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- Journal of Scientific Exploration
Journal of Scientific Exploration
- Jake Yeager
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http://www.scientificexploration.org/journal/articles.html
There looks to be some interesting topics. The mission of the Society for Scientific Exploration is as follows:
"The Society for Scientific Exploration (SSE) is a professional organization of scientists and scholars who study unusual and unexplained phenomena. Subjects often cross mainstream boundaries, such as consciousness, unidentified aerial phenomena, and alternative medicine, yet often have profound implications for human knowledge and technology."
- Jake Yeager
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http://www.scientificexploration.org/journal/jse_22_2_roney-dougal.pdf
The researchers find a positive correlation between years of meditation and instances of clairvoyance and precognition, though the finding depends on significant psi-missing (that is, hit rates that are below what is expected by chance). Psi-missing itself is an interesting phenomenon and seems to be correlated with "extrinsic" psychological variables, such as mood of the study participant.
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http://happinessbeyondthought.blogspot.com/2011/11/dean-radins-answers-to-questions-on-can.html
Gary Weber, again.
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- Jake Yeager
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Also, going back to the science, I don't think we're quite fully in the know as yet about how thing really work, and when experimental physicists are proving that there are indeed such things as action at a distance and quantum entanglement, then, well.... who knows?
-cmarti
Yeah, there have been a lot of attempts to theoretically tie non-local physical phenomena to parapsychological phenomena, primarily because they both seem to operate acausally, i.e. not under the influence of linear time. Carl Jung tries this, proposing the idea of "psychoid" which characterizes the collective unconscious. The psychoid is the organizing principle of the unconscious and has both psychological and physical properties. Jung proposed this because of the number of synchronicities he observed throughout his life, especially those instances of psychokinesis Ervin Laszlo more recently also attempts a "theory of everything" using the "zero-point field", which supposedly is under consideration in physics. Unfortunately, Laszlo's work is arcane for the uninitiated in physics. I couldn't follow most of it nor form an opinion whether it was bogus or not. The Japanese philosopher Yuasa Yasuo also attempts this, using qi-energy as a "third term" that mediates the psychological and physical domains in living phenomena. Motoyama has done some interesting experiments, which demonstrate the transformation of psi-energy at a chakra into qi-energy. This would tie Yuasa's contention with parapsychological phenomena, which operate non-locally. This is because qi-energy has been shown in experiments to be deliminted by time and space, confined to a six meter radius around the human body. If I remember correctly, the experiments involved qigong masters emitted qi externally.
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- Jake Yeager
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It would be really cool if as part of science education there could be a philosophical training aimed at creating a culture in science that is capable of thinking deeply and openly about these background assumptions. Kuhn points out that science education is targeted at producing a bunch of "normal science" practitioners-- technicians, basically. It seems like an artifact of earlier social structures more than anything to me: a few leaders are allowed to think deeply and direct research, while the masses are just following procedures and recording observations. It seems very rigid and aristocratic to me.
I think a lot of the persistent anomalous data in parapsychology and other fringe sciences may well be pointing to the limits of the current background paradigm in physical science; but these background assumptions are not falsifiable, per se. They just either seem reasonable or not depending on your metaphysical commitments. Concrete research projects are conceived and executed within the parameters set by the background, and just as in most subcultures, the background in science is "taboo". There are irrationally applied social costs to questioning it, just like there are irrationally applied social costs to backing same sex marriage for example. The fact that materialist reductionism isn't an empirical belief, but rather a metaphysic with a definite and clear historical provenance, which is adhered to for socio-cultural reasons rather than rational ones, is what much philosophy and social science of the twentieth century is pointing at. That this message hasn't sunk in to the physical sciences is expressed every time a physicist presents a new "theory of everything" in equation format, which is meant to explain literally everything, but which at best would integrate QM and relativity. Really? So "everything" excludes pretty much everything that matters to humans and other sentient beings in their lived experience? It's kind of funny how transparent it is. This philosophical naivete is why Heidegger was so hard on scientists I think.
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Ever notice how people often have a really good "gut reaction" but then second guess themselves, spend an hour overthinking things and worrying if it's the right choice?
-ona
I'd like to make a new years resolution to stop doing this. Unfortunately, several years ago, having noticed my tendency to ignore new years resolutions, I made a new years resolution to stop making new years resolutions. It's the only one that's stuck.
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How's that?
- Jake Yeager
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I thought you in particular might like this article:
http://www.scientificexploration.org/journal/jse_22_2_rock_2.pdf
It's a study of how mediums experience "spirits." This is the short-and-sweet list the authors come up with based on their study of medium reports:
1. Multi-modal ‘‘sensory’’ impressions pertaining to the discarnate.
2. Visual images of the discarnate in the medium's ‘‘mind's eye.’’
3. ‘‘Hearing’’ information from the discarnate in the medium's ‘‘mind's ear.’’
4. Feeling discarnates' ailments/cause of death.
5. Experience of fragrances associated with the discarnate prior to his or her
bodily death.
6. Alteration of affect.
7. Empathy.
And I can see how a similar process occurs when studying phenomena of the psi variety. I'm not an outright denier of psi phenomena. But, the science I've had a chance to review hasn't been all too convincing, for the most part. I've heard there's some good research out there, but I haven't read it.
The first step seems to be establishing that some kind of psi actually happens. The phenomena have to be observed before they can be tested further, for obvious reasons. If the phenomena are demonstrated and observed, then hypotheses regarding how they happen can be tested, and either supported or unsupported.
Since I'm a psych-nerd, and most of my exposure to research is in the realm of evidence-based treatments for psychological suffering, one of my favorite types of studies are the dismantling kind. I've already brought this up regarding Jake2's thread about EFT (emotional freedom technique). Although some studies show the relative efficacy of EFT for reducing some forms of anxiety, there may be little to no evidence supporting the theory on which it is based. It might work simply because it includes aspects that are similar to other already-supported treatments. I bring this up because I wonder how this type of study could be employed when dealing with psi phenomena. Just a thought.
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I guess I thought that was obvious based on your comment. Climate science is not so much considered a science these days as it is politics. The general perception seems to be "the scientists had a position and they set out to prove it."
How's that?
-cmarti
Yes, my hypotheses that I am extraordinarily dull this morning has been confirmed

- Jake Yeager
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...one of my favorite types of studies are the dismantling kind.... I wonder how this type of study could be employed when dealing with psi phenomena.
-awouldbehipster
There's an example of this in the article I posted about the phenomenology of medium's experiences. The authors state that if the phenomenological characteristics of a medium's experience in communicating with a "spirit" is different from phenomenological characteristics of a telepathic experience with a living person, then the hypothesis that these experiences arise out of an universal "psychic resevoir" that holds all experiences may be called into question. Instead, the authors claim this would provide support to the survival of consciousness theory. Apparently, there are anecdotal reports that the communion with a "spirit" and the telepathic apprehension of knowledge are phenomenologically different.
This is not technically a dismantling study, but it has the spirit of one.
P.S. Phenomenonology is a terrible word to spell.
- Jake Yeager
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"The irrational fulness of life has taught me never to discard anything, even when it goes against all our theories (so short-lived at best) or otherwise admits of no immediate explanation. It is of course disquieting, and one is not certain whether the compass is pointing true or not; but security, certitude, and peace do not lead to discoveries."
- Jake Yeager
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http://www.scientificexploration.org/journal/jse_22_2_jahn.pdf
Change the Rules!
Abstract—Although consciousness-correlated physical phenomena are widely and credibly documented, their appearance and behavior display substantial departures from conventional scientific criteria. Under even the most rigorous protocols, they are only irregularly replicable, and they appear to be insensitive to most basic physical coordinates, including distance and time. Rather, their strongest correlations are with various subjective parameters, such as intention, emotional resonance, uncertainty, attitude, and meaning, and information processing at an unconscious level appears to be involved. If science, by its
most basic definition, is to pursue understanding and utilization of these extraordinary processes, it will need to expand its current paradigm to acknowledge and codify a proactive role for the mind in the establishment of physical events, and to accommodate the spectrum of empirically indicated subjective correlates. The challenges of quantitative measurement and theoretical conceptualization within such a ‘‘Science of the Subjective’’ are formidable, but its potential intellectual and cultural benefits could be immense, not least of all in improving the reach, the utility, the attitude, and the image of science itself.
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