychology,
l o s t a costume i n s i m i l a r circumstances some three y e a r s
ago.
She had bought i t f o r a s p e c i a l occasion, and when she
went to put i t on on the n i g h t i n q u e s t i o n i t had disappeared
from her c l o s e t .
Again there was no evidence that i t might
have been s t o l e n .
That p a r t i c u l a r costume has not y e t
reappeared.
Dr. Brunvand, the P r e s i d e n t o f the American
F o l k l o r e S o c i e t y t e l l s us of one o f h i s correspondents who
wrote to him o f a mysterious appearance o f some c l o t h i n g .
T h i s p a r t i c u l a r lady was n u r s i n g her t o t a l l y bedridden mother
i n her home i n a remote country area.
On the afternoon i n
q u e s t i o n , a f t e r s e t t l i n g her mother down f o r a sleep, she
sat a t her desk, which overlooked the one lane which l e d to
the house to do some w r i t i n g .
She had been wishing as she
tended her mother that she could go i n t o town and buy her
mother some new d r e s s i n g gowns, her c u r r e n t b e d c l o t h i n g was
g e t t i n g r a t h e r worn. During the course o f the a f t e r n o o n she
heard a r a t t l i n g i n her mother's room, but i t was a small
sound and she d i d n ' t i n v e s t i g a t e .
L a t e r , when her mother
was awake she went i n , and i n the course o f a t t e n d i n g to her
mother she opened the c l o s e t door, o n l y to f i n d s e v e r a l new
and b e a u t i f u l nightgowns hanging on the r a i l .
She r e a l i z e d t h a t
the small sound she had heard was l i k e to the noise a hanger
might make on the r a i l s .
Her mother was t o t a l l y bedridden,
and nobody to her c e r t a i n knowledge had approached the house
that a f t e r n o o n .
I t happens t h a t these three s t o r i e s r e l a t e to the disappearance
and appearance o f c l o t h i n g , but any o b j e c t can be the focus
o f such phenomena.
We a l l know how easy i t i s to misplace
keys, and perhaps we might tend to d i s c r e d t i t a s t o r y about
the l o s s and reappearance o f keys, but we were struck by
one account g i v e n us.
The lady i n question kept the keys
to her o f f i c e and her c a r keys on the same r i n g .
On t h i s
p a r t i c u l a r day she had d r i v e n to her o f f i c e , locked her
car, and used the keys to go i n t o the o f f i c e (she worked
alone).
On l e a v i n g f o r the day she could not f i n d the
keys i n order to l o c k the o f f i c e and r e t u r n homej
finally
she wandered over to her car, wondering i f by chance she
had a t l e a s t l e f t i t unlocked and could go home, only to see
on the seat o f the car, which was locked, the bunch o f m i s s i n g
keys.
She could not have locked the car, o r opened the o f f i c e
without the keys, and y e t there they were i n s i d e the locked
car, i n p l a i n view on the seat.
When she f i n a l l y got the
car undone, and a r r i v e d home she s a i d "on the k i t c h e n t a b l e ,
i n a heap, were a number of o b j e c t s which had gone m i s s i n g
over the past few months.
Most o f them I had not bothered
about, b e l i e v i n g they would turn up again sometime, they
had been misplaced, and together with them were a number
o f o b j e c t s I had not r e a l i s e d were missing, and some I
d i d not recognise at a l l " .
I t was as i f some agency had
gathered up a bunch o f transported o b j e c t s and returned them
i n a heap.
T h i s i s another c h a r a c t i s t i c o f t e l e p o r t a t i o n ;
f r e q u e n t l y m i s s i n g a r t i c l e s are returned i n a bunch, a l t o g e t h e r ,
as i f they had been gathered i n some kind o f 'storeeoom!
i n another dimension.
In most cases the o b j e c t s appear o r disappear without
the a c t being seen by the people around, but that i s not
always the case.
I wonder whether i t i s more d i s c o n c e r t i n g
to see something vanish, or to see something suddenly appear
before your eyes? I remember the t o t a l astonishment i n the
v o i c e o f a person who r e l a t e d to me o f an occasion when he
was u s i n g a small penknife to cut the root o f a p l a n t , when
suddenly the k n i f e vanished from h i s hand, and the t o t a l
i n c r e d u l i t y i n the account given by a lady who was r e p l a c i n g
a l i g h t bulb, when suddenly the l i g h t bulb was no longer i n
her hand - i t had ' d e m a t e r i a l i s e d ' .
When t h i n g s reappear
they u s u a l l y seem to drop g e n t l y from the c e i l i n g , not a c t i n g
as i f they are thrown, but people d e s c r i b e them as g e n t l y
f l o a t i n g to the ground.
Some people, l i k e the man i n the
e a r l i e r s t o r y who saw the 2p p i e c e s m a t e r i a l i s e have a c t u a l l y
seen the o b j e c t s appearing.
G e n e r a l l y they appear completely,
but we have a l e t t e r from one lady who said she saw a book
g r a d u a l l y appear - cover f i r s t .
She said the book had been
missed and had been searched f o r . T h i s r a t h e r reminds one
of the Cheshire Cat i n A l i c e i n Wonderland whose face
g r a d u a l l y vanished u n t i l only the g r i n was l e f t .
Lewis
C a r r o l l , author o f A l i c e was o f course i n t e r e s t e d i n p s y c h i c
r e s e a r c h , and a member o f the S o c i e t y f o r P s y c h i c a l Research.
DISCUSSION.
While one c o u l d e a s i l y d i s c o u n t the odd i n d i v i d u a l s t o r y
as being the exaggeration o f a f a n c i f u l mind, o r an embroidered
v e r s i o n o f a s i m p l e r t r u t h , i t i s impossible to d i s m i s s
a l l the accounts that have been g i v e n o f a l l these phenomena.
Together they make up a body o f evidence which cannot
be d i s c o u n t e d .
Simply because we f i n d i t d i f f i c u l t to
encompass these s t o r i e s i n our p r e s e n t b e l i e f system we
cannot a f f o r d to ignore them.
They are a p a r t o f our
c u l t u r e , our s o c i e t y , our s o c i o l o g i c a l p a t t e r n , whether
we l i k e i t o r n o t .
Whether we l i k e i t o r not a l a r g e
p a r t o f our s o c i e t y has experiences that are not c u r r e n t l y
accepted by the s c i e n t i f i c community, o r by some o t h e r s .
As regards the " s c i e n t i f i c community" o r to put i t more
b r o a d l y "the corpus o f o f f i c i a l knowledge" we have to be
fair.
Modern science i n England and France had i t s b i r t h i n
a p e r i o d c h a r a c t e r i s e d by two f r i g h t e n i n g t h i n g s , on the one
hand was a host o f s u p e r s t i t i o n s l e a d i n g to w i t c h c r a f t
p e r s e c u t i o n s , t o r t u r e and death, on the o t h e r r e l i g i o u s
i n t o l e r a n c e l e a d i n g to p e r s e c u t i o n s f o r heresy* t o r t u r e and
death, and furthermore to a t r o c i o u s wars o f r e l i g i o n .
These
h o r r o r s ceased i n t o t a l i t y l e s s than three c e n t u r i e s ago.
An i m p a r t i a l person can t h e r e f o r e sympathize to an a p p r e c i a b l e
degree with the u l t r a s c i e n t i f i c a t t i t u d e that bans even the
mere d i s c u s s i o n o f the paranormal.
One may a l s o sympathize to some e x t e n t with C h r i s t i a n c l e r g y
i n most c o u n t r i e s who (with a very few honourable exceptions
i n North America and B r i t a i n ) t o t a l l y ignore the whole f i e l d
o f the paranormal.
Now, i n s t e a d o f being top dogs, as they
were not so l o n g ago, they have, i n t e l l e c t u a l l y , to keep a
low p r o f i l e .
Otherwise past excesses o f r e l i g i o u s z e a l , super
p a t r i o t i s m , and the d i s m a l r e c o r d o f dogmatism, p e r s e c u t i o n ,
and i n t o l e r a n c e , might be thrown i n t h e i r f a c e .
One could say t h a t , however i t might be amongst laymen, i n
the p r o f e s s i o n a l c l a s s e s i n regard to p o s s i b l e t h i n g s beyond
our p r e s e n t m o r t a l ken, an u n e n t e r p r i s i n g c a u t i o n r e i g n s .
Because the world i s i n h a b i t e d by a c t u a l people and not by
standard textbooks, strange r e a l i t i e s p e r p e t u a l l y keep b r e a k i n g
i n whatever the B r i t i s h M e d i c a l J o u r n a l . The J o u r n a l o f P s y c h i a t r y ,
The Church T i m e s , o r the V a t i c a n might say.
The p l i g h t o f t h © s e
persons who experience paranormal phenomena which are not o f
p s y c h o p a t h o l o g i c a l o r i g i n i s o f t e n a very miserable one.
Often t h e i r medical a d v i s e r s are q u i t e u n h e l p f u l whether i t be
a case o f mental impressions o r o f a p o l t e r g e i s t outbreak.
The l o c a l c l e r g y a r e , on the whole, even more blank and
i n d i f f e r e n t than the f a m i l y d o c t o r s or p s y c h i a t r i s t s .
It
should be s a i d t h a t i n Toronto a t l e a s t there i s a commendable
l e a v e n i n g o f p h y s i c i a n s who w i l l take the t r o u b l e to l i s t e n
to t h e i r p a t i e n t s and who can recognise a paranormal event
when i t i s d e s c r i b e d to themi
Even they are few i n number.
S i m i l a r l y as regards to the c l e r g y , nothing i n our experience
over n e a r l y two decades encourages us to suppose t h a t more
than a h a n d f u l o f m i n i s t e r s i n t h i s m e t r o p o l i s have the
s l i g h t e s t i n k l i n g as to what the subject i s about.
In
f a i r n e s s one might ask whether o r not a b e l i e f i n the paranormal
i s not i n f a c t harder f o r a c l e r i c than f o r a l a y s c i e n t i s t ?
T h i s may seem a strange q u e s t i o n to ask.
However i t may
become i n t e l l i g i b l e i f we r e f l e c t that these good people may
f e a r parapsychology as a c r i t i q u e o f r e l i g i o n . The methods
o f our s c i e n c e , f o r such i t i s , e n t a i l the minute examination
o f the a l l e g e d processes o f r e v e l a t i o n , v i s i o n , and m i r a c l e s .
Orthodox science mainly l a y s o f f t h i s kind o f c r i t i c i s m on account
o f a k i n d o f t a c i t t r e a t y between science and formal Western
r e l i g i o n entered i n t o by about 1900 A.D.
But parapsychology,
( q u i t e i n n o c e n t l y and without meaning to) by i t s very nature
and type o f a n a l y s i s cuts n e a r e r to the bone.
It treats
r e l i g i o u s h i s t o r y as being on a p a r with any o t h e r form o f
h i s t o r y , a l b e i t that i t a p p l i e s a c a l c u l u s more ample and powerful
than the u s u a l s e c u l a r h i s t o r i a n — one comprising psychology
and p a r a p s y c h o l o g i c a l experience.
There i s another p o s s i b l e reason why C h r i s t i a n c l e r g y tend to
shun p a r a p s y c h o l o g i c a l knowledge.
Any d i s p a s s i o n a t e study
o f paranormal phenomena which extends over the s e c u l a r f i e l d ,
the area o f C h r i s t i a n r e l i g i o n , and o t h e r r e l i g i o n s i s , we
f e e l , l i k e l y to a r r i v e at the c o n c l u s i o n t h a t strange but
s t r a n g e l y s i m i l a r happenings occur both i n the s e c u l a r sphere
and i n the spheres of not one but many r e l i g i o n s (New H o r i z o n s
Review, Stigmata and P h y s i o l o g i c a l and o t h e r Phenomena o f
M y s t i c i s m , March 1987).
Thus parapsychology may embarrass
those who b e l i e v e i n the uniqueness o f t h e i r r e l i g i o n , whatever
i t might be, J u d a i c , C h r i s t i a n , o r I s l a m i c ;
in this
connection i t could f a i r l y be s a i d t h a t some o r i e n t a l r e l i g i o n s
are i n t e r e s t i n g i n b e i n g l e s s dogmatic.
However i t i s f a i r to say that a l l the f o r e g o i n g s p e c u l a t i o n s
may he a l t o g e t h e r too h i g h - f l o w n and c l e r i c a l t i m i d i t y i n
t h i s f i e l d i s e n t i r e l y due to the l a c k o f teaching about the
paranormal g i v e n i n C o l l e g e s i n r e l a t i o n e i t h e r to theology
o r to p a s t o r a l c a r e .
CONCLUSION.
But
raw
to r e v e r t to the main theme o f t h i s paper — p e o p l e ' s
experiences.
What do these s t o r i e s t e l l us i n s o c i o l o g i c a l terms?
Are we moving towards a c u l t u r e t h a t accepts t h a t d e s p i t e
t e c h n o l o g i c a l advances i n communication we can s t i l l
communicate p e r s o n a l l y and on a one-to-one b a s i s by means
of telepathy?
Are we e v o l v i n g i n t o a s o c i e t y t h a t i s
s p l i t between the t e c h n o l o g i c a l and s c i e n t i f i c world
t h a t we regard as ' r e a l ' and t h a t ' o t h e r ' world where
we can communicate t e l e p a t h i c a l l y , move o b j e c t s ,
h e a l the s i c k , and see i n t o the f u t u r e ?
When we look a t what some people are e x p e r i e n c i n g we see
a s o c i e t y t h a t regards i t s e l f as more c l o s e - k n i t and more i n
communication than we would have b e l i e v e d .
Although we
have moved away from many c o n v e n t i o n a l r e l i g i o n s , i t would
seem there i s a b a s i c b e l i e f t h a t i s almost a u n i v e r s a l
r e l i g i o n to which we a l l subscribe and t h i s i s manifested
o f t e n i n paranormal phenomena.
S o c i o l o g y i s the study o f the e v o l u t i o n o f human
s o c i e t y , and i t s p r o g r e s s .
Are paranormal phenomena an
i n d i c a t i o n o f s o c i e t y ' s p r o g r e s s , or do they c o n s t i t u t e
a r e l i c o f what we once were, but are now no more?
New Horizons Research Foundation Paper 28
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Page(s)
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Andrew MacKenzie, “Parapsychology Today: How Common are
Psychic Experiences?,” Fate (November 1987), pp. 42-50.
2$
P.A.Convention
Edinburgh, August 1987
I n v i t e d Address
E x t r e m e Phenomena and
the Problem
of
Credibility
by
John
Beloff
Department of Psychology
University
of Edinburgh
George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ
Extreme
Phenomena and t h e P r o b l e m
John
of C r e d i b i l i t y
Beloff
I cannot define what I mean by 'extreme phenomena' I can only o f f e r
examples.
Yet I am confident that a l l of you who are f a m i l i a r with the
l i t e r a t u r e of p s y c h i c a l research w i l l understand
t a l k i n g about.
what i t i s that I am
From time to time we come across c e r t a i n claims about which
one can say only that they take one's breath away.
They seem to go so f a r
beyond anything i n our own experience and to make such a mockery of a l l our
presumptions as to the kind of world i t i s we l i v e i n that words f a i l us,
and yet we can see no easy way of dismissing them as sheer fantasy.. Our
sorcery
ancestors c a l l e d them 'miracles' or, i f they resented them, m»g»u or witchcraft;
we would do best to adopt a n e u t r a l term so I am c a l l i n g them 'ex-
treme phenomena'.
The problem of c r e d i b i l i t y i s best understood
as the attempt to provide
an answer to the age-old question: what ought a r a t i o n a l person t o believe ?
In one sense, of course, t h i s question i s decidedly odd.
For, i n any given
s i t u a t i o n at any given time, e i t h e r one believes a c e r t a i n p r o p o s i t i o n or
one does not, one does not i n q u i r e whether i t i s one's duty to b e l i e v e or
to d i s b e l i e v e . On the other hand a wise person w i l l t r y to formulate
c e r t a i n general p r i n c i p l e s or g u i d e l i n e s so as to a n t i c i p a t e a p a r t i c u l a r
contingency
and make i t e a s i e r to reach a s a t i s f a c t o r y d e c i s i o n when
confronted by some contentious i s s u e .
T h i s problem of s p e c i f y i n g what i s
c r e d i b l e or i n c r e d i b l e has exercised philosophers since a n t i q u i t y . The
Greek s k e p t i c s were greatly preoccupied with i t although mainly
negative sense of f i n d i n g reasons to doubt everything.
i n the
As with a number of
the perennial problems of philosophy - e.g. the problem of causation or the
problem of personal i d e n t i t y - i t i s i n the w r i t i n g s of David Hume that we
f i n d i t s c l a s s i c expression and Hume, moreover, brought i t to bear d i r e c t l y
on the question of extreme phenomena. So allow me to remind you what Hume
has to say on t h i s t o p i c i n h i s j u s t l y celebrated essay on m i r a c l e s .
he l a y s i t down quite simply that i n no circumstances
i s one ever
There
justified
i n b e l i e v i n g that a miracle has occurred, i f by 'miracle' we mean some s i n g u l a r v i o l a t i o n of the known laws of nature, i f only because those same laws
are constantly being confirmed
d e f i n i t i o n , a one-off
i n our experience whereas the miracle i s , by
event.
Hume was not being dogmatic i n speaking so c a t e g o r i c a l l y .
denying
He was not
that miracles might occur, indeed i t was he who pointed out that
we can have no proof that the laws of nature w i l l hold from one day to
the next.
What he does i n s i s t on i s that we can never bej-justified i n
accepting a miracle unless^we could be sure that i t would be an even
greater miracle i f the person t e s t i f y i n g to
miracle were t e l l i n g a l i e .
But,
given the f a l l i b i l i t y of human beings, such could never be the case. To
d r i v e home h i s point he imagines what would happen i f a l l the
competent
a u t h o r i t i e s agreed that Queen E l i z a b e t h of England, a month after her
burial,came back to l i f e ,
three years.
ascended the throne and reigned for a further
Would he, as an h i s t o r i a n - and i n h i s day, I may say, he
was esteemed more as an h i s t o r i a n than as a philosopher - have to concur
with t h i s consensus of experts and admit that here at l e a s t was a genuine
miracle ?
By no means, "I would s t i l l reply" he says "that the knavery and
f o l l y of men are such common phenomena, that I should rather believe
the
most extraordinary events to a r i s e from t h e i r concurrence, than admit so
s i g n a l a v i o l a t i o n of the laws of nature".
Although Hume's essay did not
go unanswered by philosophers and c r i t i c s who seized upon various weaknesses and i n c o n s i s t e n c i e s
i n h i s argument, by and large most s e l f - s t y l e d
ration-
a l i s t s since then, up to and i n c l u d i n g members of CSICOP, have been content
to follow Hume's l i n e .
celebrate
Tom Paine, the 250th anniversary of whose b i r t h we
t h i s year, put i t a l l i n a n u t s h e l l when he asks,
rhetorically,
whether i t i s more l i k e l y that nature should go out of her way than that a
man should t e l l a l i e ?
In what follows I s h a l l try to show, f i r s t ,
that Hume, however much we
may revere him i n t h i s c i t y , was mistaken and that i t i s not n e c e s s a r i l y more
r a t i o n a l to d i s b e l i e v e
than to believe i n a given extreme phenomenon.
then consider whether,
in fact,
there are any instances of extreme phenomena
to which one i s r a t i o n a l l y j u s t i f i e d i n g i v i n g credence and I w i l l
i n t h i s connection some notable h i s t o r i c a l cases that have so far
demolition.
I shall
discuss
resisted
F i n a l l y I want to discuss some possible consequences of taking
s u c h c a s e s on board
Let us s t a r t ,
w i t h us a s p a r t
o f our i n t e l l e c t u a l
then, with the Humean p o s i t i o n .
baggage.
Obviously to
acknowledge
a claim that runs counter to so much that we normally take for granted i s a
much r i s k i e r proposition than to dismiss i t from our thoughts without more
ado.
At the same time i f the f a c t s demand that we acknowledge i t ,
be sheer i n t e l l e c t u a l cowardice or evasiveness to refuse to do so.
i t would
Now Hume
argued, for the reasons we have mentioned, that the f a c t s are never such as
to make assent o b l i g a t o r y .
a paper on i t s own.
serious defect.
To do j u s t i c e to Hume's argument would require
Here I w i l l confine myself to what I regard as i t s most
I t i s an argument that cannot carry any weight with someone
who has a c t u a l l y witnessed an extreme phenomenon - i f ,
such.
of
you.
indeed, there are any
Needless to say I am not one of these and I expect that goes for most
Nevertheless,
i t would not be d i f f i c u l t for any of us to think up
a scenario i n which we not only witnessed such a phenomenon but were i n a
p o s i t i o n to s a t i s f y
ourselves
to our h e a r t ' s content that we were not the
28
3/
v i c t i m of any kind of t r i c k or i l l u s i o n .
As an e m p i r i c i s t , Hume would have
to agree that we are r i g h t to t r u s t to the evidence of our senses.
Hence,
since he did not deny that miracles might occur and, hence, that people
might have d i r e c t experience of them, he would have to argue that such
people must be disbelieved, whatever t h e i r previous reputation or c r e d e n t i a l s .
But, i f a r u l e i s v a l i d i t ought to be v a l i d i n a l l circumstances r e a l or
hypothetical.
I t should not lead to opposite conclusions depending on whether
our knowledge of a given event i s at f i r s t or at second hand.
Hume's r u l e
leads to a kind of epistemological s o l i p s i s m whereby only our own experience
i s allowed to count.
T h i s , I submit, cannot be regarded as a r a t i o n a l
prescription.
Recently, some parapsychologists, notably John Palmer, have sought
circumvent the Humean objection by arguing that the question of b e l i e f
to
need
never a r i s e .
Instead of d i v i d i n g people i n t o sheep and goats, b e l i e v e r s and
disbelievers,
Palmer suggests that we d i s t i n g u i s h between 'conventional
theorists'
i.e.
ventional l i n e s ,
those who t r y to explain an o s t e n s i b l e
anomaly along con-
that i s try to explain i t away, and 'paranormal t h e o r i s t s '
who try to introduce some novel type of explanation.
In t h i s way, he suggests,
we can a l l keep an open minded about everything and need waste no further time
on f r u i t l e s s controversy.
I t i s an ingenious formula and I appreciate the
diplomatic sentiment behind i t .
I do not t h i n k , however, that i t
an answer to the problem of c r e d i b i l i t y .
provides
However open-minded one t r i e s
to
be one i s bound to veer more to one i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of the facts rather than
another depending on one's b i a s .
Furthermore t h i s w i l l influence our
assessment of what the facts are that have to be explained.
B e l i e f may
always be a matter of degree but i t i s neither possible nor d e s i r a b l e to
forego e n t i r e l y having any b e l i e f s .
In the case of extreme phenomena the
question of b e l i e f i s bound to loom very l a r g e .
Before we proceed to discuss some a c t u a l examples of extreme phenomena
I want to make a few general points about how one might deal with them.
There a r e , I want to suggest, three pertinent questions that we can always
ask about them, one a f t e r another: (1) Could there be some normal explanation
for what i s alleged to have happened ?
I f the answer to t h i s f i r s t
question
i s no, then (2) could the witnesses be deceived or mistaken about what they
thought they had observed ?
I f the answer to t h i s question i s s t i l l no,
then (3) could the witnesses themselves or those who report t h e i r
be l y i n g ?
Finally,
testimony
i f the answer i s s t i l l no then we have reached what I
would c a l l a ' c r e d i b i l i t y impassel
The only escape from t h i s impasse i s
suggest that the evidence i s incomplete and t h a t , i f we had a l l the
the s i t u a t i o n would appear i n a very d i f f e r e n t l i g h t .
to
facts,
The plea of ignorance
4/
can always be used to sustain any p o s i t i o n which appears to c 6 n t £ a d i c t the
known f a c t s but i t should be recognized for what i t i s ,
a desperate
expedient.
So far I have been concerned only to argue that i | _ we had good evidence
for an extreme phenomenon we would not need to discount that evidence on.
any a p r i o r i grounds be they Humean or otherwise.
I t i s now time to turn
to the more e x c i t i n g question as to whether h i s t o r y has supplied us with
any examples of extreme phenomena which bring us to a c r e d i b i l i t y impasse.
L i k e a good philosopher Hume did not t r y to make things easy for himself
by dwelling on those miracles that were p l a i n l y r i s i b l e , as an i n f e r i o r
polemicist might have been tempted to do.
He was aware, for example,
that,
only s h o r t l y before the time he was w r i t i n g , a whole c l u t c h of m i r a c l e s ,
mostly having to do with h e a l i n g , had been taking place i n , of a l l
P a r i s , then the undisputed c u l t u r a l c a p i t a l of Europe.
They were a l l
connected with the tomb of Francois P a r i s , a revered and s a i n t l y
p r i e s t who was buried i n the cemetry of Saint Medard.
places,
Jansenist
The fact that P a r i s
had been a Jansenist and thus a h e r e t i c i n the eyes of the Church made t h i s
a t e s t case since the c i v i c a u t h o r i t i e s , egged on by the J e s u i t s ,
did every-
thing i n t h e i r power to suppress and d i s c r e d i t these claims and eventually
o
they closed down the cemetry, thereby provking V o l t a i r e s witty observation
that i t was a case of no miracles by order I. We must remember, t h e r e f o r e ,
that those who t e s t i f i e d
to such miracles were r i s k i n g persecution.
In
s p i t e of that scores of people came forward to add t h e i r testimony.
No
wonder Hume was driven to exclaim: "Where s h a l l we f i n d such a number of
circumstances agreeing to the corroboration of one f a c t ?
we to oppose to such a cloud of witnesses ?".
And what have
But then, immediately, Hume
answers h i s own r h e t o r i c a l question i n the way we have l e a r n t to
expect.
"The miraculous nature of such claims" he a s s e r t s " i s s u f f i c i e n t
reason
to dismiss them" since "where men are heated by z e a l and enthusiasm,
there
i s no degree of human testimony so strong as may not be procured for the
greatest absurdity".
So long as we are content to s t i c k ,
think we are secure enough.
l i k e Hume, to g e n e r a l i t i e s we may
Let us focus, however, on one s p e c i f i c case -
not one, i n c i d e n t a l l y , which Hume mentions i n h i s essay - and l e t us
whether i t ,
ation.
too, can be dismissed as the product of an overheated imagin-
The case i n point i s that of M i l e . Louise C o i r i n .
i t has come down to us i s ,
b r i e f l y as
Her s t o r y ,
as
follows:
Louise C o i r i n l i v e d with her widowed mother at Nanterre outside
Her two brothers, l i k e t h e i r father before them, were o f f i c e r s
Household.
see
Paris.
i n the Royal
In 1716, at the age of 31, she developed a cancer of her
breast which gradually destroyed the fle^sh and the nipple and l e f t
left
her
5/
w i t h a suppurating wound whose odour rendered her w e l l nigh
unapproachable.
In 1718, t o add t o her misery, she became completely paralysed on her l e f t
side.
The f o l l o w i n g year two l o c a l surgeons recommended a mastectomy, as
the one hope of saving her l i f e , but she d e c l i n e d .
By 1731 - she was now
47 - she had reached the b r i n k of death and had already r e c e i v e d the l a s t
sacraments on s e v e r a l occasions.
I t was only then, on August 9 t h t o be
p r e c i s e , that she decided t o seek supernatural a i d .
She was f a r too i l l
h e r s e l f to make the pilgrimage t o St Me'dard but she persuade a pious woman
of the neighbourhood t o undertake the mission f o r her.
The woman was t o
b r i n g back a clod of earth from around the tomb and a garment, which she
gave her a f t e r i t had touched the tomb.
The next day, a f t e r a n n o i n t i n g
h e r s e l f with the clod of earth and p u t t i n g on the chemise t h a t had been
t r e a t e d , her recovery began.
Before the end of the month she had r e -
gained p e r f e c t h e a l t h and, more t o the p o i n t , her breast was whole a g a i n .
The J e s u i t s l o s t no time i n p u t t i n g out rumours t o the e f f e c t t h a t
a r e l a p s e had occurred and that her cancer and her p a r a l y s i s had returned.
Stung by these slanders M i l e C o i r i n went i n person t o P a r i s t o make a
d e p o s i t i o n before a notary s t a t i n g the f u l l f a c t s of her case.
More
important i s the f a c t that one of the r o y a l surgeons, r i s k i n g the d i s pleasure of the c o u r t , went himself t o the same notary t o t e s t i f y that
no t r a c e of the cancer remained and he l a i d s p e c i a l s t r e s s on the f a c t
that her l e f t n i p p l e was now p e r f e c t l y formed and i n d i s t i n g u i s h a b l e from
her r i g h t n i p p l e .
Let us now apply our three questions t o t h i s case.
Could the phenom-
enon have a normal explanation ? Spontaneous remissions i n case of cancer
are,
a f t e r a l l , not unknown t o the medical l i t e r a t u r e .
complicated the e v a l u a t i o n of some of the Lourdes cases.
Indeed they have
However, though
I speak as a layman, I would suppose t h a t the complete regeneration of a
breast and i t s n i p p l e i s unique.
So could the witnesses, who i n c l u d e a
number of medical men who are mentioned by name, have been mistaken about
what they saw ? The only p o s s i b i l i t y t h a t I can see i s i f some other
woman, some l o o k - a l i k e , had impersonated
Louise C o i r i n during these
examinations but the f a c t that she then resumed her normal l i f e among
her f a m i l y and f r i e n d s makes such a f a r - f e t c h e d hypothesis q u i t e untenable.
There remains, t h e r e f o r e , only one p o s s i b i l i t y , namely t h a t the e n t i r e
s t o r y was a f a b r i c a t i o n on the part of the w r i t e r on whose a u t h o r i t y the
case has become known t o us.
This i s by f a r the most a t t r a c t i v e hypothesis
from the standpoint of a s k e p t i c s i n c e , as f a r as I know, there i s only one
extant source f o r t h i s s t o r y , as there i s f o r so many other St Me'dard cases,
«s Carre de Montgeron's three volume work e n t i t l e d 'La V e r i t e de M i r a c l e s
operes par 1 ' i n t e r c e s s i o n de M. de P a r i s ' ( I am indebted to Ian Stevenson f o r
procuring f o r me the r e l e v a n t pages of t h i s obscure work from the Bibliotheque
Nationale).
Who,
then, was t h i s Montgeron ?
Even Hume had to admit that Montgeron was no ignorant f a n a t i c but a
of substance and repute.
He was,
member of the P a r i s Parliament.
man
i n f a c t , a nobleman, a magistrate and a
P r i o r to h i s encounter with these events
he had the r e p u t a t i o n of being something of a s k e p t i c i n matters of r e l i g i o n .
But what, i n the end, makes i t so extremely u n l i k e l y that he was l y i n g
that he had nothing to gain from i t .
for
was
On the contrary he had to pay dearly
h i s audacity i n p u b l i s h i n g h i s book, despite the precaution he took of
d e d i c a t i n g i t to the king (Louis XV), f o r he was promptly i n t e r n e d i n the
B a s t i l l e , although even t h i s d i d not teach him a lesson
because he
still
managed to b r i n g out two f u r t h e r volumes while i n p r i s o n .
For our next e x h i b i t we go back another century to a case that must
s u r e l y rank as among the most remarkable of a l l time.
case of the l e v i t a t i n g f r i a r , Joseph of Copertino.
I a l l u d e to the
The l a t e E r i c Dingwall
wrote a chapter on him i n h i s Human O d d i t i e s (1947) on which I have f r e e l y
drawn and, q u i t e r e c e n t l y , Stephen Braude has again drawn a t t e n t i o n to t h i s
case i n h i s new
book The L i m i t s of Influence (1986).
Here are the main
i n c i d e n t s of h i s l i f e as f a r as we know them:
Giuseppe Desa was born i n 1603 to an impoverished
family.
By the
age
of 17 he had decided to devote h i s l i f e to r e l i g i o n but he was too ignorant
and too simple-minded to q u a l i f y as a p a r i s h p r i e s t .
accepted
He was,
however,
i n t o the Capuchin Order i n 1620 and then, i n 1625, i n t o the Order
of St F r a n c i s .
As a monk he was notorious f o r h i s extreme a s c e t i c i s m and
the r a t h e r gruesome m o r i t i f i c a t i o n s that he would i n f l i c t on h i m s e l f .
What
alone makes him memorable, however, was h i s h a b i t of going i n t o a rapture
and then l e v i t a t i n g , sometimes to a considerable height and sometimes
remaining suspended j u s t above the ground f o r a considerable period of
time.
Such l e v i t a t i o n s took place i n broad d a y l i g h t , sometimes i n the
open a i r . There i s even a s t o r y t h a t , on one occasion he c a r r i e d up a
f e l l o w monk w i t h him i n t o the r a f t e r s of a church but that may
exaggeration.
Joseph
be an
apologized f o r h i s l e v i t a t i o n s c a l l i n g
them h i s f i t s of g i d d i n e s s .
I s h a l l mention one p a r t i c u l a r i n c i d e n t
which s t r i k e s one as more e v i d e n t i a l than most because i t occurred
during h i s f i n a l i l l n e s s when two doctors were assigned to him. A Dr
P i e r p a o l i was i n the process of c a u t e r i z i n g Joseph's r i g h t l e g when he
n o t i c e d that he had gone i n t o a trance and was s i t t i n g a few inches above
the seat of h i s c h a i r .
To make a b s o l u t e l y sure of t h i s both doctors
went down on t h e i r knees to get a b e t t e r look.
present
A f t e r t h i s had gone on f o r
about f i f t e e n
minutes, Joseph's s u p e r i o r , F r . E v a n g e l i s t a , entered the room
and brought him back to h i s senses, and to t e r r a firma. by c a l l i n g out h i s
name.
Joseph died i n 1663 at the age of 60.
Within three years of h i s death
an o f f i c i a l i n q u i r y was i n s t i t u t e d with the aim of e s t a b l i s h i n g the true
f a c t s of h i s career and, more e s p e c i a l l y ,
obtaining depositions
who had a c t u a l l y witnessed h i s l e v i t a t i o n s .
from those
On t h i s basis a biography was
eventually published by one, Domenico Bernino, i n 1722.
This, in turn,
to Joseph becoming a candidate for b e a t i f i c a t i o n and a Process was set
led
in
t r a i n by the Congregation of Rites who are responsible for a d j u d i c a t i n g
such matters.
I t i s noteworthy,
from our point of view, that the key
f i g u r e i n charge of t h i s was Cardinal Prospero Lambertini, a man of advanced
views - at one time he even corresponded amicably with V o l t a i r e ! - and the
whose function was to play d e v i l s advocate
author of the standard work on canonization.
Lambertini^does not seem to
have raised any serious doubts about the l e v i t a t i o n s
but he was perturbed
by the somewhat outrageous aspects of Joseph's l i f e - s t y l e
such extreme a s c e t i c i s m .
Nevertheless,
i n 1753,
and he d i s l i k e d
by which time Lambertini
had become Pope Benedict XIV, b e a t i f i c a t i o n was duly decreed.
Canonizat-
ion followed i n 1767 - just over a century a f t e r Joseph's death - and thus
i t was that Giuseppe Desa became,for a l l the world, St Joseph of Copertino.
Le us now ourselves
sophisticated
play d e v i l ' s advocate and see whether,
vantage point,we can puncture t h i s pious t a l e .
s t r i k e us, a f t e r more than three centuries have elapsed,
remotely l i k e t h i s has ever happened again I
from our
What must
i s that nothing
Inevitably there have been
claims i n every generation that someone at some time had l e v i t a t e d .
Some
of the best known p h y s i c a l mediums are supposed to have l e v i t a t e d at one
time or another, one thinks e s p e c i a l l y
on t h i s s c a l e .
of Daniel Home, but, s t i l l ,
nothing
Perhaps one's f i r s t i n c l i n a t i o n i s to regard t h i s as an
example of the n a t u r a l human tendency to exaggerate.
I am reminded of
s t o r i e s that used to c i r c u l a t e about the dancer, N i j i n s k y .
the
I t was said that
he must have possessed supernormal powers to land so gently on the stage
a f t e r one of h i s prodigious leaps.
Perhaps Joesph was given to leaping
up and down when he got excited and the legend took o f f from there and got
out of hand.
very f a r .
I am a f r a i d , however, that such speculations w i l l not get
us
There would have had to be a massive c o l l u s i o n to have produced
t h i s amount of documentary evidence.
More promising, from the standpoint of
the skeptic would be the idea that Joseph was the stooge or puppet i n a
fiendish counter-reformation plot to bring h e r e t i c s back i n t o the one true
church.
T h i s , at any r a t e , might help to explain what happened to the
Duke of Brunswik, a Lutheran, now only remembered as the patron of
the
8/
philosopher, L e i b n i t z .
expressed
The Duke v i s i t e d A s s i s i i n 1651 and while there
a wish to meet Joseph.
With two of h i s companions he was con-
ducted to a chapel where, without h i s being aware that he was being observed, Joseph was saying mass.
After a while he uttered a loud cry and
was seen by the three onlookers to r i s e i n t o the a i r i n a kneeling
ion.
posit-
The Duke was so i n t r i g u e d that he begged to be allowed to go again
next day.
On t h i s occasion Joseph was seen to r i s e a few inches and remain
f l o a t i n g above the a l t a r steps for about quarter of an hour.
This was too
much for the good Duke who there and then decided to become a C a t h o l i c .
Had he been ensnared by some a d r o i t piece of conjuring ?
Contrary to
what many people imagine, the C a t h o l i c Church has always been
wary of e x p l o i t i n g miracles produced by l i v i n g i n d i v i d u a l s .
accorded to the l a t e Padre Pio would be a case i n p o i n t .
taking advantage of h i s l e v i t a t i o n s ,
exceedingly
The treatment
So far from
much l e s s putting him up to i t by
using some fraudulent device, Joseph was a l l h i s l i f e an embarrassment to
his superiors.
On no l e s s than three occasions he was summoned before
I n q u i s i t i o n and for much of h i s l i f e he was under s t r i c t i n s t r u c t i o n s
remain i n h i s c e l l where he could l e a s t a t t r a c t a t t e n t i o n .
the
to
Of course we
are heavily dependent on h i s biographer, Bernino, for our knowledge of
his
career - Dingwall r e l i e s mainly on t h i s source - but Bernino names so many
eminent persons that there was a l i m i t to what he would have been able to
invent or embroider.
For example, he c i t e s three c a r d i n a l s each of whom
was w i l l i n g to t e s t i f y to having seen Joseph l e v i t a t e .
Then there i s
the
famous i n c i d e n t where the Father General of the Order of St F r a n c i s arranged
for Joseph to k i s s the feet of the then Pope, Urban V I I .
As so often happened
when Joseph got too excited^ he rose i n t o the a i r and there, apparently, he
remained suspended i n tfee * * r u n t i l the Father General r e c a l l e d him to h i s
senses, to the amazement of the Pope.
i n c i d e n t i n v o l v i n g a named Pope ?
How easy would i t be to invent an
A l l things considered I am i n c l i n e d to
agree with Dingwall when he says: "For my part I do not find i t easy to
believe that C a r d i n a l s , Bishops, S u p e r i o r s , monastic physicians and lay
v i s i t o r s were a l l l y i n g or engaged i n a system of deceit for the apparent
purpose of b o l s t e r i n g up the reputation of a fraudulent f r i a r or the Order
to which he was attached".
As from the middle of the 19th century, the S p i r i t u a l i s t movement
provided the new power-house for generating paranormal phenomena.
My
remaining three e x h i b i t s have a l l been drawn from the careers of p h y s i c a l
mediums who f l o u r i s h e d during the present century. Each, as i t
been made the subject of a recent b i o g r a p h i c a l study.
happens,has
Now, p h y s i c a l mediums,
unlike saints, have a murky reputation and, to the u n i n i t i a t e d , t h i s
alone
34
9/
must seem s u f f i c i e n t reason f o r d i s m i s s i n g , or at l e a s t , p l a y i n g down any
claims that are made on t h e i r behfuajf.
At the same time, one could argue,
with more l o g i c , t h a t the more s u s p i c i o u s the medium, the more v i g i l a n t w i l l
be the i n v e s t i g a t o r s . No one, a f t e r a l l , wants to be taken f o r a r i d e . But,
f o r t u n a t e l y , the argument i s i r r e l e v a n t because the c r i t i c a l question i n
these matters i s never/the i n d i v i d u a l involved would cheat, given the chance,
but, always, whether he or she could have cheated i n the c o n d i t i o n s s p e c i f i e d .
These remarks are p e r t i n e n t because my next e x h i b i t concerns a medium
who was,
in
s u r e l y , one of the most tempestuous and c o n t r o v e r s i a l characters
the whole stormy h i s t o r y of p s y c h i c a l research, namely, Mrs Mina Crandon,
n l e S t i n s o n , known to a l l the world as 'Margery'.
who
There can be few mediums
caused q u i t e so much havoc i n the course of t h e i r career.
As you know,
the American S.P.R. s p l i t i n two on her account causing W.F.Prince to set
up a r i v a l o r g a n i z a t i o n , the Boston S.P.R.
J.B.Rhine was
so q u i c k l y d i s -
i l l u s i o n e d with her, a f t e r a s i n g l e s i t t i n g , that he never wanted to have
anything f u r t h e r to do with mediums i n h i s l i f e ( u n l e s s , l i k e Mrs
Garrett,
they were w i l l i n g to play his. game) so one could say that Margery had a
hand i n launching modern laboratory-based
in
experimental
parapsychology. But,
f a i r n e s s , and despite the r e v u l s i o n that many people f e l t towards her,
i t must be s a i d that she submitted p a t i e n t l y and i n d e f a t i g a b l y to the s t r e n uous t e s t s that were demanded of
her, perhaps, even, at the cost of her s a n i t y .
O s t e n s i b l y , she d i d a l l t h i s as the passive v e h i c l e f o r her deceased brother,
Walter, but whatever was
s t i l l remain b a f f l i n g .
going on she undoubtedly produced phenomena that
Perhaps we s h a l l begin to understand her a l i t t l e
b e t t e r when Mrs Marian Nester has completed the biography she has been
working on.
She, a f t e r a l l ,
as the daughter of Dr Mark Richardson, one
of the l e a d i n g f i g u r e s i n the i n v e s t i g a t i o n , l i v e d through i t a l l when
she was a young woman.
I s h a l l here confine myself to a s i n g l e episode
i n Margery's m u l t i f a r i o u s mediumship, namely her r i n g s .
A seamless l i n k a g e of s o l i d r i n g s , which i s a t o p o l o g i c a l m i r a c l e , i s
one of the r a r e s t of extreme phenomena.
Yet, during the 1930s, Margery
produced a whole s e r i e s of such l i n k a g e s .
so you may
None of them, a l a s , has
f e e l that I am wasting your time d i s c u s s i n g them but we
survived
still
have to t r y and make sense of the documentary and photographic evidence.
If even one such object had s u r v i v e d , parapsychology, I reckon, would be
ina
very d i f f e r e n t p o s i t i o n today.
For the beauty about a permanent para-
normal object or 'PPO', as I l i k e to c a l l i t , i s that i t i s independent of
the i n d i v i d u a l who was
originated.
r e s p o n s i b l e f o r i t or of the c o n d i t i o n s i n which i t
I f one i s going to deny i t s paranormality
e x p l a i n , or, b e t t e r s t i l l , demonstrate, how
one has got to
i t might have been normally
con-
10/
structed.
In other words, the onus, for once, would be on the doubter
rather than on the b e l i e v e r .
With a l l the other extreme phenomena, one
can always say, as I have heard David Berglas say when he was challenged
to explain some h i s t o r i c a l case of mediumship, 'I wasn't there'
Even
I
i f we have a f i l m recording of what went on at a seance, we have to
prove that the f i l m was not faked.
to the
But a PPO stands as a permanent
challenge
skeptic.
The components used i n these experiments consisted
of
substantial
wooden r i n g s , some of these have survived and I have been able to see them.
Care was taken to use p a i r s where each r i n g was made from a d i f f e r e n t timber
so as to preclude the p o s s i b i l i t y that the linkage could have been carved
from a s i n g l e
bl'aock.
We have accounts of some of the s i t t i n g s at which
'Walter' engineered the linkage which would suggest that a c e r t a i n amount
of d e m a t e r i a l i z a t i o n and r e m a t e r i a l i z a t i o n was i n v o l v e d .
We a l s o have the
photograph of one i n t a c t linkage which i s said to have been on d i s p l a y at
one time at the headquarters of the American S . P . R .
of a l e t t e r
We even have the text
from an outside expert a f f i r m i n g that the linkage had been
X-rayed and that "nothing resembling an a r t i f i c i a l l y concealed cut or break"
could be d e t e c t e d /
Unfortunately, with that p e r v e r s i t y which i s so t y p i c a l
(but paranormailv)
_
of extreme phenomena, the linkages regularly/became u n l i n k e d . I t i s as i f
Margery (or was i t Walter')could only get as far as c r e a t i n g a semi-permanent
paranormal o b j e c t .
The whole a f f a i r , as you see,
b r i s t l e s with a b s u r d i t i e s
but who are we, a f t e r a l l , to say that r e a l i t y cannot, at times,
resemble
a theatre of the absurd !
At a l l events, my next e x h i b i t w i l l probably s t r i k e you as even more
absurd.
onist,
It i s c e r t a i n l y far more obscure.
F o r , i n t h i s case, the protag-
far from being world-famous or world-infamous, was someone whose
very name was unknown to me u n t i l a few months ago and i s ,
unknown to a l l of you, unless,
that i s ,
probably, equally
you happen to be an Icelander.
[ continue on p.11
]
n/
you happen to be an Icelander.
I n d r i d i Indridason was rescued from o b s c u r i t y
when, at the i n s t i g a t i o n of Erlendur Haraldsson, L o f t u r G i s s u r a r s o n , a student
at
the U n i v e r s i t y of I c e l a n d , decided to w r i t e h i s
medium of y e s t e r y e a r .
Thesis on t h i s
The SPR are planning to p u b l i s h t h i s monograph as
an i s s u e of Proceedings so i t i s to be hoped that Indridason may become
b e t t e r known i n f u t u r e .
Indridason who,
I gather, i s the only p h y s i c a l medium which that country
has produced, died prematurely
29.
from t u b e r c u l o s i s i n 1912 at the e a r l y age of
early
His mediumship f i r s t manifested/in 1905 - there had been no previous
mediums i n Iceland - so the events we are t a l k i n g of occupy roughly the
f i r s t decade of t h i s century.
By then, of course, p h y s i c a l mediumship was
widespread both i n Europe and i n America.
Indridason never l e f t Iceland
and thus never came to the a t t e n t i o n of those with experience i n d e a l i n g
w i t h p h y s i c a l mediums.
In some respects the i n v e s t i g a t i o n of h i s mediumship
compares unfavourably with/best work of i t s k i n d being done i n Europe.
For
example, except on r a r e occasions h i s s i t t i n g s were conducted i n the dark
apart from the o c c a s i o n a l s t r i k i n g of matches.
Moreover no attempt was
made to use f l a s h l i g h t photography as i t was i n the cases of P a l l a d i n o ,
Kathleen Goligher or Marthe Beraud.
We are f u r t h e r hampered i n assessing
t h i s case by the f a c t that a l l the contemporary seance notes kept by the
Experimental S o c i e t y , so c a l l e d , have s i n c e been l o s t .
the case has some very d e f i n i t e pluses i n i t s favour.
On the other hand,
In p a r t i c u l a r , the
group who undertook the i n v e s t i g a t i o n was made up of persons of good standing
i n the community.
They were not s p i r i t u a l i s t s and were not l o o k i n g f o r
evidence to support t h e i r preconceptions, they were thus able to focus on
the one e s s e n t i a l question, namely whether what they observed was something r e a l and mysterious or j u s t part of an elaborate hoax.
d i s t i n g u i s h e d member of the group who,
The most
a f t e r 1908, took charge of the
i n v e s t i g a t i o n was Gudmundur Hannesson who became P r o f e s s o r of Medicine
at
the U n i v e r s i t y of Iceland from 1911 to h i s death i n 1946.
He
was
a l s o twice president of the u n i v e r s i t y and f o r a time a member of p a r l i a ment.
Gissurarson and Haraldsson say of him that he "had a greater reput-
a t i o n as a s c i e n t i s t i n Iceland than any of h i s contemporaries
known f o r h i s i n t e g r i t y and i m p a r t i a l i t y " ( p . 8 4 ) .
and
was
Most of the s i t t i n g s
took place i n a l i t t l e b u i l d i n g which the S o c i e t y had b u i l t s p e c i a l l y f o r
t h i s purpose but some of the s i t t i n g s were held i n Hannesson's own house
and the medium was o b l i g e d to wear Hannesson's own c l o t h e s . In the end,
36
a l l the i n v e s t i g a t o r s , not l e a s t Hannesson h i m s e l f , came round to the view
that they had witnessed phenomena t h a t were t r u l y i n e x p l i c a b l e .
The p a r t i c u l a r i n c i d e n t t h a t I have s i n g l e d out f o r d i s c u s s i o n i s not
by any means one of the best a t t e s t e d - i t p e r t a i n s to the period before
Hannesson took over - but i t i s , perhaps, the most unusual and i t s b i z a r r e
and f a r c i c a l aspects r a i s e the problem of c r e d i b i l i t y i n an acute form.
I t i n v o l v e s nothing l e s s than the temporary
l e f t arm I
disappearance of Indridason's
I t happened f o r the f i r s t time on the 19th December 1905 and
then again on two subsequent occasions during t h a t w i n t e r .
On the t h i r d
occasion we are informed no l e s s than seven witnesses were present each
of whom afterwards signed a document s t a t i n g t h a t they had not been able
to f e e l or to f i n d Indridason's l e f t arm and were ready to c e r t i f y t h i s
under oath.
We are f u r t h e r informed t h a t at one point Indridason stood
i n f u l l l i g h t and s t i l l no arm was v i s i b l e although hal^an hour l a t e r
i t reappeared as normal.
The^rfason f o r t h i s strange happening,
as
provided by Indridason's s p i r i t c o n t r o l * s p e a k i n g through the medium,
was t h a t the powers on the other s i d e were g e t t i n g ready to b r i n g about,
through the medium,full-form m a t e r i a l i z a t i o n s .
f e a t u r e of h i s l a t e r
T h i s was, i n f a c t , a
seances.
What are we to make of t h i s s t o r y ?
One o b v i o u s l y s u s p i c i o u s f a c t
i s t h a t the i n v e s t i g a t o r s were never permitted to undress the medium.
We can not even be sure from the published account whether the medium
wore h i s j a c k e t throughout or was i n h i s s h i r t s l e e v e s .
A l l the same,
i t i s not easy to fathom how anyone could conceal an arm from seven
i n q u i s i t i v e i n d i v i d u a l s whose only aim was to f i n d i t I
No doubt
d i s c i p l e s of Batcheldor w i l l see t h i s as a c o n f i r m a t i o n of the
Batcheldorian d o c t r i n e that unless some element of ambiguity i s allowed
i n the s i t u a t i o n nothing paranormal can t r a n s p i r e .
[ continue on p.13
]
13/
All
paranormal phenomena a r e , by d e f i n i t i o n , 'impossible' but some,
one might say, are more i m p o s s i b l e than others I
Nothing, I t h i n k , i n
a l l the l i t e r a t u r e of p s y c h i c a l research s t r e t c h e s our c r e d u l i t y more
s e v e r e l y than the phantoms of the seance chamber.
At one moment we have
c r e a t u r e s t h a t , i n a l l r e s p e c t s , resemble l i v i n g , t a l k i n g human beings, a t
the
next they have ceased t o e x i s t I
For my l a s t e x h i b i t , t h e r e f o r e , i t
i s f i t t i n g that we take a look a t t h i s u l t i m a t e extreme and the example
I want t o d i s c u s s i s taken from the case of the S c o t t i s h medium, Helen
Duncan, who died i n 1956 at the age of 58.
The c h o i c e may s t r i k e you as
p e r v e r s e l y foolhardy on my part - that i s i f you know anything about
Mrs Duncan.
For there i s no d i s g u i s i n g the f a c t that she had an unsavoury
reputation.
I f m i r a c l e s were the p r e r o g a t i v e of persons of s a i n t l y c h a r a c t -
er,
or even of moderate refinement, Helen Duncan would be nowhere i n the
running.
To be b l u n t , she was an uneducated woman of gross appearance
and
her manners and her language was anything but l a d y l i k e . More t o the p o i n t ,
both she and her husband-manager were deeply i m p l i c a t e d i n f r a u d .
t h e l e s s , she has two advantages from my point of view.
Never-
F i r s t , whereas we
can no longer i n t e r r o g a t e those who witnessed Joseph's l e v i t a t i o n s , Mrs
Duncan's phenomena are c l o s e enough to us i n time f o r me t o have met a
f a i r number of those who d i d witness them.
Secondly, my f r i e n d , Manfred
C a s s i r e r has done h i s homework on Helen Duncan and has produced a hefty
monograph on her (he has c a l l e d i t 'Witchcraft at Portsmouth') which he
has lodged w i t h the S.P.R.
I f there were others l i k e her at the present
time we would not now have t o bother with such an u n s a t i s f a c t o r y case but,
a l a s , as w i t h a l l my e x h i b i t s , there i s nothing comparable
today.
The witnesses w i t h whom I have spoken or corresponded and whose s a n i t y
I have no reason t o doubt - two of them, I may
say, are good f r i e n d s of
mine and d i s t i n g u i s h e d members of the S.P.R. - a l l t e l l roughly the same
story.
They speak of seeing f i g u r e s emerge from the cabinet or take shape
from the amorphous ectoplasm, sometimes these are s a i d t o correspond to
deceased i n d i v i d u a l s whom the s i t t e r knew i n l i f e , and then, a f t e r a
b r i e f i n t e r v a l , d u r i n g which they may converse with^fe&ati^tf&y disappear
again by slowly s i n k i n g through the s o l i d f l o o r .
i s v i r t u a l unanimity as C a s s i r e r p o i n t s out.
On t h i s l a s t point there
These spectaculjfr phenomena
however, were reserved f o r c l i e n t s who attended her seances.
When she
performed f o r p s y c h i c a l r e s e a r c h e r s , such as Harry P r i c e or Mrs Goldney,
the
phenomena she produced were not nearly as impressive
copious
mainly o f ^ q u a n t i t i e s of ectoplasm whose paranormal o r i g i n remained
prob-
lematic.
E v e n t u a l l y , Mrs Duncan made l e g a l h i s t o r y by becoming the l a s t person
14/
ever to be charged under the 'Witchcraft Act'.
This was an a r c h a i c s t a t u t e ,
introduced i n the r e i g n of George II,which s t a t e d t h a t : "anyone pretending
to e x e r c i s e or use any kind of w i t c h c r a f t , s o r c e r y , enchantment or c o n j u r a t i o n
could be committed to p r i s o n f o r one year".
March 1944,
Her t r i a l at the Old B a i l e y , i n
became something of a cause ce'lebre i n wartime London.
I t lasted
seven days, c a p t u r i n g the headlines i n the d a i l y press, a t the end of which
the j u r y , seven men and one woman, w i t h l i t t l e h e s i t a t i o n , found her g u i l t y
and she was duly sentenced to 9 months i n p r i s o n .
Her defence counsel, during
the t r i a l , made a bold o f f e r to hold a seance f o r the b e n e f i t of the jury,
none of whom knew anything about such matters.
The judge consented t o permit
t h i s option but the j u r y turned i t down. That, too, might have made l e g a l h i s t ory but i t was not to be.
No doubt the j u r y reckoned t h a t i t would be l e s s
confusing to condemn the wretched woman without f i r s t seeing what she
was
c l a i m i n g to be able to do !
The defence d i d , however, produce a long s t r i n g of witnesses.
One
who
made a p a r t i c u l a r l y good impression on the court, as being a s e n s i b l e , l e v e l
headed s o r t of woman was Jane Rust, a r e t i r e d municipal midwife and a widow
who
described at some legnth her experiences at a s i t t i n g i n Portsmouth on
January 17, 1944.
She t o l d the court how she had met and embraced her
deceased husband and how she had f e l t the knobbly knuckles on h i s rheumatic
hands, how she was able to i d e n t i f y her deceased mother by two moles, the
one i n the hollow of her c h i n , the other above her l e f t eyebrow and
how
her Aunt Mary appeared and spoke to her i n Spanish with a G i b r a l t a r i a n
accent saying that " I would have come sooner but they d i d not understand".
Was
t h i s a l l a pack of l i e s ?
But why
should a p r o f e s s i o n a l woman of
unblemished character perjure h e r s e l f to no purpose ?
h a l l u c i n a t e d during that seance ?
way
Was
she then deeply
That i s more p l a s u i b l e and yet the only
I know whereby one can induce such s p e c i f i c h a l l u c i n a t i o n s i s f i r s t to
hypnotize the subject and then make the appropriate v e r b a l suggestions.
If
Mrs Duncan was able to induce such h a l l u c i n a t i o n s j u s t by s i t t i n g there i n
her c a b i n e t , that i n i t s e l f would suggest a paranormal f a c u l t y a l b e i t not
a p h y s i c a l one.
Of one t h i n g , o n l y , we can be c e r t a i n .
I t was not the
r e s u l t of Mrs Duncan r e g u r g i t a t i n g cheesecloth I
These, then, are my s e l e c t i o n of extreme phenomena.
To r e c a p i t u l a t e ,
we have M i l e . C o i r i n with her new b r e a s t , St Joseph of Copertino
sitting
on h i s cushion of a i r , Margery's impossible o b j e c t , Indridason's
missing
arm and, l a s t l y , Helen Duncan w i t h her troupe of phantoms.
endless such examples to choose from and you may
your own
favourite l i s t .
There are
enjoy t r y i n g t o compile
The common f a c t o r i n a l l these cases i s that
the act as i n t e l l e c t u a l i r r i t a n t s .
They c o n t r i v e to make us f e e l uneasy
15/
but we see no way of g e t t i n g r i d of them. Some of you may be disappointed
thatjJ- d i d not s e l e c t any more t o p i c a l example.
ing
I can only plead t h a t , look-
around a t the world today, I could see no obvious candidates.
has long been i n a c t i v e .
Ted S e r i o s
U r i G e l l e r has taken a t e r r i b l e b a t t e r i n g and the
m i n i g e l l e r s have become ever s c a r c e r .
The SORRAT group i n M i s s o u r i have
never won the confidence of the parapsychological community.
Batcheldor's
is
set-up i n Exeter sounds great fun f o r the p a r t i c i p a n t s but i t does not e a s i l y
t r a n s l a t e d i n t o the p u b l i c domain and Batcheldor himself now says that he
makes no f i r m c l a i m s .
There i s , o f course, S a i Baba i n I n d i a .
He has h i s
admirers and I am l o o k i n g forward eagerly t o reading Haraldsson's new book
about him but, a t the same time, we cannot ignore the f a c t that he has never
l e t Haraldsson, or anyone else, t e s t him.
I f I had t o choose a contemporary
example I would plump f o r the Chinese c h i l d r e n .
They a r e c r e d i t e d w i t h
c l a i r v o y a n t a b i l i t y f a r surpassing anything we have known i n the West. I
have now read three separate accounts o f t h e i r phenomena, each w r i t t e n
by a Western s c i e n t i s t of Chinese e x t r a c t i o n who knows the language. Each,
w h i l e v i s i t i n g China, was allowed access t o one or more such c h i l d r e n .
Each was given c a r t e blanch t o devise h i s own t a r g e t s , p i c t u r e s or i n s c j l p o t i o n s ,
and t o administer the t e s t i n h i s own p r e f e r r e d way. I n each case the r e s u l t s
were phenomenally s u c c e s s f u l and yet i n each case the s c i e n t i s t went back t o
the West convinced that the c h i l d r e n could not have t r i c k e d him.
But, of
course, t h i s i s only a beginning and much more r i g o r o u s evidence i s needed
before we are brought t o a c r e d i b i l i t y impasse.
F i n a l l y , what lessons do I want you t o takeaway from a l l that I have
been saying ?
I hope no one w i l l regard t h i s t a l k as an i n v i t a t i o n t o
members of the P.A. t o throw c a u t i o n t o the winds and abandon t h e i r customary
and commendable s c i e n t i f i c r e s t r a i n t .
I want, f u r t h e r , t o say that although
I am indeed f a s c i n a t e d by extreme phenomena I do not want t o g l o a t about
them.
On the c o n t r a r y , I am f e a r f u l of what might happen i f such phenomena
ever become more widespread o r more widely c r e d i t e d . For the i r o n y of my s i t u a t i o n
i s t h a t , i d e a l o g i c a l l y speaking, I am on the s i d e of David Hume.
I consider
that excessive c r e d u l i t y does f a r more harm than excessive i n c r e d u l i t y .
The
g r e a t e s t menace that confronts us today i s s t i l l , as i t was f o r David Hume,
s u p e r s t i t i o n , i r r a t i o n a l i t y and f a n a t i c i s m . The recent resurgence of fundam e n t a l i s t r e l i g i o n p a i n f u l l y underscores my p o i n t .
However, i f extreme phenomena e x i s t i t would be i n t e l l e c t u a l l y dishonest
as w e l l as cowardly t o discount them.
And a f t e r a l l , t o be a r a t i o n a l i s t
does not mean that one has got t o b e l i e v e t h a t everything i n the end w i l l
be s u s c e p t i b l e to r a t i o n a l a n a l y s i s , there may be some things we s h a l l never
understand.
A r a t i o n a l ' r a t i o n a l i s t ' i s one who merely denies that there i s
16/
any a l t e r n a t i v e short-cut to t r u t h , whether we c a l l i t f a i t h , i n t u i t i o n or
whatever and who
therefore refuses to abandon reason.
S u r v i v a l i s t s w i l l no doubt f i n d i n many of these extreme phenomena a
v i n d i c a t i o n of t h e i r p o s i t i o n and, of course, they have every r i g h t to
do so.
who
For my p a r t , however, i t puzzles me why
those on the other s i d e
have the power to communicate with us should choose to do so i n such
a b i z a r r e and unseemly f a s h i o n .
And yet, I must confess, that I f i n d i t
no l e s s i m p l a u s i b l e to a t t r i b u t e such cataclysmic disturbances to the
medium's p r i v a t e unconscious.
Perhaps some t r a n s p e r s o n a l or cosmic f o r c e
i s somehow being harnessed i n these s i t u a t i o n s ?
One
consequence of t a k i n g aboard these phenomena, so i t seems to
me,
i s that i t jeopardizes what I l i k e to c a l l the ' a s s i m i l a t i o n i s t program'.
At almost every gathering of parapsychologists that I have attended
has been someone who
there
gets up and d e c l a r e s , often with an e v a n g e l i c a l f e r -
vour, that we need only one more turn of the s c i e n t i f i c s p i r a l , one more
paradigm s h i f t , and we w i l l be able to take our r i g h t f u l place alongside
the e s t a b l i s h e d sciences.
I have always been d o u b t f u l about t h i s s c e n a r i o .
The i d e a , so widely canvassed, that we might somehow get i n on the coatt a i l s , as i t were, of quantum theory never s t r u c k me as being very p l a u s i b l e
However, as long as parapsychology could be seen as confined to a c e r t a i n
w e l l defined set of s t a t i s t i c a l anomalies - as many of our c r i t i c s
imagine i t to be - there was something going f o r such an i d e a .
still
Once we
admit extreme phenomena, on the other hand, t h i s prospect looks increasingly
forlorn.
They are j u s t too a n a r c h i c .
What, then, i s the a l t e r n a t i v e ? At f i r s t blush they may
appear to take
us r i g h t away from the o r d e r l y world of science and plunge us back i n t o the
dark c h a o t i c world of magic.
not be q u i t e so bleak.
But, on f u r t h e r r e f l e c t i o n , the s i t u a t i o n
I f , l i k e me,
may
you b e l i e v e that parapsychology, alone
among the sciences, s t u d i e s the i n f l u e n c e of mind on matter, i s i t r e a l l y so
s u r p r i s i n g t h a t , every once i n a w h i l e , we meet with a case where mind overreaches i t s e l f with the r e s u l t s that we have been d i s c u s s i n g .