Parapsychology is the study of paranormal and psychic phenomena, including telepathy, precognition, clairvoyance, psychokinesis, near-death experiences, synchronicity, reincarnation, apparitional experiences, and other paranormal claims. It is considered to be pseudoscience by a vast majority of mainstream scientists.
Parapsychology research is largely conducted by private institutions in several countries and funded through private donations,
and the subject almost never appears in mainstream science journals.
Most papers about parapsychology are published in a small number of
niche journals.
Parapsychology has been criticised for continuing investigation despite
being unable to provide convincing evidence for the existence of any
psychic phenomena after more than a century of research.
Terminology
The term parapsychology was coined in 1889 by philosopher Max Dessoir as the German "parapsychologie." It was adopted by J. B. Rhine in the 1930s as a replacement for the term psychical research in order to indicate a significant shift toward experimental methodology and academic discipline. The term originates from the Greek: παρά para meaning "alongside", and psychology.
In parapsychology, psi is the unknown factor in extrasensory perception and psychokinesis experiences that is not explained by known physical or biological mechanisms. The term is derived from the Greek ψ psi, 23rd letter of the Greek alphabet and the initial letter of the Greek ψυχή psyche, "mind, soul". The term was coined by biologist Berthold P. Wiesner, and first used by psychologist Robert Thouless in a 1942 article published in the British Journal of Psychology.
The Parapsychological Association divides psi into two main categories: psi-gamma for extrasensory perception and psi-kappa for psychokinesis. In popular culture, "psi" has become more and more synonymous with special psychic, mental, and "psionic" abilities and powers.
History
Early psychical research
In 1853, the chemist Robert Hare conducted experiments with mediums and reported positive results. Other researchers such as Frank Podmore highlighted flaws in his experiments, such as lack of controls to prevent trickery. Agenor de Gasparin conducted early experiments into table-tipping. Over a period of five months in 1853 he declared the experiments a success being the result of an "ectenic force".
Critics noted that the conditions were insufficient to prevent
trickery. For example, the knees of the sitters may have been employed
to move the table and no experimenter was watching above and below the
table simultaneously.
The German astrophysicist Johann Karl Friedrich Zöllner tested the medium Henry Slade in 1877. According to Zöllner some of the experiments were a success.
However, flaws in the experiments were discovered and critics have
suggested that Slade was a fraud who performed trickery in the
experiments.
The Society for Psychical Research (SPR) was founded in London
in 1882. Its formation was the first systematic effort to organize
scientists and scholars to investigate paranormal phenomena. Early
membership included philosophers, scholars, scientists, educators and
politicians, such as Henry Sidgwick, Arthur Balfour, William Crookes, Rufus Osgood Mason and Nobel Laureate Charles Richet. Presidents of the Society included, in addition to Richet, Eleanor Sidgwick and William James, and subsequently Nobel Laureates Henri Bergson and Lord Rayleigh, and philosopher C. D. Broad.
Areas of study included telepathy, hypnotism, Reichenbach's phenomena, apparitions, hauntings, and the physical aspects of Spiritualism such as table-tilting, materialization and apportation. In the 1880s the Society investigated apparitional experiences and hallucinations in the sane. Among the first important works was the two-volume publication in 1886, Phantasms of the Living which was largely criticized by scholars. In 1894, the Census of Hallucinations
was published which sampled 17, 000 people. Out of these, 1, 684
persons admitted to having experienced a hallucination of an apparition. The SPR became the model for similar societies in other European countries and the United States during the late 19th century.
Early clairvoyance experiments were reported in 1884 by Charles Richet.
Playing cards were enclosed in envelopes and a subject put under
hypnosis attempted to identify them. The subject was reported to have
been successful in a series of 133 trials but the results dropped to
chance level when performed before a group of scientists in Cambridge.
J. M. Peirce and E. C. Pickering reported a similar experiment in which they tested 36 subjects over 23,384 trials which did not obtain above chance scores.
In 1881, Eleanor Sidgwick revealed the fraudulent methods that spirit photographers such as Édouard Isidore Buguet, Frederic Hudson and William H. Mumler had utilized. During the late nineteenth century many fraudulent mediums were exposed by SPR investigators.
Largely due to the support of psychologist William James, the American Society for Psychical Research (ASPR) opened its doors in Boston in 1885, moving to New York City in 1905 under the leadership of James H. Hyslop. Notable cases investigated by Walter Franklin Prince of the ASPR in the early 20th century included Pierre L. O. A. Keeler, the Great Amherst Mystery and Patience Worth.
Rhine era
In 1911, Stanford University became the first academic institution in the United States to study extrasensory perception (ESP) and psychokinesis (PK) in a laboratory setting. The effort was headed by psychologist John Edgar Coover, and was supported by funds donated by Thomas Welton Stanford,
brother of the university's founder. After conducting approximately
10,000 experiments, Coover concluded "statistical treatments of the data
fail to reveal any cause beyond chance."
In 1930, Duke University
became the second major U.S. academic institution to engage in the
critical study of ESP and psychokinesis in the laboratory. Under the
guidance of psychologist William McDougall, and with the help of others in the department—including psychologists Karl Zener, Joseph B. Rhine, and Louisa E. Rhine—laboratory
ESP experiments using volunteer subjects from the undergraduate student
body began. As opposed to the approaches of psychical research, which
generally sought qualitative evidence for paranormal phenomena, the experiments at Duke University proffered a quantitative, statistical approach using cards
and dice. As a consequence of the ESP experiments at Duke, standard
laboratory procedures for the testing of ESP developed and came to be
adopted by interested researchers throughout the world.
George Estabrooks
conducted an ESP experiment using cards in 1927. Harvard students were
used as the subjects. Estabrooks acted as the sender with the guesser in
an adjoining room. In total 2,300 trials were conducted. When the
subjects were sent to a distant room with insulation the scores dropped
to chance level. Attempts to repeat the experiment also failed.
The publication of J. B. Rhine's book, New Frontiers of the Mind
(1937) brought the laboratory's findings to the general public. In his
book, Rhine popularized the word "parapsychology", which psychologist Max Dessoir
had coined over 40 years earlier, to describe the research conducted at
Duke. Rhine also founded an autonomous Parapsychology Laboratory within
Duke and started the Journal of Parapsychology, which he co-edited with McDougall.
Rhine, along with associate Karl Zener, had developed a statistical
system of testing for ESP that involved subjects guessing what symbol,
out of five possible symbols, would appear when going through a special deck of cards
designed for this purpose. A percentage of correct guesses (or hits)
significantly above 20% was perceived as higher than chance and
indicative of psychic ability. Rhine stated in his first book, Extrasensory Perception (1934), that after 90,000 trials, he felt ESP is "an actual and demonstrable occurrence".
Irish medium and parapsychologist, Eileen J. Garrett,
was tested by Rhine at Duke University in 1933 with Zener cards.
Certain symbols that were placed on the cards and sealed in an envelope,
and she was asked to guess their contents. She performed poorly and
later criticized the tests by claiming the cards lacked a psychic energy called "energy stimulus" and that she could not perform clairvoyance to order. The parapsychologist Samuel Soal and his colleagues tested Garrett in May 1937. Most of the experiments were carried out in the Psychological Laboratory at University College London. A total of over 12,000 guesses were recorded but Garrett failed to produce above chance level.
In his report Soal wrote "In the case of Mrs. Eileen Garrett we fail to
find the slightest confirmation of J. B. Rhine's remarkable claims
relating to her alleged powers of extra-sensory perception. Not only did
she fail when I took charge of the experiments, but she failed equally
when four other carefully trained experimenters took my place."
The parapsychology experiments at Duke evoked much criticism from
academics and others who challenged the concepts and evidence of ESP. A
number of psychological departments attempted to repeat Rhine's
experiments with failure. W. S. Cox (1936) from Princeton University
with 132 subjects produced 25,064 trials in a playing card ESP
experiment. Cox concluded "There is no evidence of extrasensory
perception either in the 'average man' or of the group investigated or
in any particular individual of that group. The discrepancy between
these results and those obtained by Rhine is due either to
uncontrollable factors in experimental procedure or to the difference in
the subjects." Four other psychological departments failed to replicate Rhine's results. After thousands of card runs, James Charles Crumbaugh failed to duplicate the results of Rhine.
In 1938, the psychologist Joseph Jastrow
wrote that much of the evidence for extrasensory perception collected
by Rhine and other parapsychologists was anecdotal, biased, dubious and
the result of "faulty observation and familiar human frailties". Rhine's experiments were discredited due to the discovery that sensory leakage
or cheating could account for all his results such as the subject being
able to read the symbols from the back of the cards and being able to
see and hear the experimenter to note subtle clues.
Illusionist Milbourne Christopher
wrote years later that he felt "there are at least a dozen ways a
subject who wished to cheat under the conditions Rhine described could
deceive the investigator". When Rhine took precautions in response to
criticisms of his methods, he was unable to find any high-scoring
subjects. Another criticism, made by chemist Irving Langmuir, among others, was one of selective reporting.
Langmuir stated that Rhine did not report scores of subjects that he
suspected were intentionally guessing wrong, and that this, he felt,
biased the statistical results higher than they should have been.
Rhine and his colleagues attempted to address these criticisms through new experiments described in the book Extrasensory Perception After Sixty Years (1940). Rhine described three experiments the Pearce-Pratt experiment, the Pratt-Woodruff experiment and the Ownbey-Zirkle series which he believed demonstrated ESP. However, C. E. M. Hansel
wrote "it is now known that each experiment contained serious flaws
that escaped notice in the examination made by the authors of Extra-Sensory Perception After Sixty Years". Joseph Gaither Pratt
was the co-experimenter in the Pearce-Pratt and Pratt-Woodruff
experiments at the Duke campus. Hansel visited the campus where the
experiments took place and discovered the results could have originated
through the use of a trick so could not regarded as supplying evidence
for ESP.
In 1957, Rhine and Joseph Gaither Pratt wrote Parapsychology: Frontier Science of the Mind. Because of the methodological problems, parapsychologists no longer utilize card-guessing studies. Rhine's experiments into psychokinesis (PK) were also criticized. John Sladek wrote:
His research used dice, with subjects 'willing' them to fall a certain way. Not only can dice be drilled, shaved, falsely numbered and manipulated, but even straight dice often show bias in the long run. Casinos for this reason retire dice often, but at Duke, subjects continued to try for the same effect on the same dice over long experimental runs. Not surprisingly, PK appeared at Duke and nowhere else.
The Ownbey-Zirkle ESP experiment at Duke was criticized by parapsychologists and skeptics.
Ownbey would attempt to send ESP symbols to Zirkle who would guess what
they were. The pair were placed in adjacent rooms unable to see each
other and an electric fan was used to prevent the pair communicating by
sensory cues. Ownbey tapped a telegraph key to Zirkle to inform him when
she was trying to send him a symbol. The door separating the two rooms
was open during the experiment, and after each guess Zirkle would call
out his guess to Ownbey who recorded his choice. Critics pointed out the
experiment was flawed as Ownbey acted as both the sender and the
experimenter, nobody was controlling the experiment so Ownbey could have
cheated by communicating with Zirkle or made recording mistakes.
The Turner-Ownbey long distance telepathy
experiment was discovered to contain flaws. May Frances Turner
positioned herself in the Duke Parapsychology Laboratory whilst Sara
Ownbey claimed to receive transmissions 250 miles away. For the
experiment Turner would think of a symbol and write it down whilst
Ownbey would write her guesses.
The scores were highly successful and both records were supposed to be
sent to J. B. Rhine, however, Ownbey sent them to Turner. Critics
pointed out this invalidated the results as she could have simply
written her own record to agree with the other. When the experiment was
repeated and the records were sent to Rhine the scores dropped to
average.
A famous ESP experiment at the Duke University was performed by
Lucien Warner and Mildred Raible. The subject was locked in a room with a
switch controlling a signal light elsewhere, which she could signal to
guess the card. Ten runs with ESP packs of cards were used and she
achieved 93 hits (43 more than chance). Weaknesses with the experiment
were later discovered. The duration of the light signal could be varied
so that the subject could call for specific symbols and certain symbols
in the experiment came up far more often than others which indicated
either poor shuffling or card manipulation. The experiment was not
repeated.
The administration of Duke grew less sympathetic to
parapsychology, and after Rhine's retirement in 1965 parapsychological
links with the university were broken. Rhine later established the
Foundation for Research on the Nature of Man (FRNM) and the Institute
for Parapsychology as a successor to the Duke laboratory. In 1995, the centenary of Rhine's birth, the FRNM was renamed the Rhine Research Center.
Today, the Rhine Research Center is a parapsychology research unit,
stating that it "aims to improve the human condition by creating a
scientific understanding of those abilities and sensitivities that
appear to transcend the ordinary limits of space and time".
Establishment of the Parapsychological Association
The Parapsychological Association (PA) was created in Durham, North Carolina,
on June 19, 1957. Its formation was proposed by J. B. Rhine at a
workshop on parapsychology which was held at the Parapsychology
Laboratory of Duke University. Rhine proposed that the group form itself
into the nucleus of an international professional society in
parapsychology. The aim of the organization, as stated in its
Constitution, became "to advance parapsychology as a science, to
disseminate knowledge of the field, and to integrate the findings with
those of other branches of science".
In 1969, under the direction of anthropologist Margaret Mead, the Parapsychological Association became affiliated with the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the largest general scientific society in the world. In 1979, physicist John A. Wheeler said that parapsychology is pseudoscientific, and that the affiliation of the PA to the AAAS needed to be reconsidered.
His challenge to parapsychology's AAAS affiliation was unsuccessful. Today, the PA consists of about three hundred full, associate, and affiliated members worldwide.
Stargate Project
Beginning in the early 1950s, the CIA started extensive research into behavioral engineering. The findings from these experiments led to the formation of the Stargate Project, which handled ESP research for the U.S. federal government.
The Stargate Project was terminated in 1995 with the conclusion
that it was never useful in any intelligence operation. The information
was vague and included a lot of irrelevant and erroneous data. There was
also reason to suspect that the research managers had adjusted their
project reports to fit the known background cues.
1970s and 1980s
The
affiliation of the Parapsychological Association (PA) with the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, along with a general
openness to psychic and occult
phenomena in the 1970s, led to a decade of increased parapsychological
research. During this period, other related organizations were also
formed, including the Academy of Parapsychology and Medicine (1970), the
Institute of Parascience (1971), the Academy of Religion and Psychical
Research, the Institute of Noetic Sciences (1973), the International Kirlian Research Association (1975), and the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Laboratory (1979). Parapsychological work was also conducted at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) during this time.
The scope of parapsychology expanded during these years. Psychiatrist Ian Stevenson conducted much of his research into reincarnation during the 1970s, and the second edition of his Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation was published in 1974. Psychologist Thelma Moss devoted time to the study of Kirlian photography at UCLA's parapsychology laboratory. The influx of spiritual teachers from Asia, and their claims of abilities produced by meditation, led to research on altered states of consciousness. American Society for Psychical Research Director of Research, Karlis Osis, conducted experiments in out of body experiences. Physicist Russell Targ coined the term remote viewing for use in some of his work at SRI in 1974.
The surge in paranormal research continued into the 1980s: the
Parapsychological Association reported members working in more than 30
countries. For example, research was carried out and regular conferences
held in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union although the word parapsychology was discarded in favour of the term psychotronics. The main promoter of psychotronics was Czech scientist Zdeněk Rejdák, who described it as a physical science, organizing conferences and presiding over the International Association for Psychotronic Research.
In 1985 a Chair of Parapsychology was established within the Department of Psychology at the University of Edinburgh and was given to Robert Morris,
an experimental parapsychologist from the United States. Morris and his
research associates and PhD students pursued research on topics related
to parapsychology.
Modern era
Since the 1980s, contemporary parapsychological research has waned considerably in the United States.
Early research was considered inconclusive, and parapsychologists were
faced with strong opposition from their academic colleagues. Some effects thought to be paranormal, for example the effects of Kirlian photography (thought by some to represent a human aura), disappeared under more stringent controls, leaving those avenues of research at dead-ends. The bulk of parapsychology research in the US is now confined to private institutions funded by private sources. After 28 years of research, Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Laboratory (PEAR), which studied psychokinesis, closed in 2007.
Two universities in the United States currently have academic parapsychology laboratories. The Division of Perceptual Studies, a unit at the University of Virginia's Department of Psychiatric Medicine, studies the possibility of survival of consciousness after bodily death, near-death experiences, and out-of-body experiences. Gary Schwartz at the University of Arizona's Veritas Laboratory conducted laboratory investigations of mediums, criticized by scientific skeptics. Several private institutions, including the Institute of Noetic Sciences, conduct and promote parapsychological research.
Over the last two decades some new sources of funding for
parapsychology in Europe have seen a "substantial increase in European
parapsychological research so that the center of gravity for the field
has swung from the United States to Europe". Of all nations the United Kingdom has the largest number of active parapsychologists.
In the UK, researchers work in conventional psychology departments, and
also do studies in mainstream psychology to "boost their credibility
and show that their methods are sound". It is thought that this approach
could account for the relative strength of parapsychology in Britain.
As of 2007, parapsychology research is represented in some 30 different countries and a number of universities worldwide continue academic parapsychology programs. Among these are the Koestler Parapsychology Unit at the University of Edinburgh; the Parapsychology Research Group at Liverpool Hope University (this closed in April 2011); the SOPHIA Project at the University of Arizona; the Consciousness and Transpersonal Psychology Research Unit of Liverpool John Moores University; the Center for the Study of Anomalous Psychological Processes at the University of Northampton; and the Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Research and professional organizations include the Parapsychological Association; the Society for Psychical Research, publisher of the Journal of Society for Psychical Research; the American Society for Psychical Research, publisher of the Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research (last published in 2004); the Rhine Research Center and Institute for Parapsychology, publisher of the Journal of Parapsychology; the Parapsychology Foundation, which published the International Journal of Parapsychology (between 1959 and 1968 and 2000–2001) and the Australian Institute of Parapsychological Research, publisher of the Australian Journal of Parapsychology. The European Journal of Parapsychology ceased publishing in 2010.
Parapsychological research has also included other sub-disciplines of psychology. These related fields include transpersonal psychology, which studies transcendent or spiritual aspects of the human mind, and anomalistic psychology, which examines paranormal beliefs and subjective anomalous experiences in traditional psychological terms.
Research
Scope
Parapsychologists study a number of ostensible paranormal phenomena, including but not limited to:
- Telepathy: Transfer of information on thoughts or feelings between individuals by means other than the five classical senses.
- Precognition: Perception of information about future places or events before they occur.
- Clairvoyance: Obtaining information about places or events at remote locations, by means unknown to current science.
- Psychokinesis: The ability of the mind to influence matter, time, space, or energy by means unknown to current science.
- Near-death experiences: An experience reported by a person who nearly died, or who experienced clinical death and then revived.
- Reincarnation: The rebirth of a soul or other non-physical aspect of human consciousness in a new physical body after death.
- Apparitional experiences: Phenomena often attributed to ghosts and encountered in places a deceased individual is thought to have frequented, or in association with the person's former belongings.
The definitions for the terms above may not reflect their mainstream usage, nor the opinions of all parapsychologists and their critics.
According to the Parapsychological Association, parapsychologists
do not study all paranormal phenomena, nor are they concerned with astrology, UFOs, cryptozoology, paganism, vampires, alchemy, or witchcraft.
Journals dealing with parapsychology include the Journal of Parapsychology, Journal of Near-Death Studies, Journal of Consciousness Studies, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, and Journal of Scientific Exploration.
Experimental research
Ganzfeld
The Ganzfeld (German for "whole field") is a technique used to test individuals for telepathy. The technique—a form of moderate sensory deprivation—was developed to quickly quiet mental "noise" by providing mild, unpatterned stimuli to the visual and auditory senses. The visual sense is usually isolated by creating a soft red glow which is diffused through half ping-pong balls placed over the recipient's eyes. The auditory sense is usually blocked by playing white noise,
static, or similar sounds to the recipient. The subject is also seated
in a reclined, comfortable position to minimize the sense of touch.
In the typical Ganzfeld experiment, a "sender" and a "receiver" are isolated. The receiver is put into the Ganzfeld state, or Ganzfeld effect
and the sender is shown a video clip or still picture and asked to
mentally send that image to the receiver. The receiver, while in the
Ganzfeld, is asked to continuously speak aloud all mental processes,
including images, thoughts, and feelings. At the end of the sending
period, typically about 20 to 40 minutes in length, the receiver is
taken out of the Ganzfeld state and shown four images or videos, one of
which is the true target and three of which are non-target decoys. The
receiver attempts to select the true target, using perceptions
experienced during the Ganzfeld state as clues to what the mentally
"sent" image might have been.
The Ganzfeld experiment studies that were examined by Ray Hyman and Charles Honorton
had methodological problems that were well documented. Honorton
reported only 36% of the studies used duplicate target sets of pictures
to avoid handling cues.
Hyman discovered flaws in all of the 42 Ganzfeld experiments and to
assess each experiment, he devised a set of 12 categories of flaws. Six
of these concerned statistical defects, the other six covered procedural
flaws such as inadequate documentation, randomization and security as well as possibilities of sensory leakage. Over half of the studies failed to safeguard against sensory leakage
and all of the studies contained at least one of the 12 flaws. Because
of the flaws, Honorton agreed with Hyman the 42 Ganzfeld studies could
not support the claim for the existence of psi.
Possibilities of sensory leakage in the Ganzfeld experiments
included the receivers hearing what was going on in the sender's room
next door as the rooms were not soundproof and the sender's fingerprints
to be visible on the target object for the receiver to see.
Hyman reviewed the autoganzfeld experiments and discovered a pattern in
the data that implied a visual cue may have taken place. Hyman wrote
the autoganzfeld experiments were flawed because they did not preclude
the possibility of sensory leakage.
In 2010, Lance Storm, Patrizio Tressoldi, and Lorenzo Di Risio
analyzed 29 Ganzfeld studies from 1997 to 2008. Of the 1,498 trials, 483
produced hits, corresponding to a hit rate of 32.2%. This hit rate is statistically significant with p < .001.
Participants selected for personality traits and personal
characteristics thought to be psi-conducive were found to perform
significantly better than unselected participants in the Ganzfeld
condition. Hyman (2010) published a rebuttal to Storm et al.
According to Hyman, "Reliance on meta-analysis as the sole basis for
justifying the claim that an anomaly exists and that the evidence for it
is consistent and replicable is fallacious. It distorts what scientists
mean by confirmatory evidence." Hyman wrote that the Ganzfeld studies
were not independently replicated and failed to produce evidence for
psi. Storm et al.
published a response to Hyman stating that the Ganzfeld experimental
design has proved to be consistent and reliable, that parapsychology is a
struggling discipline that has not received much attention, and that
therefore further research on the subject is necessary. Rouder et al. 2013 wrote that critical evaluation of Storm et al.'s meta-analysis reveals no evidence for psi, no plausible mechanism and omitted replication failures.
Remote viewing
Remote viewing is the practice of seeking impressions about a distant
or unseen target using subjective means, in particular, extrasensory
perception. Typically a remote viewer is expected to give information
about an object, event, person or location that is hidden from physical
view and separated at some distance. Several hundred such trials have been conducted by investigators over the past 25 years, including those by the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Laboratory (PEAR) and by scientists at SRI International and Science Applications International Corporation. Many of these were under contract by the U.S. government as part of the espionage program Stargate Project, which terminated in 1995 having failed to document any practical intelligence value.
The psychologists David Marks and Richard Kammann attempted to replicate Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff’s remote viewing experiments that were carried out in the 1970s at the Stanford Research Institute.
In a series of 35 studies, they were unable to replicate the results,
motivating them to investigate the procedure of the original
experiments. Marks and Kammann discovered that the notes given to the
judges in Targ and Puthoff's experiments contained clues as to the order
in which they were carried out, such as referring to yesterday's two
targets, or they had the date of the session written at the top of the
page. They concluded that these clues were the reason for the
experiment's high hit rates. Marks was able to achieve 100 per cent accuracy without visiting any of the sites himself but by using cues. James Randi
wrote controlled tests in collaboration with several other researchers,
eliminating several sources of cuing and extraneous evidence present in
the original tests; Randi's controlled tests produced negative results.
Students were also able to solve Puthoff and Targ's locations from the
cues that had inadvertently been included in the transcripts.
In 1980, Charles Tart claimed that a rejudging of the transcripts from one of Targ and Puthoff’s experiments revealed an above-chance result.
Targ and Puthoff again refused to provide copies of the transcripts and
it was not until July 1985 that they were made available for study,
when it was discovered they still contained sensory cues.
Marks and Christopher Scott (1986) wrote "considering the importance
for the remote viewing hypothesis of adequate cue removal, Tart’s
failure to perform this basic task seems beyond comprehension. As
previously concluded, remote viewing has not been demonstrated in the
experiments conducted by Puthoff and Targ, only the repeated failure of
the investigators to remove sensory cues."
PEAR closed its doors at the end of February 2007. Its founder, Robert G. Jahn,
said of it that, "For 28 years, we’ve done what we wanted to do, and
there’s no reason to stay and generate more of the same data."
Statistical flaws in his work have been proposed by others in the
parapsychological community and within the general scientific community. The physicist Robert L. Park said of PEAR, "It’s been an embarrassment to science, and I think an embarrassment for Princeton".
Psychokinesis on random number generators
The advent of powerful and inexpensive electronic and computer
technologies has allowed the development of fully automated experiments
studying possible interactions between mind and matter. In the most common experiment of this type, a random number generator (RNG), based on electronic or radioactive noise, produces a data stream that is recorded and analyzed by computer software.
A subject attempts to mentally alter the distribution of the random
numbers, usually in an experimental design that is functionally
equivalent to getting more "heads" than "tails" while flipping a coin.
In the RNG experiment, design flexibility can be combined with rigorous
controls, while collecting a large amount of data in a very short period
of time. This technique has been used both to test individuals for
psychokinesis and to test the possible influence on RNGs of large groups
of people.
Major meta-analyses of the RNG database have been published every few years since appearing in the journal Foundations of Physics in 1986. PEAR founder Robert G. Jahn
and his colleague Brenda Dunne say that the experiments produced "a
very small effect" not large enough to be observed over a brief
experiment but over a large number of trials resulted in a tiny
statistical deviation from chance. According to Massimo Pigliucci
the results from PEAR can be explained without invoking the paranormal
because of two problems with the experiment "the difficulty of designing
machines capable of generating truly random events and the fact that
statistical "significance" is not at all a good measure of the
importance or genuineness of a phenomenon." Pigluicci has written the statistical analysis used by the Jahn and the PEAR group relied on a quantity called a "p-value"
but a problem with p-values is that if the sample size (number of
trials) is very large like PEAR then one is guaranteed to find
artificially low p-values indicating a statistical "significant" result
even though nothing was occurring other than small biases in the
experimental apparatus.
Two German independent scientific groups have failed to replicate the PEAR results.
Pigliucci has written this was "yet another indication that the
simplest hypothesis is likely to be true: there was nothing to
replicate." The most recent meta-analysis on psychokinesis was published in Psychological Bulletin,
along with several critical commentaries. It analyzed the results of
380 studies; the authors reported an overall positive effect size that
was statistically significant but very small relative to the sample size
and could, in principle, be explained by publication bias.
Direct mental interactions with living systems
Formerly
called bio-PK, "direct mental interactions with living systems" (DMILS)
studies the effects of one person's intentions on a distant person's psychophysiological state.
One type of DMILS experiment looks at the commonly reported "feeling of
being stared at." The "starer" and the "staree" are isolated in
different locations, and the starer is periodically asked to simply gaze
at the staree via closed circuit video links. Meanwhile, the staree's
nervous system activity is automatically and continuously monitored.
Parapsychologists have interpreted the cumulative data on this
and similar DMILS experiments to suggest that one person's attention
directed towards a remote, isolated person can significantly activate or
calm that person's nervous system. In a meta-analysis of these experiments published in the British Journal of Psychology
in 2004, researchers found that there was a small but significant
overall DMILS effect. However, the study also found that when a small
number of the highest-quality studies from one laboratory were analyzed,
the effect size was not significant. The authors concluded that
although the existence of some anomaly related to distant intentions
cannot be ruled out, there was also a shortage of independent
replications and theoretical concepts.
Dream telepathy
Parapsychological studies into dream telepathy were carried out at the Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York led by Stanley Krippner and Montague Ullman. They concluded the results from some of their experiments supported dream telepathy. However, the results have not been independently replicated.
The picture target experiments that were conducted by Krippner and Ullman were criticized by C. E. M. Hansel.
According to Hansel there were weaknesses in the design of the
experiments in the way in which the agent became aware of their target
picture. Only the agent should have known the target and no other person
until the judging of targets had been completed; however, an
experimenter was with the agent when the target envelope was opened.
Hansel also wrote there had been poor controls in the experiment as the
main experimenter could communicate with the subject. In 2002, Krippner denied Hansel's accusations, claiming the agent did not communicate with the experimenter.
An attempt to replicate the experiments that used picture targets
was carried out by Edward Belvedere and David Foulkes. The finding was
that neither the subject nor the judges matched the targets with dreams
above chance level. Results from other experiments by Belvedere and Foulkes were also negative.
In 2003, Simon Sherwood and Chris Roe wrote a review that claimed support for dream telepathy at Maimonides. However, James Alcock
noted that their review was based on "extreme messiness" of data.
Alcock concluded the dream telepathy experiments at Maimonides have
failed to provide evidence for telepathy and "lack of replication is
rampant."
Near-death experiences
A near-death experience (NDE) is an experience reported by a person who nearly died, or who experienced clinical death and then revived. NDEs include one or more of the following experiences: a sense of being dead; an out-of-body experience;
a sensation of floating above one's body and seeing the surrounding
area; a sense of overwhelming love and peace; a sensation of moving
upwards through a tunnel or narrow passageway; meeting deceased
relatives or spiritual figures; encountering a being of light, or a
light; experiencing a life review; reaching a border or boundary; and a feeling of being returned to the body, often accompanied by reluctance.
Interest in the NDE was originally spurred by the research of psychiatrists Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, George G. Ritchie, and Raymond Moody. In 1975, Moody wrote the best-selling book Life After Life and in 1977 he wrote a second book, Reflections on Life After Life. In 1998 Moody was appointed chair in "consciousness studies" at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The International Association for Near-death Studies
(IANDS) was founded in 1978 to meet the needs of early researchers and
experiencers within this field of research. Later researchers, such as
psychiatrist Bruce Greyson, psychologist Kenneth Ring, and cardiologist Michael Sabom, introduced the study of near-death experiences to the academic setting.
Reincarnation research
Psychiatrist Ian Stevenson, from the University of Virginia,
conducted more than 2,500 case studies over a period of 40 years and
published twelve books. He wrote that childhood memories ostensibly
related to reincarnation
normally occurred between the ages of three and seven years then fade
shortly afterwards. He compared the memories with reports of people
known to the deceased, attempting to do so before any contact between
the child and the deceased's family had occurred, and searched for disconfirming evidence that could provide alternative explanations for the reports aside from reincarnation.
Some 35 per cent of the subjects examined by Stevenson had
birthmarks or birth defects. Stevenson believed that the existence of
birth marks and deformities on children, when they occurred at the
location of fatal wounds in the deceased, provided the best evidence for
reincarnation.
However, Stevenson has never claimed that he had proved the existence
of reincarnation, and cautiously referred to his cases as being "of the
reincarnation type" or "suggestive of reincarnation". Researchers who believe in the evidence for reincarnation have been unsuccessful in getting the scientific community to consider it a serious possibility.
Ian Wilson argued that a large number of Stevenson’s cases consisted of poor children remembering wealthy lives or belonging to a higher caste. He speculated that such cases may represent a scheme to obtain money from the family of the alleged former incarnation.
Philosopher Keith Augustine has written "the vast majority of
Stevenson's cases come from countries where a religious belief in
reincarnation is strong, and rarely elsewhere, seems to indicate that
cultural conditioning (rather than reincarnation) generates claims of
spontaneous past-life memories." According to the research of Robert Baker
many of the alleged past-life experiences investigated by Stevenson and
other parapsychologists can be explained in terms of known
psychological factors. Baker has written the recalling of past lives is a
mixture of cryptomnesia and confabulation. Philosopher Paul Edwards noted that reincarnation invokes assumptions and is inconsistent with modern science.
Scientific reception
Evaluation
The scientific consensus is that there is insufficient evidence to support the existence of psi phenomena.
Scientists critical of parapsychology state that its
extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence if they are to be
taken seriously. Scientists who have evaluated parapsychology have written the entire body of evidence is of poor quality and not adequately controlled. In support of this view, critics cite instances of fraud, flawed studies, and cognitive biases (such as clustering illusion, availability error, confirmation bias, illusion of control, magical thinking, and the bias blind spot) as ways to explain parapsychological results.
Research has also shown that people's desire to believe in paranormal
phenomena causes them to discount strong evidence that it does not
exist.
The psychologists Donovan Rawcliffe (1952), C. E. M. Hansel (1980), Ray Hyman
(1989) and Andrew Neher (2011) have studied the history of psi
experiments from the late 19th century up until the 1980s. In every
experiment investigated, flaws and weaknesses were discovered so the
possibility of sensory leakage and trickery were not ruled out. The data from the Creery sister and the Soal-Goldney experiments were proven to be fraudulent, one of the subjects from the Smith-Blackburn experiments confessed to fraud, the Brugmans experiment, the experiments by John Edgar Coover and those conducted by Joseph Gaither Pratt and Helmut Schmidt
had flaws in the design of the experiments, did not rule out the
possibility of sensory cues or trickery and have not been replicated.
According to critics, psi is negatively defined as any effect
that cannot be currently explained in terms of chance or normal causes
and this is a fallacy as it encourages parapsychologists into using any
peculiarity in the data as a characteristic of psi.
Parapsychologists have admitted it is impossible to eliminate the
possibility of non-paranormal causes in their experiments. There is no
independent method to indicate the presence or absence of psi. Persi Diaconis
has written that the controls in parapsychological experiments are
often loose with possibilities of subject cheating and unconscious
sensory cues.
The existence of parapsychological phenomena and the scientific
validity of parapsychological research is disputed by independent
evaluators and researchers. In 1988, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences
published a report on the subject that concluded that "no scientific
justification from research conducted over a period of 130 years for the
existence of parapsychological phenomena." No accepted theory
of parapsychology currently exists, and many competing and often
conflicting models have been advocated by different parapsychologists in
an attempt to explain reported paranormal phenomena. Terence Hines in his book Pseudoscience and the Paranormal
(2003) wrote "Many theories have been proposed by parapsychologists to
explain how psi takes place. To skeptics, such theory building seems
premature, as the phenomena to be explained by the theories have yet to
be demonstrated convincingly." Skeptics such as Antony Flew have cited the lack of such a theory as their reason for rejecting parapsychology.
In 1998, physics professor Michael W. Friedlander
noted that parapsychology has "failed to produce any clear evidence for
the existence of anomalous effects that require us to go beyond the
known region of science." Philosopher and skeptic Robert Todd Carroll
has written research in parapsychology has been characterized by
"deception, fraud, and incompetence in setting up properly controlled
experiments and evaluating statistical data." The psychologist Ray Hyman
has pointed out that some parapsychologists such as Dick Bierman,
Walter Lucadou, J. E. Kennedy, and Robert Jahn have admitted the
evidence for psi is "inconsistent, irreproducible, and fails to meet
acceptable scientific standards." Richard Wiseman
has criticized the parapsychological community for widespread errors in
research methods including cherry-picking new procedures which may
produce preferred results, explaining away unsuccessful attempted
replications with claims of an "experimenter effect", data mining, and retrospective data selection.
In a review of parapsychological reports Hyman wrote "randomization is often inadequate, multiple statistical testing without adjustment for significance levels is prevalent, possibilities for sensory leakage are not uniformly prevented, errors in use of statistical tests are much too common, and documentation is typically inadequate". Parapsychology has been criticized for making no precise predictions.
In 2003, James Alcock Professor of Psychology at York University published Give the Null Hypothesis a Chance: Reasons to Remain Doubtful about the Existence of Psi,
where he claimed that parapsychologists never seem to take seriously
the possibility that psi does not exist. Because of that, they interpret
null results as indicating only that they were unable to observe psi in
a particular experiment, rather than taking it as support for the
possibility that there is no psi. The failure to take the null hypothesis
as a serious alternative to their psi hypotheses leads them to rely
upon a number of arbitrary "effects" to excuse failures to find
predicted effects, excuse the lack of consistency in outcomes, and to
excuse failures to replicate.
Basic endemic problems in parapsychological research include
amongst others: insufficient definition of the subject matter, total
reliance on negative definitions of their phenomena (E.g.- psi is said
to occur only when all known normal influences are ruled out); failure
to produce a single phenomenon that can be independently replicated by
neutral researchers; the invention of "effects" such as the
psi-experimenter effect to explain away inconsistencies in the data and
failures to achieve predicted outcomes; unfalsifiability of claims;
unpredictability of effects; lack of progress in over a century of
formal research; methodological weaknesses; reliance on statistical
procedures to determine when psi has supposedly occurred, even though
statistical analysis does not in itself justify a claim that psi has
occurred; and failure to jibe with other areas of science. Overall, he
argues that there is nothing in parapsychological research that would
ever lead parapsychologists to conclude that psi does not exist, and so,
even if it does not, the search is likely to continue for a long time
to come. "I continue to believe that parapsychology is, at bottom,
motivated by belief in search of data, rather than data in search of
explanation."
Richard Land has written that from what is known about human biology it is highly unlikely that evolution has provided humans with ESP as research has shown the recognized five senses are adequate for the evolution and survival of the species. Michael Shermer in an article Psychic Drift: Why most scientists do not believe in ESP and psi phenomena for Scientific American
wrote "the reason for skepticism is that we need replicable data and a
viable theory, both of which are missing in psi research."
In January 2008 the results of a study using neuroimaging
were published. To provide what are purported to be the most favorable
experimental conditions, the study included appropriate emotional
stimuli and had participants who are biologically or emotionally
related, such as twins. The experiment was designed to produce positive
results if telepathy, clairvoyance or precognition
occurred, but despite this no distinguishable neuronal responses were
found between psychic stimuli and non-psychic stimuli, while variations
in the same stimuli showed anticipated effects on patterns of brain
activation. The researchers concluded that "These findings are the
strongest evidence yet obtained against the existence of paranormal
mental phenomena."
Other studies have attempted to test the psi hypothesis by using
functional neuroimaging. A neuroscience review of the studies (Acunzo et al. 2013) discovered methodological weaknesses that could account for the reported psi effects.
A 2014 study discovered that schizophrenic patients have more belief in psi than healthy adults.
Some researchers have become skeptical of parapsychology such as Susan Blackmore and John Taylor after years of study and no progress in demonstrating the existence of psi by the scientific method.
Physics
The ideas of psi (precognition, psychokinesis and telepathy) violate well-established laws of physics. Psychokinesis violates the inverse-square law, the second law of thermodynamics, and the conservation of momentum. There is no known mechanism for psi.
On the subject of psychokinesis, the physicist Sean M. Carroll has written that both human brains and the spoons they try to bend are made, like all matter, of quarks and leptons;
everything else they do emerges as properties of the behavior 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.
This leaves no physical force that could possibly account for
psychokinesis.
Physicist John G. Taylor
who investigated parapsychological claims has written an unknown fifth
force causing psychokinesis would have to transmit a great deal of
energy. The energy would have to overcome the electromagnetic forces
binding the atoms together. The atoms would need to respond more
strongly to the fifth force while it is operative than to electric
forces. Such an additional force between atoms should therefore exist
all the time and not during only alleged paranormal occurrences. Taylor
wrote there is no scientific trace of such a force in physics, down to
many orders of magnitude; thus if a scientific viewpoint is to be
preserved the idea of any fifth force must be discarded. Taylor
concluded there is no possible physical mechanism for psychokinesis and
it is in complete contradiction to established science.
Felix Planer, a professor of electrical engineering,
has written that if psychokinesis was real then it would be easy to
demonstrate by getting subjects to depress a scale on a sensitive
balance, raise the temperature of a water bath which could be measured
with an accuracy of a hundredth of a degree Celsius
or affect an element in an electrical circuit such as a resistor which
could be monitored to better than a millionth of an ampere.
Planer writes that such experiments are extremely sensitive and easy to
monitor but are not utilized by parapsychologists as they "do not hold
out the remotest hope of demonstrating even a minute trace of PK"
because the alleged phenomenon is non-existent. Planer has written
parapsychologists have to fall back on studies that involve only
statistics that are unrepeatable, owing their results to poor
experimental methods, recording mistakes and faulty statistical
mathematics.
According to Planer, "all research in medicine and other sciences
would become illusionary, if the existence of PK had to be taken
seriously; for no experiment could be relied upon to furnish objective
results, since all measurements would become falsified to a greater or
lesser degree, according to his PK ability, by the experimenter's
wishes." Planer concluded the concept of psychokinesis is absurd and has
no scientific basis.
Philosopher and physicist Mario Bunge
has written that "psychokinesis, or PK, violates the principle that
mind cannot act directly on matter. (If it did, no experimenter could
trust his readings of measuring instruments.) It also violates the
principles of conservation of energy and momentum. The claim that
quantum mechanics allows for the possibility of mental power influencing
randomizers—an alleged case of micro-PK—is ludicrous since that theory
respects the said conservation principles, and it deals exclusively with
physical things."
The physicist Robert L. Park
questioned if mind really could influence matter then it would be easy
for parapsychologists to measure such a phenomenon by using the alleged
psychokinetic power to deflect a microbalance
which would not require any dubious statistics but "the reason, of
course, is that the microbalance stubbornly refuses to budge."
Park has suggested the reason statistical studies are so popular in
parapsychology is because they introduce opportunities for uncertainty
and error which are used to support the biases of the experimenter. Park
wrote "No proof of psychic phenomena is ever found. In spite of all the
tests devised by parapsychologists like Jahn and Radin,
and huge amounts of data collected over a period of many years, the
results are no more convincing today than when they began their
experiments."
Pseudoscience
Parapsychological theories are viewed as pseudoscientific by the
scientific community as they are incompatible with well established laws
of science. As there is no repeatable evidence for psi, the field is often regarded as a pseudoscience.
The philosopher Raimo Tuomela
summarized why the majority of scientists consider parapsychology to be
a pseudoscience in his essay "Science, Protoscience, and
Pseudoscience".
- Parapsychology relies on an ill-defined ontology and typically shuns exact thinking.
- The hypotheses and theories of parapsychology have not been proven and are in bad shape.
- Extremely little progress has taken place in parapsychology on the whole and parapsychology conflicts with established science.
- Parapsychology has poor research problems, being concerned with establishing the existence of its subject matter and having practically no theories to create proper research problems.
- While in parts of parapsychology there are attempts to use the methods of science there are also unscientific areas; and in any case parapsychological research can at best qualify as prescientific because of its poor theoretical foundation.
- Parapsychology is a largely isolated research area.
The methods of parapsychologists are regarded by critics, including those who wrote the science standards for the California State Board of Education, to be pseudoscientific.
Some of the more specific criticisms state that parapsychology does not
have a clearly defined subject matter, an easily repeatable experiment
that can demonstrate a psi effect on demand, nor an underlying theory to
explain the paranormal transfer of information. James Alcock
has stated that few of parapsychology's experimental results have
prompted interdisciplinary research with more mainstream sciences such
as physics or biology, and that parapsychology remains an isolated
science to such an extent that its very legitimacy is questionable, and as a whole is not justified in being labeled "scientific".
Alcock has written "Parapsychology is indistinguishable from
pseudo-science, and its ideas are essentially those of magic... There is
no evidence that would lead the cautious observer to believe
that parapsychologists and paraphysicists are on the track of a real
phenomenon, a real energy or power that has so far escaped the attention
of those people engaged in "normal" science."
The scientific community considers parapsychology a pseudoscience
because it continues to explore the hypothesis that psychic abilities
exist despite a century of experimental results that fail to
conclusively demonstrate that hypothesis. A panel commissioned by the United States National Research Council
to study paranormal claims concluded that "despite a 130-year record of
scientific research on such matters, our committee could find no
scientific justification for the existence of phenomena such as
extrasensory perception, mental telepathy or ‘mind over matter’
exercises... Evaluation of a large body of the best available evidence
simply does not support the contention that these phenomena exist."
There is also an issue of non-falsifiability associated with psi. On this subject Terence Hines has written:
The most common rationale offered by parapsychologists to explain the lack of a repeatable demonstration of ESP or other psi phenomena is to say that ESP in particular and psi phenomena in general are elusive or jealous phenomena. This means the phenomena go away when a skeptic is present or when skeptical “vibrations” are present. This argument seems nicely to explain away some of the major problems facing parapsychology until it is realized that it is nothing more than a classic nonfalsifiable hypothesis... The use of the nonfalsifiable hypothesis is permitted in parapsychology to a degree unheard of in any scientific discipline. To the extent that investigators accept this type of hypothesis, they will be immune to having their belief in psi disproved. No matter how many experiments fail to provide evidence for psi and no matter how good those experiments are, the nonfalsifiable hypothesis will always protect the belief.
Mario Bunge
has written that research in parapsychology for over a hundred years
has produced no single firm finding and no testable predictions. All
parapsychologists can do is claim alleged data is anomalous and lying
beyond the reach of ordinary science. The aim of parapsychologists "is
not that of finding laws and systematizing them into theories in order
to understand and forecast" but to "buttress ancient spiritualist myths
or to serve as a surrogate for lost religions."
In response to Bunge's position, Eberhard Bauer and Walter von Lucadou
have argued that "there is not one single argument used by Bunge which
has not been extensively discussed in the relevant literature for
decades".
The psychologist David Marks has written that parapsychologists have failed to produce a single repeatable demonstration of the paranormal
and described psychical research as a pseudoscience, an "incoherent
collection of belief systems steeped in fantasy, illusion and error." However, Chris French
who is not convinced that parapsychology has demonstrated evidence for
psi, has argued that parapsychological experiments still adhere to the
scientific method, and should not be completely dismissed as
pseudoscience. French has noted his position is "the minority view among
critics of parapsychology".
Philosopher Bradley Dowden
characterized parapsychology as a pseudoscience as parapsychologists
have no valid theories to test and no reproducible data from their
experiments.
Fraud
There have been instances of fraud in the history of parapsychology research. In the late 19th century the Creery Sisters (Mary, Alice, Maud, Kathleen, and Emily) were tested by the Society for Psychical Research
and believed them to have genuine psychic ability; however, during a
later experiment they were caught utilizing signal codes and they
confessed to fraud. George Albert Smith and Douglas Blackburn were claimed to be genuine psychics by the Society for Psychical Research but Blackburn confessed to fraud:
For nearly thirty years the telepathic experiments conducted by Mr. G. A. Smith and myself have been accepted and cited as the basic evidence of the truth of thought transference...
...the whole of those alleged experiments were bogus, and originated in the honest desire of two youths to show how easily men of scientific mind and training could be deceived when seeking for evidence in support of a theory they were wishful to establish.
The experiments of Samuel Soal and K. M. Goldney
of 1941–1943 (suggesting precognitive ability of a single participant)
were long regarded as some of the best in the field because they relied
upon independent checking and witnesses to prevent fraud. However, many
years later, statistical evidence, uncovered and published by other
parapsychologists in the field, suggested that Soal had cheated by
altering some of the raw data.
In 1974, a number of experiments by Walter J. Levy, J. B. Rhine's
successor as director of the Institute for Parapsychology, were exposed
as fraudulent.
Levy had reported on a series of successful ESP experiments involving
computer-controlled manipulation of non-human subjects, including rats.
His experiments showed very high positive results. However, Levy's
fellow researchers became suspicious about his methods. They found that
Levy interfered with data-recording equipment, manually creating
fraudulent strings of positive results. Levy confessed to the fraud and
resigned.
In 1974 Rhine published the paper Security versus Deception in Parapsychology in the Journal of Parapsychology
which documented 12 cases of fraud that he had detected from 1940 to
1950 but refused to give the names of the participants in the studies. Massimo Pigliucci has written:
Most damning of all, Rhine admitted publicly that he had uncovered at least twelve instances of dishonesty among his researchers in a single decade, from 1940 to 1950. However, he flaunted standard academic protocol by refusing to divulge the names of the fraudsters, which means that there is unknown number of published papers in the literature that claim paranormal effects while in fact they were the result of conscious deception.
Martin Gardner claimed to have inside information that files in Rhine's laboratory contain material suggesting fraud on the part of Hubert Pearce.
Pearce was never able to obtain above-chance results when persons other
than the experimenter were present during an experiment, making it more
likely that he was cheating in some way. Rhine's other subjects were
only able to obtain non-chance levels when they were able to shuffle the
cards, which has suggested they used tricks to arrange the order of the
Zener cards before the experiments started.
A researcher from Tarkio College in Missouri, James D. MacFarland, was suspected of falsifying data to achieve positive psi results.
Before the fraud was discovered, MacFarland published 2 articles in the
Journal of Parapsychology (1937 & 1938) supporting the existence of
ESP.
Presumably speaking about MacFarland, Louisa Rhine wrote that in
reviewing the data submitted to the lab in 1938, the researchers at the
Duke Parapsychology Lab recognized the fraud. "...before long they were
all certain that Jim had consistently falsified his records... To
produce extra hits, Jim had to resort to erasures and transpositions in
the records of his call series." MacFarland never published another article in the Journal of Parapsychology after the fraud was discovered.
Some instances of fraud amongst spiritualist mediums were exposed by early psychical researchers such as Richard Hodgson and Harry Price. In the 1920s, magician and escapologist Harry Houdini said that researchers and observers had not created experimental procedures which absolutely preclude fraud.
Criticism of experimental results
Critical analysts, including some parapsychologists, are not satisfied with experimental parapsychology studies. Some reviewers, such as psychologist Ray Hyman,
contend that apparently successful experimental results in psi research
are more likely due to sloppy procedures, poorly trained researchers,
or methodological flaws rather than to genuine psi effects. Fellow psychologist Stuart Vyse hearkens back to a time of data manipulation, now recognized as "p-hacking," as part of the issue.
Within parapsychology there are disagreements over the results and
methodology as well. For example, the experiments at the PEAR laboratory
were criticized in a paper published by the Journal of Parapsychology
in which parapsychologists independent from the PEAR laboratory
concluded that these experiments "depart[ed] from criteria usually
expected in formal scientific experimentation" due to "[p]roblems with
regard to randomization, statistical baselines, application of
statistical models, agent coding of descriptor lists, feedback to
percipients, sensory cues, and precautions against cheating." They felt
that the originally stated significance values were "meaningless".
A typical measure of psi phenomena is statistical deviation from
chance expectation. However, critics point out that statistical
deviation is, strictly speaking, only evidence of a statistical anomaly,
and the cause of the deviation is not known. Hyman contends that even
if psi experiments could be designed that would regularly reproduce
similar deviations from chance, they would not necessarily prove psychic
functioning. Critics have coined the term The Psi Assumption
to describe "the assumption that any significant departure from the
laws of chance in a test of psychic ability is evidence that something
anomalous or paranormal has occurred...[in other words] assuming what
they should be proving." These critics hold that concluding the
existence of psychic phenomena based on chance deviation in inadequately
designed experiments is affirming the consequent or begging the question.
In 1979, magician and debunker James Randi engineered a hoax, now referred to as Project Alpha
to encourage a tightening of standards within the parapsychology
community. Randi recruited two young magicians and sent them undercover
to Washington University's
McDonnell Laboratory where they " fooled researchers ... into believing
they had paranormal powers." The aim was to expose poor experimental
methods and the credulity thought to be common in parapsychology.
Randi has stated that both of his recruits deceived experimenters over a
period of three years with demonstrations of supposedly psychic
abilities: blowing electric fuses sealed in a box, causing a lightweight
paper rotor perched atop a needle to turn inside a bell jar, bending
metal spoons sealed in a glass bottle, etc.
The hoax by Randi raised ethical concerns in the scientific and
parapsychology communities, eliciting criticism even among skeptical
communities such as the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of
Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP), which he helped found, but also
positive responses from the President of the Parapsychological
Association Stanley Krippner. Psychologist Ray Hyman, a CSICOP member,
called the results "counterproductive".
Selection bias and meta-analysis
Selective reporting
has been offered by critics as an explanation for the positive results
reported by parapsychologists. Selective reporting is sometimes referred
to as a "file drawer" problem, which arises when only positive study
results are made public, while studies with negative or null results are
not made public. Selective reporting has a compounded effect on meta-analysis, which is a statistical technique that aggregates the results of many studies in order to generate sufficient statistical power to demonstrate a result that the individual studies themselves could not demonstrate at a statistically significant level. For example, a recent meta-analysis combined 380 studies on psychokinesis,
including data from the PEAR lab. It concluded that, although there is a
statistically significant overall effect, it is not consistent and
relatively few negative studies would cancel it out. Consequently, biased publication of positive results could be the cause.
The popularity of meta-analysis in parapsychology has been criticized by numerous researchers, and is often seen as troublesome even within parapsychology itself.
Critics have said that parapsychologists misuse meta-analysis to create
the incorrect impression that statistically significant results have
been obtained that indicate the existence of psi phenomena. Physicist Robert Park
states that parapsychology's reported positive results are problematic
because most such findings are invariably at the margin of statistical
significance and that might be explained by a number of confounding
effects; Park states that such marginal results are a typical symptom of
pathological science as described by Irving Langmuir.
Researcher J. E. Kennedy has said that concerns over the use of
meta-analysis in science and medicine apply as well to problems present
in parapsychological meta-analysis. As a post-hoc analysis,
critics emphasize the opportunity the method presents to produce biased
outcomes via the selection of cases chosen for study, methods employed,
and other key criteria. Critics say that analogous problems with
meta-analysis have been documented in medicine, where it has been shown
different investigators performing meta-analyses of the same set of
studies have reached contradictory conclusions.
Anomalistic psychology
In anomalistic psychology, paranormal phenomena have naturalistic explanations resulting from psychological and physical factors which have sometimes given the impression of paranormal activity to some people when, in fact, there have been none. According to the psychologist Chris French:
The difference between anomalistic psychology and parapsychology is in terms of the aims of what each discipline is about. Parapsychologists typically are actually searching for evidence to prove the reality of paranormal forces, to prove they really do exist. So the starting assumption is that paranormal things do happen, whereas anomalistic psychologists tend to start from the position that paranormal forces probably don't exist and that therefore we should be looking for other kinds of explanations, in particular the psychological explanations for those experiences that people typically label as paranormal.
Whilst parapsychology has been said to be in decline, anomalistic
psychology has been reported to be on the rise. It is now offered as an
option on many psychology degree programmes and is also an option on the
A2 psychology syllabus in the UK.
Skeptics organizations
Organizations that encourage a critical examination of parapsychology and parapsychological research include the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, publisher of the Skeptical Inquirer; the James Randi Educational Foundation, founded by illusionist and skeptic James Randi, and the Occult Investigative Committee of the Society of American Magicians a society for professional
magicians/illusionists
that seeks "the promotion of harmony among magicians, and the
opposition of the unnecessary public exposure of magical effects."