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How ESP Works
BY TOM HARRIS
Most likely, you've never been abducted by aliens, and you probably don't know anybody who's
had a brush with Bigfoot.
But undoubtedly, you or somebody close to you
has had the apparently paranormal experience of
"seeing" the future or distant events.
Most of us have dreamed something that eventually
came true, had a correct hunch about an event miles away or predicted
an out-of-the-blue phone call from an old friend.
The experience is incredibly strange --
positively spooky -- but it happens all the time.
So what's going on here? Depends on who you
ask. A sizable chunk of the world's population attributes these strange events
to extrasensory perception (ESP), a special sense beyond vision, hearing, smell, touch and taste.
Unlike ordinary senses, ESP has virtually
unlimited range, and it's experienced mainly as thoughts rather than bodily
sensations.
The other view holds that there's nothing supernatural about these events at all.
These things do happen, the skeptics say, but
they're perfectly in keeping with conventional science.
In this article, we'll take a look at both sides
of the argument to find out what might be behind the ESP phenomenon.
We'll also find out how false psychics can fake
ESP, and we'll see how this sort of trickery factors into the ongoing
parapsychology debate.
Types of ESP
Extrasensory perception is a collective term
for various hypothetical mental abilities. These abilities (along with other
paranormal phenomena) are also referred to as psi.
The major types of ESP are:
· Telepathy: the ability to read another
person's thoughts
· Clairvoyance: the ability to
"see" events or objects happening somewhere else
· Precognition: the ability to see the
future
· Retrocognition: the ability to see into the
distant past
· Mediumship: the ability to channel dead
spirits
· Psychometry: the ability to read
information about a person or place by touching a physical object
A closely related psi phenomenon, not technically
part of ESP, is telekinesis, the ability to alter the physical
world with mind power alone.
All of these abilities are based on the idea
that human beings can perceive things beyond the scope of known bodily senses.
This concept has been around since the beginning
of human civilization, under many different names, but the modern conception
didn't develop until the first half of the 20th century.
The term ESP itself was coined in 1934, by Duke University professor J.B.
Rhine, one of the first respected scientists to conduct paranormal research
in a university laboratory.
ESP believers around the world have different
ideas of how these abilities manifest themselves.
Some people believe everybody possesses these
abilities, and we involuntarily experience moments of ESP all the time.
Others say only a handful of psychics, shamans or mediums have
the special power, and that they can only access this power when they put
themselves into a special mental state.
Most believers think that everybody has the
potential for ESP, but that some people are more in tune with their paranormal
abilities than others.
Believers also disagree on how ESP actually
works. One theory says that, like our ordinary senses, ESP is energy moving
from one point to another point.
Typically, proponents of this theory say ESP
energy takes the form of electromagnetic waves -- just like light, radio and X-ray energy
-- that we haven't been able to detect scientifically.
This theory was fairly popular in the early 20th
century, but it's out of favor today due to several inherent problems.
For one thing, the explanation only accounts for
telepathy, not clairvoyance or precognition.
Presumably, if the information travels as electromagnetic
energy, it has to be sent by someone -- it has to travel from mind to mind.
It doesn't explain how information would move
through time or from an object to a mind.
Secondly, the theory doesn't jibe with what we
know about ourselves and the universe. In most reported cases of telepathy, ESP
works totally independent of distance.
That is, the power of the "signal" is
the same whether the transmitting mind and the receiving mind are in the same
room or on opposite sides of the earth.
No other form of energy behaves this way,
skeptics point out, so it doesn't make sense that "psi waves" would
either.
Furthermore, it seems strange that we haven't
found any unexplained sense organs in the body that might pick up on this
energy, nor any evidence of the energy waves themselves.
In light of these problems, the prevailing
theory among believers today is that ESP is a result of something beyond the
known physical world.
For example, many people view it as
"spillover" from another reality.
According to this theory, in addition to the
physical universe we are consciously aware of, we all exist in another
dimension that has completely different governing laws.
Time and space work very differently in the
other reality, allowing us to know about other people's thoughts, distant
events or things that haven't happened yet in the physical reality.
Normally, our awareness of this plane of
existence is completely unconscious, but every once in a while, the conscious
mind picks up on this information.
Needless to say, this theory is also completely
outside our scientific understanding of the world. But, according to the
theory's proponents, it's not supposed to fit into that conception.
Like the concepts of God or an afterlife, the
hypothetical reality would not rely on the physical laws of the universe. It
would depend on the existence of a soul of some sort.
So, given that it's completely at odds with our
understanding of the world, why do so many people believe in ESP?
In the next section, we'll find out some of the
reasons for this belief, and we'll see what scientific evidence supports it.
The Case for ESP
Most believers come by their convictions either
through personal experience or anecdotal evidence.
If you have a dream that eventually comes true,
in strikingly similar detail, you might very well take it as proof that you're
psychic.
And if you hear enough incredible ESP stories
from reliable sources, you may have a harder and harder time discounting the
phenomenon.
Undeniably, the world is full of both of these
forms of evidence.
Most of us encounter extraordinary coincidences
now and then, and there are many well-documented cases of apparent precognition
and clairvoyance.
For example, in 1898, Morgan Robertson
published "Futility," a novel about a huge
luxury liner called the Titan.
The story allegedly came to him in a sort of
trance. In the novel, the ship zips through dense fog late one April night,
crashes into an iceberg and sinks, killing hundreds of people.
Fourteen years later, the Titanic, similar in
size and structure to the fictional ship, did exactly this, at the same time of
year, under the same conditions.
For both the fictional ship and the real ship,
the casualties were high because there weren't nearly enough lifeboats on
board.
There are dozens of other famous stories, most
not as well documented, detailing major and minor examples of apparent ESP
all over the world.
But as compelling as these stories may be to
believers, they're of limited use to scientists because they occur in an
uncontrolled environment.
In order to effectively demonstrate something
with hard evidence, scientists need to conduct structured laboratory
experiments with closely controlled conditions.
Since the 1930s, parapsychologists around
the world have been doing just that.
J.B. Rhine, often dubbed the father of
parapsychology, was behind one of the earliest and most famous efforts,
the Zener cards experiments.
The original Zener cards (named after their
designer, Karl Zener) were a deck of 25 plain white cards, each printed with
one of five simple, distinct patterns.
Each deck contained five cards of each pattern,
so anybody had a one-in-five chance of correctly guessing the pattern on any
particular card.
The experiment was simple: Rhine would ask his
subject to guess which pattern was on each card and record the result.
On average, random guessing would yield five
"hits" (correct guesses) per deck of 25. Rhine reasoned that
consistent accuracy above that level, barring any cheating, indicated ESP
ability.
The scientific community was certainly
surprised, and largely incredulous, when Rhine claimed in his treatise, "Extra-Sensory Perception," that
some of his subjects consistently guessed correctly above chance levels.
Many disputed Rhine's methods and his
credibility, but in general, he was regarded as a legitimate, sincere scientist.
In the years since Rhine's pioneering work,
hundreds of parapsychologists have conducted similar experiments, sometimes
with the same positive results.
Most of these researchers have moved away from
the rigid patterns of Zener cards to more open-ended images, such as paintings
or photographs.
In a typical experiment, a "sender"
will concentrate on a particular image (a target) and try to
communicate it telepathically to an isolated subject.
The "receiver" subject describes what
he sees in his mind, and the research team records his impressions.
At the end of the session, the receiver attempts
to pick the correct target out of a collection of images created from his
impressions during the session.
In ganzfeld (German for
"whole field") target experiments, developed in the 1970s, the
receiver is deprived of sensory information to make it easier to focus on ESP
messages.
The subject lies in a room filled with dim red
light, listening to white noise, with his or her eyes covered (by halved Ping-Pong balls in
the conventional experiment).
Most of the time, receivers in these experiments
are way off in their guesses, but some subjects do describe the target images
in striking detail. There are several examples of impressive hits at PSI
Explorer: The Ganzfeld Experiment.
In similar experiments, designed to test
clairvoyance alone and not telepathy, there is no sender, only a receiver.
In another popular experiment, subjects attempt
to influence a machine, such as a random number generator, with their minds.
Over the course of hundreds of runs, researchers
have found that subjects do appear to have some influence over machine
behavior, though it is very slight. Check out Princeton's Engineering
Anomalies Research department Web site for more information.
Many parapsychologists say their findings
indicate the existence of ESP, but skeptics are far from convinced. In the
next section, we'll look at some of the arguments against claims of ESP
evidence.
INTERCESSORY PRAYER
Many people categorize forms of religious prayer
with ESP and other psi phenomena.
The notion of intercessory prayer holds that
focusing mental energy in the form of prayer can actually have an effect on
reality, whether through a divine force, or by virtue of the energy itself.
As it turns out, there is some scientific data
supporting this belief.
In a number of double-blind
experiments, scientists monitored a control group of patients who
are not being prayed for and an experimental group of patients who are being
prayed for. The results have been mixed, but some studies do indicate a
correlation between prayer and recovery.
The Case Against ESP
Parapsychology has gained a lot of credibility
over the past 100 years, but there is still a strong contingent of skeptics
who see ESP studies as misguided at best and completely worthless pseudoscience
at worst.
For a number of these skeptics, the primary
argument against ESP is, quite simply, that it doesn't make any sense.
As we saw earlier, the existence of the ESP
phenomenon is fundamentally at odds with the known "rules" of the
universe, as supported by countless scientific experiments.
As much as we might want to believe it, these
skeptics say, ESP is just too extraordinary to accept without equally
extraordinary evidence.
And the widespread anecdotal evidence of ESP,
they say, certainly isn't extraordinary -- not when you consider the big
picture.
To the average person, a dream or feeling coming
true, in precise detail, seems too amazing to be simple coincidence. But if you
look at it from a statistician's viewpoint, it's much less incredible.
There are more than 6 billion people on Earth, constantly thinking and all experiencing
dozens of significant events every day.
Statistically, on any particular day, some of
the things some people envision will line up closely with some of the things
those people happen to experience.
In all of your time on Earth, this will
undoubtedly happen to you now and then.
Add to this the desire for an afterlife, the
skeptics say, and it's no wonder such a large section of the population deludes
itself into believing in psi phenomenon.
The chances of a hit climb even higher when you
consider people's ability to make reasoned, educated guesses.
For example, Morgan Robertson's apparent
prediction of the Titanic disaster seems less incredible when you learn that he
was a former seaman who knew a lot about modern ship technology.
His book correctly guessed details of the real
ship and the crash, skeptics say, because he had a good understanding of how a
ship like that would be built, how it might get into trouble and what would
happen in that scenario.
Similarly, some people may seem to have psychic
powers when they really just have heightened intuition.
Your five senses are constantly picking up on
information, and your brain is constantly processing this
information on an unconscious level.
Some people are particularly adept at analyzing
seemingly irrelevant information and putting the pieces together to make highly
accurate guesses.
For example, you might inexplicably know when
somebody is lying to you because you unconsciously recognize subtle variations
in facial expression or tone of voice.
Many ESP believers counter these arguments with
the assertion that true psychic visions aren't everyday thoughts, but rare
revelations easily distinguished from a person's normal thinking.
If you only consider these special visions, they
argue, the coincidence explanation doesn't hold up. The educated guessing
theory may explain a lot of apparent revelations, they say, but not all.
In any case, it's clear that human nature does
lead people to focus on a few instances of extraordinary coincidence as
evidence of something supernatural, while completely ignoring the thousands of
dreams and visions that don't line up with reality in any remarkable way.
Out of context, the individual hits are very
impressive, especially if you start to misremember your thoughts so that they
correspond even more closely with reality. Whether or not this accounts for all
alleged ESP phenomena, it most likely accounts for a lot of it.
But what about the research subjects and the
professed psychics who demonstrate ESP abilities above chance levels? In the
next section, we'll look at the skeptic's response to this data.
ESP Research
It's not too difficult to explain anecdotal
evidence of ESP, but scientific data is a little trickier. The common skeptical
view is that parapsychologists' positive lab results come from problems with
the experiment or plain old bad science.
If the researcher's mathematical model is
faulty, for example, simple chance guessing might look like something
exceptional.
Or the researchers could accidentally influence
the subject to pick the right target. This could certainly happen, if the
experiment isn't tightly controlled.
In Rhine's early experiments, for example, he
knew the correct card and he usually made eye contact with the guesser.
The subject could have guessed correctly by
unconsciously picking up on Rhine's body language -- what looked like ESP could
have been simple intuition.
Rhine later improved his methods, and his
subject's accuracy did drop off somewhat.
The biggest problem with a lot of ESP research
is it isn't reproducible. That is, one scientist may get results
that another scientist can't get by replicating the experiment with different
subjects.
Parapsychologists might point out that some
people aren't as psychically in-tune as others, so different subjects will
yield different results, but the stigma still sticks.
Reproducible results are essential to the
conventional scientific method, so many scientists discount
any irreproducible data no matter how credible the source.
In some cases, skeptics charge that ESP evidence
is the product of outright fraud.
There have certainly been experiments where
parapsychologists manipulated data to support their own theories (this has
occurred in most, if not all, scientific disciplines), and even an innocent
scientist can have a hard time disproving these claims.
Accusing a respected scientist of fraud is
pretty serious business, however, so most skeptics are hesitant to take that
step.
Skeptics are much more likely to point out fraud
in unscientific ESP demonstrations, such as stage psychic shows.
Most parapsychologists are also wary of ESP
demonstrations for entertainment, simply because it's too easy to create the
illusion of psychic powers.
The most ubiquitous fraudulent method is cold
reading, in which the stage psychic rapidly throws out general, broad
suggestions to an audience member until something "hits."
For example, the psychic might say, "I see
a man very close to you -- the name starts with J -- Jason, John, Jim? -- An
uncle, or grandfather, or older friend?"
Objectively, you can see that this is so broad
it could apply in some way to just about everybody.
But in the moment, subjects typically
concentrate on any correct guesses and ignore everything that misses. It's the
age-old trick of never being wrong and occasionally being right
The ESP Debate
Most parapsychologists recognize that the
skeptical viewpoint is largely beneficial to the public's understanding of ESP
phenomena.
High-profile skeptics, such as former
magician James
Randi, help steer the ESP discussion away from emotional responses
and toward logical analysis by unmasking false psychics and providing other
reasonable explanations for apparent paranormal phenomena.
By explaining the statistics of coincidence and
the tricks of the magic trade, these skeptics get the public thinking
critically about its beliefs and assumptions.
But skeptics like Randi can also detract from
the ESP discussion. Randi is widely known for his offer of one million dollars to
anyone who can prove the existence of paranormal phenomena in a supervised
demonstration.
So far, nobody has been able to claim the prize,
which Randi suggests is evidence that none of this stuff exists.
Several high-profile professed psychics have accepted
the challenge and then backed out, which certainly casts them in a bad light.
To many parapsychologists and ESP believers,
Randi's challenge is just theatrics, like the psychic stage shows he exposes.
Generally, legitimate scientists are not in the
business of claiming prize money in publicized demonstrations, nor are they
necessarily out to prove ESP's existence in the first place.
The primary mission of science is to investigate
truth -- generally speaking, scientists are not out to profess their own
beliefs, only their own findings. By lumping legitimate researchers in with
entertainers, skeptics may confuse the issue.
ESP believers mainly find fault with the
implication that providing a logical explanation for apparent psychic phenomena
and unmasking false psychics disproves the existence of ESP.
It's an absolute certainty that many
demonstrations of psychic power are fraudulent; it's also certain that
experiments will be imperfect, and that data may turn out to be useless. But
this has no bearing on the validity of the theory itself.
When all is said and done, we simply don't know
whether ESP exists.
Given what we do understand about the way
physics operates in the universe, ESP doesn't make any sense, but this is not a
valid reason to rule it out.
In the history of mankind, thinkers have
reevaluated their model of the universe many times in response to new evidence.
The scientific process is never about deciding what can't be; it's always about
figuring out what is.
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ESP is thought to be a special sense beyond the physical world. So if this man has "the gift," he should be able to tell what the pattern is on that ESP test card on his forehead.
Psychics claim to have telepathic powers that allow them to predict the future.
The standard Zener card designs
A lot of skeptics think this woman and others like her are full of baloney.
That caged gerbil is being tested for psychic abilities.
Magician and self-confessed fraud James Randi doing a magic trick.
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