Psychokinesis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Psychokinesis

Description:

They made knives cling to their skin and could send furniture flying with just a light touch ... Crooke's observations of Kate Fox in 1874 suggested she could ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:97
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: davidsh3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Psychokinesis


1
Psychokinesis
  • Lecture 9
  • Parapsychology
  • Paul Staples

2
Learning Objectives
  • By the end of this session you will be able to
  • Appreciate the history of PK and the early
    findings
  • Recognise the different methodologies employed to
    investigate PK
  • Understand the methods used in micro-PK
  • Understand the methods used in macro-PK
  • Interpret later findings

3
The History of PK
  • Comes from the Greek psyche and kinein (soul and
    move)
  • Occurences from ancient times include
  • Levitation
  • Miraculous healings
  • Apports
  • Objects materialising during a séance
  • Table-tipping
  • Manipulation of a table during a séance
  • Raps
  • Knocking sounds produced by spirits

4
The History of PK
  • PK is recorded in the bible in the Book of Acts
  • The use of the evil eye has been classed as PK
  • In the 19th century, D D Home was known to be
    able to levitate and to handle hot coals
  • Others at that time were known as electric
    people who experienced high-voltage syndrome
  • They made knives cling to their skin and could
    send furniture flying with just a light touch

5
Early 20th Century PK
  • Fielding, Baggally, and Carrington (1909) were
    experienced and skeptical observers of seances
  • In a series of sittings in Naples they were
    convinced that Eusapia Palladino was capable of
    PK
  • Price reported on Stella Cranshaw who could make
    small musical instruments inside a double cage
    move and play
  • Price also reported levitations by Rudi Schneider
  • The control conditions were quite strict and it
    would have been difficult to manipulate the
    environment by physical means.

6
Early 20th Century PK
  • Paranormal raps were commonly reported but it is
    difficult to establish whether they are genuine
  • Crookes observations of Kate Fox in 1874
    suggested she could make noises occur on a range
    of different objects (tambourine, tree, sheet of
    paper)
  • Photographic effects abound and materialisations
    have often been reported. These have ranged from
    foggy masses to well formed and solid hands,
    faces, or even full bodies

7
Recurrent Spontaneous PK
  • Poltergeists - at least 500 years (Gauld and
    Cornell, 1979).
  • Moving objects, sometimes breaking
  • Unexplained noises, knockings
  • Electrical disturbances
  • Sometimes explanations, e.g., rats apples.
  • Unhappy spirits, or young or stressed?

8
The Development of Methodologies
  • A systematic study of PK requires more rigour
  • There are two type of PK methodology
  • Micro-PK
  • PK that is weak or slight in magnitude
  • PK that is not detectable with the naked eye
  • Requires the application of statistics for
    detection
  • Macro-PK
  • PK that is directly observable
  • Large and strong effect (e.g. metal bending)
  • Only observable in a handful of people

9
Macro-PK Methods
  • With macro-PK, a success is much easier to detect
  • Types of test include
  • Movements of objects
  • Metal bending
  • Photographic effects (thoughtography)
  • Effects on electronic apparatus
  • Acoustical effects

10
Macro-PK Methods
  • Movements of objects
  • This is the expected side of PK
  • Recent reports have centred around a Soviet woman
    called Nina Kulagina
  • Most tests involve small objects that rest on a
    horizontal surface
  • Sometimes the object to be moved is one of many

11
Macro-PK Methods
  • Metal bending
  • This was initiated by Uri Geller in 1965
  • Safeguards need to defend against substitution or
    bending by normal means
  • Photographic effects
  • Experiments done with Ted Serios
  • Investigator would sit with Polaroid camera in
    lap and aimed at Serios head, then trip the
    shutter
  • Serios would produce an object on the photo

12
Macro-PK Methods
  • Effects on electronic apparatus
  • A few cases have been reported where a piece of
    electronic equipment such as an oscilloscope
    trace was made to alter
  • Acoustical effects
  • Voices at seances do not have sufficient
    opportunities for control to be included
  • However, raps have been recorded in quiet rooms
    using tape recordings

13
Micro-PK Methods
  • The object to be manipulated must require a
    minimum of energy to alter it
  • Standard tests involve
  • Dice test
  • Placement tests
  • Random event generators
  • Ambient energy
  • Biological systems

14
Micro-PK Methods
  • Dice test
  • Influence die to fall with a certain face
    uppermost
  • Electromechanical device used to release the die
  • Die released down a bevelled incline plane to
    randomise the roll
  • Chance level is one in six

15
Mechanical
  • Many early experiments with dice
  • Highly significant scores
  • BUT
  • Dice bias and unobserved/no witness
  • Got better! e.g., Gibson et al. (1944)
  • 33,696 trials, 171 above MCE (3 above chance,
    p.01).
  • Witnessed and random selection of 1 of 3 die

16
Studies with Dice 2
  • Highly consistent internal decline (e.g. Pratt,
    1944 Rhine et al., 1945).
  • Looked at response of quartiles.
  • MCE 8.0 6.5 6.0 4.5.
  • 18 studies comparison of 1st and 4th quartiles
    gt plt.00000001.
  • Some studies find later incline or new increase
    after break.

17
Studies with Dice 3
  • Radin and Ferrari (1991) meta-analysis.
  • 73 studies (148 expts) from 52 investigators from
    1935 to 1987
  • 2,569 participants 2.6 million trials.
  • 31 control studies 150,000 trials.
  • Hit rate for control studies 50.02
  • Hit rate for expt 51.2 gt1 in a billlion.

18
Studies with Dice 4
  • Not dependent on a few investigators or a few
    exceptional studies.
  • File drawer problem and Homogeneity
  • but 17,974 studies needed and 35 deletion.
  • Quality related to chronology. Studies got better
    over time.
  • BUT hit rates not related to quality
  • Die-Face Analysis still better than controls.

19
Placement tests
  • Similar setup to dice test except landing surface
    divided into two halves
  • Task is to influence die to land in one half or
    the other
  • Chance level is one in two
  • Can combine with dice test to yield a need to
    influence both the number and the surface half
  • Placement tests are not restricted to dice

20
Other Mechanical
  • Placement tests.
  • Role ball into one of a pair of chutes.
  • Cox (1974) witnessed trials 2 confirmatory
    studies, p.0006.
  • Nelson et al. (1984) multiple shoots gt normal
    Gaussian distribution. But could be shifted to
    left or right (plt.0001).

21
Random Event Generators
  • Usually computer-generated number sequences based
    on random generation
  • Randomness often achieved by radioactive decay
  • Can be used to generate tasks like those where
    the aim is to get a light to move around a
    circular display of lights in a clockwise
    direction

22
Studies with REGs
  • http//www.psiexplorer.com/guided_tour.htm
  • Will it work today?

23
Studies with REGs 2
  • Schmidt (1970) deliberately tried to discourage
    15 participants.
  • Negative deviation significant (p.001).
  • Later looked across studies (Schmidt, 1973).
    440,000 trials, p10-9
  • Now, trials completely automated.

24
Studies with REGs 3
  • Nelson and Radin (1987) meta-analysis.
  • 152 references from 1959 to 1987.
  • 597 (258 PEAR lab) expt and
  • 235 (127) control studies.
  • Hit rate approx 51 controls approx 50 one
    trillion to one.
  • No diffs over time. But quality improved over
    time.

25
Studies with REGs 4
  • Radin (1989) predicted results should be at about
    51.
  • Confirmed from later studies in PEAR labs. 1,262
    independent studies involving 108 people.
  • Pairs of people did better than single.
  • Bonded couple did even better (4x than singles).

26
Ambient Energy
  • An example is to try to influence a thermometer
    by changing the ambient temperature at a
    particular location
  • The control is the recording of temperature
    changes at other nearby locations
  • The desired thermometer must be made to change
    more than the control thermometers
  • Biological systems - similar but target is a
    biological system such as heart rate or GSR.

27
Healing
  • Grad (1976) mice on goiter (enlarged thyroid
    gland) producing diet.
  • Treatment give cages to known healer Oskar
    Estebany.
  • Control nothing OR warmth.
  • Controls not different.
  • BUT slower in expt (p.001)

28
Healing 2
  • Grad (1961) wound healing in rats.
  • Remove square of tissue.
  • Healer vs. student touch vs. nothing.
  • Healer related to quicker recovery (p.01).
  • Other studies too in mice.

29
Healing 3
  • New studies with humans controversial.
  • e.g., Columbia Miracle study (Cha, Wirth and
    Lobo, 2001).
  • IVF treatment randomised to distant prayer
    (blind).
  • BUT Flamm (2004) SI critical.

30
Healing 4
  • Byrd (1988).
  • Double-blind intercessory prayer for 193 CCU pts.
  • Randomly matched controls.
  • Prayed for 5x less likely to need antibiotics,
    3x less likely pulm edema, less deaths.

31
Healing 5
  • Retroactive prayer see
  • Olshansky and Dossey, BMJ. 2003 Dec 20327(7429)
    1465-8.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com