cj.23
Master Poster
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2006
- Messages
- 2,827
Absolutely.
Indeed. I don't blame Lodge et al for thinking wierd things lurked in the unknown. Wierd things did- and then as now it was physicists / chemists who were finding them. Ectoplasm and X-Rays were equally odd. One proved real, one not, but the only way to find that out was research.
What is interesting is how gullible these eminent scientists were when presented with deliberate or accidental fraud- which is basically Randi's First Law.
Though not as gullible as one might think in some cases. Having read the PSPR & JSPR from 1882 to the present, something I doubt many people have (I was sleeping on boxes of them at the time, as there was no room for a bed in my landlords house!) I think a lot of them were far more sceptical than we realize. Frank Podmore for example was a pretty hard core sceptic, and the great nay sayer of the early SPR.
Spot on. What interests me here is how witnesses mislead themselves and each other unconsciously. I do not believe in spirits at all - but I do believe some people honestly see things (which I take to be internally generated) and that other people, knowing those people to be honest, themselves believe in the reality of the hallucinations they have not, themselves, seen.
Quite often there is an external stimuli. One famous British haunt has a grey lady who walks down a spiral staircase. I have footage of her. The fact I stood my ground and her spectral embrace was clearly the smell of wood smoke gave me the clue - when a fore was lit downstairs, the kindling aand newspaper caused a nice cloud of grey smoke, driven up the chimney, but then some of it disperses through a blowhole in to a room half way up the stairs. The smoke gathered, and was pulled down the stairs by the roaring fire at the base of the stairs (no door), and formed a rather nice cloud which having passed through the room door did look vaguely humanoid - well cylindrical! Another time I was in a car driven by a friend taking another firnd (a Most Haunted star as it happens) to a shoot, and on the way back we suddenly saw an old lady step out from some woods. Our driver braked sharply, and we were able to tell it was a detached piece of ground mist - the nearby pond provided a good explanation -- and so forth! Yet the context and discussion had prepped us for "spook" - though the driver said he woud have braken anyway. and then there was the black blob with many eyes taht terrified a well known UK sceptic in to screaming one night when we driving her through the Forest of Dean - and after alsmot crashing, the headlights clearly showed a huddle of black sheep whose eyes the headlights had picked out as we rounded the bend, not a Lovecraftian shoggoth! I could go on and on, about causes of all kinds of odd phenomena, from footsteps every night at the same time to teh time i was presenting a ghost night with MH star Richard Felix and a glass shot across the bar between us - water on table, the usual. Imagination explains some cases, but most begin with a number of discrete happenings, and then as you start to classify them together you end up with the ghost explanation, while each individual incident is fairly easily explicable. I wrote a little article about this in the JSPR for June 1996 as I recall.
Much other witness evidence is simply due to inattention or nervousness. Some is due to investigators misusing equipment they are unfamiliar with and again producing anomalies, but this time electronically. This includes the old issue of battery failure- which is so often seen as proof of spirit activity, instead of proof that batteries drain if overused by excited people.
Yeah, I did a threa don this a few weeks back as I recall. My friend has sone a wonderful research project on a haunted hotel, and this kind of context sensitive observation came up again and again "crisp packet rustled" was ana mazingly common experience reported as ghostly!
I have no TV and have never seen any of the "Most haunted" series.
I deeply deeply envy you. I have spent most of my life without a tV as well as it happens, and a couple of years I can honestly say I made more than I watched. I get bored easily with passive entertainment, preferring places one can engage in dialogue and participate - like forums! However I always rate MH by how many diazepam it takes me to sit through an episode, and bear in mind i know almost every one involved and worked on the show, albeit as a researcher. I just have a very low tolerance for this sort of thing.
Mind you I love the US show A Haunting. Awesome. Last night they had some northern British people, with strong tyneside accents, and the actors who played them in the reconstructiosn all sounded like old Etonians, sort of Hugh Grant (actually a bit more like me, embarassingly.) I was in hysterics -- not least because i was sure that when the actor went looking for the ghost with the cricket bat he was going to say "I say, the bally ghost went this way, I'll see if I can whack the blighter!" Sadly he did not, but it really was superb - because they would then cut bac tot he real guy, with a serious Northern accent.
It sounds to me that your approach makes far more sense. While I do not believe paranormal phenomena occur, I do think research into why people think they do is important. Sadly, I find those who feel this way tend to be mostly believers by definition. What the SPR and SSPR need, is more honest sceptics- but the believers tend to view sceptics as well-poisoners (which seems to echo your experience).
I hav enot been to an SPR event in a decade, but most of them were pretty hard sceptics in my day? Sue Blackmore, Richard Wiseman, Chris French, Matthew Smith, Louie Savva, Ciairan O Keefe - none of them remotely credulous. Even the few I knew who were seriously interested in spontaneous cases - Tony Cornell, Alan Gauld, etc were pretty hard headed.
I'll have to reply to the rest later. Need to go watch "A Haunting!"
cj x
