madurobob
Philosopher
Yes, it is possible to approach parapsychology scientifically. One can also approach Christianity scientifically. That does not make Christianity "science".
Or, am I wrong? Have there been some important breakthroughs in parapsychology by scientists studying it? Have they proven the existence of something paranormal?
See, thats a read flag to me.The usual claim of the psi believers is that the skeptics have not read the parapsychological material proving psi. I could equally turn around and say the believers have not read the skeptical material. But to be honest the skeptical literature of psi is very slim, for every 100s of woo books there will only be a single debunking book. It amazes me how the psi believers still peddle the nonsense that their beliefs are being supressed... they have mainstream publishers and media attention and promotion all the time. I have been researching this field for a few years now and read many books and there are only a handful of skeptical books written on psi. Of course there are many books debunking general paranormal claims or spiritualism etc, but not specifically psi experiments from the parapsychologists.
The only main skeptical book of psi experiments is ESP: A Scientific Evaluation by C. E. M. Hansel published in 1966 and a revised edition in 1980, most psi believers ignored the book. Another one is Pseudoscience and the paranormal : a critical examination of the evidence published in 1988 by Terence Hines. It would be interesting if a new book was released.
anyway even if the skeptical material was available online, the believers wouldn't even read it they have no interest in any evidence contrary to their belief and just call anything and anyone who opposes them a pseudoskeptic.![]()
Not having an actual demonstrable object of study certainly makes Parapsychology unique among the sciences (at the very least).
I was supposed to use "micro-PK" to influence the random generation of pixels on a screen in such a way as to make them less random. I scored precisely zero. This confused the postgrad student who had designed the experiment, because every other subject had scored slightly above chance, thus making my result simultaneously the most and least interesting! I tried to involve him in a discussion of how these amazing abilities were supposed to work, since I had no idea which of the numerous bits of kit scattered about the room was the random number generator. He looked at me as if I was a very stupid person indeed and patiently explained that all computers have a built-in random number generator. I thought the best revenge was to quietly agree with him and walk out without attempting to explain that those built-in algorithms are not in fact random, and always give results a little above chance if you repeat them long enough.
That IS what makes Parapsychology special, it's adaptation of the scientific method in the absence of an actual object of study makes it the control group for science.
That IS what makes Parapsychology special, it's adaptation of the scientific method in the absence of an actual object of study makes it the control group for science.
When you publish a book you are going after the wallets of the credulous. When you publish research in a peer -reviewed publication you are seeking consensus among scientists with similar specialites. When there is plenty of the former and a paucity of the latter then there is a good change you're dealing in pseudoscience.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used in an effort to document the existence of psi. If psi exists, it occurs in the brain, and hence, assessing the brain directly should be more sensitive than using indirect behavioral methods (as have been used previously). To increase sensitivity, this experiment was designed to produce positive results if telepathy, clairvoyance (i.e., direct sensing of remote events), or precognition (i.e., knowing future events) exist. Moreover, the study included biologically or emotionally related participants (e.g., twins) and emotional stimuli in an effort to maximize experimental conditions that are purportedly conducive to psi. In spite of these characteristics of the study, psi stimuli and non-psi stimuli evoked indistinguishable neuronal responses-although differences in stimulus arousal values of the same stimuli had the expected effects on patterns of brain activation. These findings are the strongest evidence yet obtained against the existence of paranormal mental phenomena.
I am aware that most computer algorithms are formulas and not random, but what would make them give results a little above chance if you repeat them long enough? Or are you just cherry-picking results and ignoring the ones below chance? Please explain.... those built-in algorithms are not in fact random, and always give results a little above chance if you repeat them long enough.
it gets to the point where it is downright dishonesty... why can't the psi believers accept their beliefs are metaphysical and beyond empirical science? Instead they feel the need to lie and claim their psi is scientific and call anyone who disagrees with them a "pseudoskeptic". Basic physics leaves it not looking good for parapsychology as a field in any way. Sean Carroll points out that both human brains and the spoons they try to bend are made, like all matter, of quarks and leptons; everything else they do is emergent properties of the behaviour of quarks and leptons. And the quarks and leptons interact through the four forces: strong, weak, electromagnetic and gravitational. Thus either it's one of the four known forces or it's a new force, and any new force with range over 1 millimetre must be at most a billionth the strength of gravity or it will have been captured in experiments already done. So either it's electromagnetism, gravity or something weaker than gravity.
This leaves no force that could possibly account for telekinesis, for example. Telepathy would require a new force much weaker than gravity that is not subject to the inverse square law, and also a detector in the brain evolved to use it for signaling. Precognition, the receipt of information transmitted back in time, would violate quantum field theory.
To a little boy with a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.Taylor as a physicist came to the conclusion that if "psi" or "psychic" (PK) forces exist then they would have to have a physical mechanism, only four possible forces could account for psi: gravitation, the weak force, the strong force, and electromagnetism.
Interesting discussion. Just out of curiosity, how might a scientific test of this phenomenon go? I had a friend who was an occupational therapist. One of her clients was an autistic 15-year-old boy. She mentioned to me that she would play chess with him (she doesn't play well), and while she was thinking about her move, he would interrupt her and say that's a terrible move, make the move she was thinking about and show her why. She was quite nonplussed about it. I suggested that she take a deck of cards, look at each one, and ask him what the card was. She said that he got 34 right out of the deck. I suggested that he attempt to guess the cards without her looking at them, and she told me that he only got a couple.
While these are hardly scientific evidence of mind reading, it certainly is interesting. What suggestions might you have to test something like this more scientifically?
It's not a science. It's magic.
To a little boy with a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.
Once of the postulates to explain paranormal phenomena is that there is some new, undiscovered force at work. This is usually advanced when known ones have been exhausted.
Not that I believe it for a moment. I just wanted to clarify that your argument could be accused of having an excluded middle.
Thus either it's one of the four known forces or it's a new force, and any new force with range over 1 millimetre must be at most a billionth the strength of gravity or it will have been captured in experiments already done.