Chapter 23
Informational psychic phenomena
In this chapter we shall touch briefly on those psychic phenomena
which involve the transfer of information rather than the movements
of matter in space-time. It may be, but is not necessarily, true
that information cannot be transferred except by means of photons
or through similar channels.
It may on the other hand be that these informational phenomena
fall into the category 'quasi-physical' rather than 'physical'.
Since the phenomena are sometimes displayed by metal-benders,
so that there could be a connection, we cannot ignore them entirely.
They may be classified as telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition
and psychometric information, and the phenomena are sometimes
termed 'extra-sensory perception' (ESP).
'Telepathy' is the transfer of information between humans or other
living beings by extra-sensory means. 'Clairvoyance' is the reception
by a human of information about physical events. This is said
to be 'precognitive' or 'retrocognitive' when the moment of transfer
precedes or follows the events. By psychometric information is
meant information received from a physical object (e.g. 'This
knife once killed Mr X').
Inevitably, since I am a physicist and not a parapsychologist,
my approach will be less professional; indeed I have made an effort
to avoid involvements with study of the possible telepathic abilities
of the metal-benders simply because I have less experience in
such studies than I have at observing physical phenomena. But
since I found that some of the children had reported plausible
telepathic experiences, I will not avoid describing a little of
what has happened.
In order to establish in the laboratory the reality of the various
forms of ESP, and in particular telepathy, careful protocols are
necessary. The subject of parapsychology, in which scientists
claim to have proved the reality of ESP in numerous experiments,
is often considered to have been established by J.B. Rhine and
his collaborators at Duke University in the USA during the early
1930s. There had been experimentation before this, by many investigators,
who either found gifted subjects, or found themselves to be gifted.
The Oxford classical scholar Gilbert Murray conducted more than
five hundred experiments in his home between 1910 and 1915; he
was himself required to guess 'events' in the minds of other people
in the room, who had previously been asked to agree on an event
and to think about it simultaneously. His success seems not to
have been explicable in terms of 'hyperaesthesia' or abnormally
keen hearing. In the written accounts, we are given some charming
examples of events which had been chosen, e.g. 'Mother hitting
the purser with a skipping-rope', and we are told that a 33 per
cent success rate was achieved, with 28 per cent partial success
and 39 per cent failure. This was a similar success rate to that
obtained in the well-known Pearce-Pratt card-guessing experiments
at Duke, but when these were criticized by psychologists, more
elaborate protocols were established; in the subsequent Pratt-Woodruff
tests the success rates were lower. Many parapsychologists have
conducted telepathy and clairvoyance experiments, and the success
rate seems to have been dependent on many factors, including
dependence on the experimenter himself. The success also declines
as the experiment progresses, so that we know that we are dealing
not with a repeatable and exactly controllable phenomenon, but
with an elusive human faculty. Surprising success rates have been
claimed in government-sponsored experiments - 75 per cent in the
fictitious transmissions to the US submarine Nautilus, and
48 per cent in allegedly real Novosibirsk tests. What is surprising
is that this possibly strategically valuable information should
have been released by governments; perhaps the public does not
yet know which experiments are fictitious and which are real.
Nevertheless there is a long tradition of ESP research in the
Soviet Union, founded by Professor Vassiliev at the University
of Leningrad.
A significant variant of telepathic transmission was first investigated
by Abramovski:(69) that of recently forgotten facts. X tells Y
a list of words, and Y then writes down as many as he can remember
(a high score must be rewarded, for reasons soon to become obvious).
X later concentrates sequentially on single words, attempting
to transmit them mentally. Y is asked to recall. In the experiments
carried out in the Psychological Institute in Warsaw, 154 out
of 324 words were successfully recalled. Possibly this speciaised
kind of telepathy is easier to develop than the more general phenomenon.
When Uri Geller first visited Britain and appeared on television
he always included 'mentalism' (demonstration of ESP) in his repertoire.
Particularly frequent was the blind 'guessing' of simple drawings.
Such 'free response' (Free response experiments are contrasted
with 'forced choice' of targets.) exercises are open to the following
disadvantages:
l There are many well-known methods of fraud.
2 It is difficult to determine just how much information there
is in each drawing.
3 It is difficult to know how much of the transmission is by geometrical
pattern and how much by content. Also failure can occur because
of poor drawing ability or ignorance of the subject-matter.
4 Judgment of success is not always straightforward. In particular,
it is very difficult to design a control experiment in which the
chance of a random guess succeeding can be accurately assessed.(70)
However, there are overriding advantages of playing telepathic
drawing games, as follows:
1 They are interesting and provide good motivation.
2 They require very little equipment.
3 The short time taken for an experiment makes it easier to avoid
fraud on the part of the psychic than would be the case in a more
lengthy experiment.
The 'sender' draws something relatively simple on a writing-pad
in such a way that the receiver does not see what is being drawn.
The sender should not draw an object visible to the receiver,
or otherwise to the forefront of the conversation, and he should
not state whether it is a representation or a geometrical pattern.
The 'receiver' attempts to imagine and copy this drawing onto
his own pad without seeing the original. Comparison is then made,
preferably by an independent judge.
Laboratory studies of extra-sensory perception, widely conducted
in the USA, Britain and elsewhere, are obviously a good deal more
careful and systematic than the above, but there are several reasons
why a lower success rate is usually achieved in extended studies.
My judgment is that the important thing about telepathy is its
spontaneity. The mind of the telepathist at an unpredictable moment
receives information, and with experience he can sense that the
information has not come to him through normal channels. Not many
people regard themselves as reliable telepathists (although at
one time it was almost a profession), and it is not very often
that the minds of telepathists receive telepathic or clairvoyant
information. But when they do receive it, the information is essentially
correct. If it is incorrect, the error is usually in the deduction
that the brain makes from incomplete information, since a telepathic
link is often fragmentary.
It follows that when a telepathist is tested, for example on guessing
the symbols on a parapsychologist's 'Zener cards', there must
be many occasions on which no telepathic information comes to
him, and he therefore simply guesses at the card. An attempt is
made to allow for this by permitting him to 'pass' or refuse the
card if he wishes. But we have no way of knowing if he always
'passes' when no information comes. So there is a contribution
from the telepathist's inability to distinguish telepathic information
from a mere whim or fancy. And the fact that low success rates
are usually achieved in such experiments indicates that the ability
is small. This has led to the suggestion that there is no difference
between telepathy and lucky guesses. To know the difference is
the skill of the telepathist - he must know when to keep silent.
The existence of the so-called 'decline effect' in telepathy experiments
- the failure of a subject to keep up his originally good score
- supports this point of view.
The 'sending of drawings' game has something of a built-in protection
against decline effect; when one is bored or afraid of failure,
one just stops. The most successful telepathy games that I have
organized amongst metal-benders were played at a rate of three
pictures each day after school. For a few days Richard B. was
able to receive about 70 per cent of the pictures sent by my son
John Andrew over a distance of ten miles. Some of the pictures
are shown in Figure 23.1 In Figure 23.2 I also include some data
obtained in casual sessions I have had personally with Uri Geller.
Although I am aware of most of the pitfalls encountered in playing
drawing games with a television performer, I am reasonably certain
that these pictures are not just a load of nonsense.
When the game is played with both sender and receiver in a single
room, it is more difficult to guard against cheating by the receiver
than it is by the sender or by both in collusion. The sender must
be seen to record his drawing under conditions such that he cannot
communicate normally with the receiver (this is fairly easy to
organise); he must also be unable to tamper with the drawing after
it has been made.
However, the receiver's methods of breaking down the security
of the sender are more difficult to detect. I have never felt
confident of my own security when sending to a professional mentalist,
from whom it is difficult to conceal the movements of the pencil;
therefore under these conditions I prefer to receive myself, since
it is easy for me to know that I have not myself cheated, and
that tampering afterwards was impossible, provided that the sender
relinquished his drawing to me before I uncovered mine. Under
these conditions I have myself successfully received from Uri
Geller, although I am usually a poor receiver and sender.
Another form of experiment popular among investigators is known
as remote viewing.(15) The receiver is kept in a room and is asked
at a predetermined time to guess and record graphically and verbally
the visual impressions that the sender is having of the place
to which he has traveled. Photographic and other records are kept
of this place, for the independent judgment of success rate. Unexpectedly
high rates have been obtained not only with recognized psychics
but with subjects who had not suspected their ability (including
representatives of the government agency sponsoring the research).
So far as I know, this type of receiving (or sending) ability
has not been tested in metal-benders.
Telepathy is usually regarded as the paranormal transmission of
information between two brains or minds, and is thus distinguished
from clairvoyance (paranormal knowledge of physical objects) and
from pre- or retrocognition (paranormal knowledge of events before
or after they happen). Clearly the most advanced form of telepathy
is when a two-way mental conversation takes place between two
people remote from each other. One of the metal-bending children
has had such an experience. I quote his father's report:
Figure 23.1 Six drawings made by my son John Andrew and 'sent'
telepathically over a distance of several miles to Richard B.,
whose attempts to reproduce them appear on the right side of each
one.
Figure 23.2 Drawings (left) (A-G and 1-10) made by my wife
Lynn, Dr Ted Bastin and myself, and guessed (right) by Uri Geller,
with reasonable precautions against pencil-watching, surreptitious
drawing, etc. item G was drawn by Geller and guessed in g by me.
In September 1975 my son told me he was receiving a message and
I got the details from him by asking him questions and getting
him to spell out names. I afterwards checked in an atlas and found
a village in Russia with the name he had given and in the geographical
situation he had described
Q: From which country? A: Russia.
Q: Boy or girl? A: Girl.
Q: Age? A: Girl.
Q: Name? A: E.P.
Q: Any brothers? A: One.
Q: Age? A: 12.
Q: Sisters? A: Two, ages 2 and 3.
Q: Father's name? A: C.
Q: Mother's name? A: L.
Q: Where do they live? A: S.
Q: What is it like? A: Near water. The wide part of a
river where it opens up into a lake, on the outskirts of a village.
There is no address could be a farm. Not very good roads cart
tracks. A community of 3 families.
Q: How do your family make a living? A: Crops (could
be potatoes).
Q: Is the river big or small? A: Very wide where she
lives; there is a small waterfall where the river widens.
Q: Do you wear jeans? A: No.
Q: Is she better at telepathy than me? Has she sent out
before? A: She has received - not sent.
Q: Has she worked with scientists? A: No but she knows
people who have. She knows someone, a great person, who can talk
like this. Her name is Madame Kulinga.
The word 'Luneburg' is also in the notes I made, but I have not
noted the question to which it applied. Apart from reference to
the atlas, none of the information has since been verified or
tested.
Independent unofficial checking of this information is in progress.
Real names have been omitted for this reason.
An informational phenomenon with strong physiological overtones
is 'automatic writing'. As a form of automatism it is to be classified
with automatic speech (cf. de la Tourette's syndrome), sleep-walking,
and actions under hypnotic trance. But it is the information that
comes out of the unconscious mind rather than the physiology that
concerns us here. More than one metal-bender has displayed these
talents. The subject's hand moves automatically over the paper,
holding pen or pencil; a handwriting and word style quite different
from his usual graphic output is produced. Sometimes what is written
is information unknown to the conscious mind of the subject; not
just forgotten material, but material which the subject is most
unlikely to have come across; sometimes it is in foreign, even
remote, languages.
In the last century automatic writing was often considered to
be a mild form of possession by a discarnate entity or spirit,
from whom the information derived. But now the most usual interpretation
is that the unconscious mind is responsible for the automatism
and is providing the information, having had access to it through
an ESP channel. It must be recorded that much of the credit for
the provision of an alternative to the spirit hypothesis belongs
to Madame H.P. Blavatsky. But it must also be borne in mind that
the participation of a discarnate entity is something which cannot
be proved or disproved; the unconscious mind may well be capable
of producing information having its apparent origin in a spirit;
or it may not.
There is also an informational phenomenon, with very strong psychokinetic
involvement, known as 'direct writing'. It is supposed that the
pencil stands up and writes on its own. I have never observed
such an event and, like most people, I find it difficult to accept.
But I have complete records and reports of a series of such events
from the family of one of the metal-benders: the writing starts
by being merely blobs and scratches; then it becomes scrawled
curves, then single letters, then short words appear; finally
whole sentences are written. But the informational content of
this particular case was unremarkable. The father encouraged the
writing by leaving paper with written questions, hoping that answers
would appear; although their mode of appearance was unobserved,
answers did appear. And they were framed in the first person singular,
as though what was answering had a personality of its own. The
father interpreted this as the participation of a discarnate entity;
but the metal-bending child refused to accept this, and believed
that he himself was in some way responsible. Thus the unanswerable
question of the origin of the words and sentences and indeed the
poltergeist events by which they were accompanied directly confronts
the observers.
An activity rather similar to direct writing is to induce the
reception of information from unknown sources. This activity was
first reported in 1880 by the journalist A.P. Sinnett.(71) In
1978 metal-benders Gill Costin and Kim Griffiths tried to teleport
letters to Uri Geller, who never received them. But they received
'apports', including some letters, whose origin is completely
unknown. The information in them appears to come from some sort
of 'knowledge store' (or possibly the subliminal memory). The
phenomenon is rather like speaking with tongues or automatic writing
in remote languages. Here are some quotations from their letters:
1
2
3 'Die Geisterwelt ist nicht verschlossen'
4 'Radwan'
5 'Nepesh'
The first Greek quotation is from the Iliad (2:56), with
slight alterations; it means: 'There came to me in the night a
divine dream.' The second is from Acts 2 :17, and means:
'The older of you will have a dream during the night.' These are
of course well known and were traced for me in five minutes by
Professor Giangrande. The quotation from Goethe's Faust is
also well known.
Possibly 'Radwan' refers to the noble Radovan,(72) son of Knight
George, nephew of the Venetian premeditor of Zang, and hero of
a Guslerlied (song with south Slav musical instrument):
Radovan simulated death in a yoga-trance in order to escape prison.
Presumably 'Nepesh' is a reference to the ancient Egyptian word
for the soul.
It is an interesting collection to be turned up by two teen-age
girls, and many people will speculate that they researched the
items themselves, possibly with help from school. But if one meets
Gill and Kim, one finds this very difficult to believe.
Such communications are sometimes received by psychics, for example
Margo Williams, in the form of clairaudience (voices), clairvoyance
(pictures), or automatic writing. Sometimes they have been interpreted
as information from men and women living as long as two centuries
ago. This type of ESP is known as 'drop-in communications'.
It would seem that telepathy is likely to be of very much significance
or value only when it is reasonably reliable. Knowledge of when
it is reliable is the most difficult thing to achieve, and we
have argued that statistical experiments test this knowledge and
not the telepathy itself.
Engineers have taken the published success rates of different
subjects and calculated that if they were used in parallel - i.e.
if we accept a message only when it is confirmed by sufficient
subjects - then for 90 per cent reliability we must use more than
ten good subjects at each end; we would then be able to transmit
information at the rate of 0.04 bits/sec. This is surely the slowest
telecommunication system so far designed! But it is largely, although
not entirely, independent of distance. Experiments have been conducted
over huge distances, and 'firsts' claimed for information received
across the Atlantic, etc. Electromagnetic screening appears to
have little effect; in the recent researches of Targ and Puthoff(15)
on remote viewing, there have been successes with sending from
underground sites, as well as from coast to coast across the United
States.
These features, together with the more unusual precognitive and
retrocognitive communications, have led to the dissatisfaction
of most scientists with the electromagnetic interpretation of
telepathy, which is that the brain receives the information carried
by some form of modulation of electromagnetic waves. The difficulties
of this theory are manifold: first, that the time-varying electric
potentials at the surface of the skull (electroencephalographs,
or EEG) are many orders of magnitude too weak for transmission
and apparently do not carry information anyway; second, that the
brain is not of suitable design to receive and unravel purely
electromagnetic signals with any efficiency; third, that only
extra low frequency and long wavelength radiation (ELF waves)
could traverse the long distances and overcome screening, and
such waves have an information-carrying ability which is far too
small; fourth, telepathy by electromagnetic waves would be expected
to show distance and screening effects, and these are not consistently
measurable in remote viewing and similar experiments; fifth, no
mechanism for precognitive or retrocognitive effects is envisaged
in the electromagnetic interpretation.
There have been other physical candidates for a telepathic carrier
wave, but all suffer from similar inadequacies. It really appears
as though physics must provide new concepts before any physical
explanation can be sought.
In this situation we are tempted to postulate simply that telepathy
is a mode of behaviour of minds, having such-and-such properties,
as elucidated by experiments. Minds apparently have properties
which are at present outside the scope of physical science. These
properties are best described as 'trans-spatial' and 'trans-temporal',
in that both space and time are transcended.
The 'trans-spatial' characteristic would render the question of
distance effects in telepathy irrelevant - as indeed it seems
to be at present. It also makes the question, 'Where is the mind?'
a meaningless one, since the word 'where' implies space. Certainly,
minds seem to work in close conjunction with brains situated within
the cranium; but their conjunction with other parts of space may
also be possible.
A 'trans-temporal' characteristic is necessary for the interpretation
of precognition and retrocognition. Possibly it is not the precognition
of physical events which is the primary channel, but rather the
precognitive contact with other minds which have contact with
the physical events via the normal channels of brain and senses.
It may further be the case that there is a vast mental store in
which the entire spatio-temporal physical sequence of the universe
is held; access to this store on the part of a single mind is
tenuous, but could be precognitive or retrocognitive in nature.
We are tempted to propose that the singularity of individual minds
is itself only a concept assumed for convenience, and possibly
only with partial truth. Thus we approach the 'collective unconscious',
a concept advanced by Jung.(73)
Of all the mental psychic phenomena, precognition is probably
the most significant; I have heard it described as the 'senior
phenomenon'. But in my experience it is rare amongst metal-benders.
Several of the children have had clear visions which they have
taken to be precognitive or retrocognitive - visions of supposedly
future or past events; but it is difficult to specify details
which provide convincing evidence that the visions eventually
became reality.
Kim Griffiths, the metal-bender who had received the quotation
from the Iliad, later told me about further 'messages';
this time there were precognitive elements. I quote them because
they are typically fragmentary.
About Radwan. I think there's a Dr E Jensen. Something about
1934. (There was in fact a Harley Street physician of this
name in the 1930s, and he did become centrally interested in spiritual
healing phenomena. But I have as yet been unable to find any connection
with Radwan.)
I seem to get ideas all at once about things . . . I saw a
signpost to Cambridge . . . is there a meeting about these things
going on there? . . . One of the people was something to do with
chemistry.
(Yes. I had just been to the Society for Psychical Research meeting
there, but there was minimal publicity. Several chemists were
present.)
The other day I thought about somewhere very cold. I could
see it like
a film on a screen.
(I had recently returned from a scientific meeting in Iceland.)
Something about a greater power under the snow there. A holy
water. Stream or river?
(I was indirectly concerned with an important but confidential
issue about dowsing for new hot springs, on which much of the
home heating of Iceland depends.)
And something to do with the Russians . . . radiation.
(A talk had been given on Russian high power radio transmissions
at the conference.)
A name starting Nanda or Nana Indian I think.
(Presumably Nana Dwaku, the priest whose levitation above the
fire had been filmed.(61) I had recently seen this film for the
first time and become interested in it, but it had not been shown
in England so far as I know.)
Tell the Professor Hasted that four computers have been told
to switch off but have not. This shows how research must go on.
These computers are here in G.B. The Manchester people. No. Not
right. Moore.
(I did not bother to contact my friends at the new Computer Centre
at Daresbury, near Manchester, but I received something of a jolt
when I saw the name Moore, which could refer to Laurie Moore,
the manager of the computer link in our College. I talked to Laurie,
without leading him, about the possible phasing out of computers,
and he told me that, of the large London University computers,
four and four only were for the chop. But this was news to me,
since the University computing services are large and complex.
Two days later I was talking to Professor H.. who volunteered
the information that one of my research laboratories in another
college of London University could be threatened when the IBM
370 (one of these four) came to be phased out. Relocation of services
in its old space and elsewhere in the college would trigger off
an accommodation squeeze possibly threatening my atomic collisions
research.)
If this interpretation of Kim Griffiths's 'message' is correct,
there is no doubt that the last part is 'trans-temporal', if not
precognitive. There seems to be no normal channel by which the
confidential information could have traveled to the Bedfordshire
family before it reached me. At the same time, like so many 'psychic
stories'. it depends very much on interpretation.
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