Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
Hey, I'm famous!
~~ Paul
~~ Paul
According to Schwartz, it's a paranormal phenomenon that you and I agree on anything...Hey that is what I way saying in the paragraph before the one you quoted. Coincidence or what !!!
All coincidences are astounding.
When you are asked to look for coincidences between two subjects it would be even more astounding if none could be found. However multiplying the coincidences that do exist does not make it more special nor does it mean there is a link, especially when the coincidences are not commonly shared.
Yes, that would be more impressive. And yes, further research of the type you describe needs to be done. Still, before undertaking that sort of research project, it needs to be established that there is cause to suspect something might be going on. Schwartz's paper provides that.I understand that Schwartz found 2- 5 coincidences in each patient. It would be more impressive if the same coincidence appeared time and time again. If most patients found their musical tastes changed that would be interesting, but even then it would need to be compared to a control group.
2 of 10 cases detailed included change in musical tastes similar to the donor's tastes (although one was young enough it's not terribly unusual). Another two of the cases were children too young to have developed strong musical preferences (donors were also children).I agree that most people don’t switch musical tasted in the mid 40s but from what I understand there is only one person out of 28,000 has changed preferences post operation. That fits in with most people not changing.
Going about it the way Schwartz does if very iffy and it is difficult to come up with a meaningful comparison but I see it as being similar to someone looking at the effects of marriage, and finding that after marriage quite a few people changed their preferences for some activities. Some of those people had dramatic changes but the dramatic changes they had varied from person to person. So far nothing surprising however Schwartz goes a step further and claims that the change is not part of the normal changes we all go through but are caused by the married couple eating their own wedding cake !
Sure, he can always measure a correlation but can he prove the causation?
So it must be peer-reviewed because it says so? Also, who does the peer-review? Properly skeptical scientists or "scientists" in the mold of Targ and Puthoff who are looking for anything to validate their beliefs? Why publish in this journal (if it can be called that) rather than JAMA or Nature or a university journal?It was stated on the site with the journal article.
Interested but not so interested I will spend £30 on it.Several of the coincidences detailed in the paper are shared. I suggest you give it a read if you are interested.
Unless you are counting the two young kids as people whose taste would have changed we have 1 'unusual' change in taste.Yes, that would be more impressive. And yes, further research of the type you describe needs to be done. Still, before undertaking that sort of research project, it needs to be established that there is cause to suspect something might be going on. Schwartz's paper provides that.
2 of 10 cases detailed included change in musical tastes similar to the donor's tastes (although one was young enough it's not terribly unusual). Another two of the cases were children too young to have developed strong musical preferences (donors were also children).
Don't tell me he hasn't found anything yet tell him. After all it was him that saidActually, he hasn't even measured a correlation yet. All he has done is document some surprising personality changes that parallel the donor's personality and tastes. Whether a strong correlation actually exists would require more research. Establishing causation far more than that.
"When the organ is placed in the recipient, the information and energy stored in the organ is passed on to the recipient. The theory applies to any organ that has cells that are interconnected. They could be kidneys, liver and even muscles. The stories we have uncovered are very compelling and are completely consistent."
So it must be peer-reviewed because it says so? Also, who does the peer-review? Properly skeptical scientists or "scientists" in the mold of Targ and Puthoff who are looking for anything to validate their beliefs? Why publish in this journal (if it can be called that) rather than JAMA or Nature or a university journal?
Understandable. I got it via the library.Interested but not so interested I will spend £30 on it.
Yes, one unusal change, but two of the same type, which is what you were asking for.Unless you are counting the two young kids as people whose taste would have changed we have 1 'unusual' change in taste.
Don't tell me he hasn't found anything yet tell him. After all it was him that said
He doesn'tI don't think he reads this forum.![]()
edited......
The good doctor is surely a true Renaissance man -- the University of Arizona must be very proud. (Thank God I went to ASU.)
I don’t know how anyone associated with the U of A can hear mention of Dr. Schwartz and not want to put a bag over their head.
......and defecating on the reputation of the university that employs you?
What do you think, Steve?
You were the one posting the link, Steve.I have no idea.
Now by morning I am sure Claus Larsen will be here to ask me what the point is of the links I have just posted.
Let's see if anyone can guess? Some of you seem to be engaged in bashing Schwartz and sending condolences to the University of Arizona while studiously ignoring or remaining ignorant that the institution has a much larger, in fact a huge agenda which includes Gary's work as a small but integral part, irrespective of how it pans out.
I was a bit amazed that one "prominent" physician involved is not only running the school's alternative and integrative medicine program but is selling his "secret" vitamin formulas to the public on his own website as a sideline. But what the heck, why not? Everyone else is. Nothing surprises me anymore and he sincerely believes and has the benefit of his professional experience and training to "certify" his formulas will be panaceas for unresolved problem areas in medicine. If Randi would take the time to research all the programs at the University of Arizona and at many other highly respected colleges and universities here and abroad he would find that bashing a single person while giving him some personal satisfaction doesn't work in light of both the politics and larger agendas at play which he would find much more questionnable.
I know Gary quite well. He is sincerely interested in the niche he was afforded at the U of A and was enticed to leave opportunities both at his alma mater, Harvard and at Yale to pursue the investigations he now undertakes. He invites and is open minded to criticism but rejects cynicism
Actually, the more I think about it, aren’t these two discoveries diametrically opposed? I mean, if human consciousness survives death, why are pieces of it sticking around and inhabiting donated organs after the donor is dead? Say a piano virtuoso dies and donates her kidneys to a bricklayer. Does the surviving consciousness of the departed pianist lose her musical ability (assuming there’s some means to indulge it in the Hereafter) while her donated organs inhabit the recipient’s body? And when the bricklayer dies, will his acquired virtuosity be reunited with its original owner? Does any of this make a lick of sense?
Hey, why labor in anonymity doing real science, when you can make a name for yourself by whoring your academic credentials and defecating on the reputation of the university that employs you?
Such is the attitude of a typical "skeptic". Why bother doing any science at all since we already know precisely what exists and how the world must work?