17
Whatever It Is
Who is the real Uri Geller? Is he a complete fraud, a very clever
magician who has fooled much of the world into hailing him as
the greatest psychic of all time? Or is he the greatest psychic
of all time, despite all the denunciations and allegations? Surely
he must be one or the other, but how are we going to find out
which?
For some, there is no difficulty at all. There are no such things
as 'psychic powers', they say, so anybody claiming to practice
them must be phoney. Any kind of action at a distance or exchange
of information beyond the limits of our known senses is impossible.
People certainly have hunches and intuitions, to be sure, but
there is no need to dream up words like telepathy and clairvoyance
to account for them. As for psychokinesis, we know enough about
the human brain to say that any kind of 'mind over matter' outside
the body is nonsense. There is no known natural force that could
account for it. If there were, we would have been able to measure
it by now. All so-called psychic phenomena can be ascribed to
one of three well-known factors: coincidence, faulty observation,
and lies.
If you take this view, as many do, then Geller must be a magician.
He began in show business, and he has never left it. Nowadays,
instead of performing to large audiences he performs to single
individuals, who should know better than to take him for what
he claims to be. He has a great act, and he has perfected it in
fifteen years of constant repetition. But, say the magicians,
he's one of us. We rumbled him the minute he set foot on the stage.
We gave him the chance to confess and to be welcomed into our
secret brotherhood. He turned it down, and went on to fool most
of the people most of the time, but not all of us. He's a magician
all right - it takes one to spot one, and we spotted him right
at the start.
If Geller's 'powers' were ever to be the subject of a court case,
this is probably how the prosecution would summarize its claims.
The defence would object, waving handfuls of papers and protesting
that numerous eminent scientists had shown that the accused had
unusual powers. Had he not demonstrated them over and over again
in the laboratory just as convincingly as on the stage or in the
television studio?
The prosecution would have none of this. Scientists are the easiest
of people to deceive. They are not trained to deal with professional
deceivers. As for all those deluded businessmen who have paid
Geller millions to find gold, they would be better off hanging
their maps on the wall and throwing darts at them . . .
So the arguments would go on. By the end of the case the jury
would be too confused to reach a unanimous verdict, and everybody
would go home still believing what they had always believed.
It is very difficult to prove anything nowadays, even in a court.
I have sat on a jury myself and taken part in two cases, one of
which went on for several days. On both occasions, the accused
was found not guilty, and our verdict is now on the record. In
one case, I am proud to say that it was probably due to my vigorous
arguments with my fellow jurors, in which I pointed out that the
prosecution case was all based on assumptions, hearsay and testimony
from the police, who were obviously hoping for a conviction although
they had somehow managed to 'lose' the only piece of evidence
that would have settled the matter.
The case for the prosecution sounded quite reasonable, as did
the case for the defence. Both were argued eloquently and at great
length. Choosing which of them to believe was not easy for some
of us. The defendant was an Asian immigrant, which complicated
matters. One juror assured me privately that 'they're all a bunch
of crooks', but did not say so in the jury room in front of the
five non-white members, each of whom might well have had some
fellow-feeling for the defendant (as might I also, having been
born in India). We all had our own views about crime in general,
and the way it should be dealt with, and some of these were quite
extreme. However, when I managed to concentrate the minds of my
colleagues on the case in question, and pointed out that we were
supposed to reach a verdict solely on the evidence, we all had
to agree that the prosecution case just was not good enough to
send a man to prison. So, much to my relief, we let him off.
Uri Geller went on trial in 1970, when he was first publicly denounced,
and the case continues. The prosecution has claimed that he must
be a magician, for two reasons: everything he does (well, most
of it) can be replicated by conjurors, and there are no such things
as psychic powers in the first place. Even the scientists who
have studied him most closely, with one or two exceptions, have
not come out and endorsed his powers unconditionally. They have
pointed out correctly that science is not about what people believe,
but about repeatable experiments and explanatory theories, and
they have neither of these to report.
On the other hand, millions of people all over the world have
no doubt at all that Uri is a genuine psychic. Strange things
have happened in their own homes just as he has predicted: clocks
and watches have started ticking, spoons and forks have twisted
out of shape for no obvious reason, and messages have been received
from some distant television studio or newspaper office, after
being beamed out without the help of any known form of radio or
electronics. Is it possible to fool so many people for so long?
And can we dismiss the testimony of Uri's closest friends, each
of whom can reel off a list of very odd things that they have
seen happen in his presence?
The case for Geller is just as reasonable as the case against
him. The reason why neither has yet been accepted to everybody's
satisfaction is very simple: there are too many vested interests
and preconceptions involved on both sides. Many have already reached
their own verdicts, and nothing said by either side is going to
make them change their minds. Little that I say will make any
difference either, so I will say nothing to those whose minds
are made up except that the evidence on which they base their
opinions may not be as good as it seems. From now on, I will address
myself only to those who, like me, are genuinely mystified by
Uri Geller and are equally prepared to believe that he is genuine
or that he is not. That is exactly how I felt when I began to
work on this book. The fact that I already had plenty of experience
of other people's psychic powers made me all the more anxious
to arrive at the right verdict. Like any collector, I had no wish
to acquire a fake.
Let me return to my court case for a moment. I spent a good deal
of time during the trial watching the defendant, who was only
a few feet from me. He did not say much when he was spoken to,
answering questions quietly and politely and often looking very
bewildered.
'You can see he's got something to hide,' my anti-Asian fellow
juror muttered one morning during the lunch break, to which I
replied that in my opinion he just looked terrified.
'Wouldn't you be?' I asked. We had both been looking at the same
person, yet we had reached very different conclusions about him.
If you are suspicious about somebody, anything he says or does
is going to look suspicious.
So it has been, right from the start, with Geller. Magicians,
who think they know how he does his tricks, watch for the misdirections
and the rapid hand movements they think he must be using. And
they see them! At least, they think they do, and they assure us
that they did.
However, two points must be considered. One is that magicians
can be deceived just like anybody else. The Amazing Randi was
taken for a ride with no difficulty at all by the non-magician
Dennis Stillings, who proved his point by doing it again at once.
The other is that magicians are professional deceivers, and are
the most suspect of witnesses, although it is hard to imagine
what could have motivated magicians such as Dickson, Zorka, Cox
and Leslie to come out in favour of Geller other than a simple
desire to speak the truth. It should also be remembered that these
four observed him rather more carefully than the majority of his
detractors have ever done. On the whole, the evidence from the
magicians is inconclusive, but weighted strongly in Geller's favour.
The same is true of the evidence from the scientists, whose positive
findings far outnumber their negative ones. They may not have
come up with final proof of any kind, but most of them are quite
sure that something very odd went on while Uri was in their laboratories.
As for the evidence from the general public, this is overwhelmingly
in his favour. There are millions of people all over the world
who may not understand what psychic power is, and may not even
be very interested in it, yet they have experienced it for themselves.
Like Uri, they have lived a little of the mystery. They may since
have banished it from their conscious minds, but for a brief moment
they have known that there is more to human nature than finds
its way into science magazines and textbooks.
There have been too many snap judgments both in favour of Geller
and against him, and some of the more extreme examples of each
strain belief. For example, some of those who accept his powers
without question find Puharich's extraterrestrial-control theory
too much to swallow, and I have not yet managed to swallow it
myself. Nor have I spat it out, however, for, improbable as it
may seem, it cannot be ruled out. Puharich has an impressive track
record in many areas of scientific research, and if we accept
some of his findings why should we reject others? We may complain
that some of his theories about Uri only added a further complication
to a subject that was quite complex enough already, but I for
one am not prepared to assert that they are wrong.
It is much easier, as both Uri and I have shown, to debunk some
of the misleading material that has been published about him.
To list all the cases would be a very tedious task. To give just
one of many possible examples: Brendan O'Regan wrote in the New
Scientist (20 November 1974) that the feature on Geller published
in the 17 October issue of the magazine contained no less than
forty-two erroneous statements, seventeen of them 'blatant errors
of fact' and the rest either 'unsupportable innuendo or gross
misrepresentation'.
If science magazines cannot get their facts straight, what can
we expect from the popular press? In September 1985 I was interested
to read in an Israeli magazine called Bul (issue dated
13 September 1986!) that yet another anti-Geller opus was on the
way, subtitled 'The Crook from Outer Space'. Among its sensational
revelations: the 'Israeli comedian of the past' was now living
in a state of terror, 'like a hypnotized mouse', having been placed
on an unnamed person's hit-list, and was guarded around the clock
by 'a team of frightening gorillas'. Uri translated this extraordinary
article for me with surprising good humour, and readily allowed
me to dig through his vast files of anti-Geller material, of which
I am sure he has more than anybody else. After visiting his home
several times a week for more than six months, I saw nothing more
frightening than the children's collection of toy monsters, and
it was some time before I became aware of his security arrangements,
which are as discreet as they are effective.
I will now try to scrape off both the mud and the whitewash and
reach my own conclusions about Uri Geller.
It cannot be disputed that he has had an impact upon his time
such as we have not seen since the days of the Victorian medium
Daniel Home (1833-86) and the escapologist Houdini (1874-1926),
both of whom became household names, though for very different
reasons. Home baffled and astonished London society and several
European royal families for more than twenty years, producing
most of the standard phenomena of the seance room from table-turning
and materialisation of 'spirit' forms to the levitation of himself,
and a hundred years after his death his reputation remains intact.
Houdini spent much of his life crusading against Spiritualist
mediums and imitating their performances on stage, yet such was
his skill at escaping from handcuffs, strait-jackets and jails,
that some suspected him of having psychic powers, and there is
reason to believe that he seriously considered this himself. Ironically,
it was Houdini and not Home who was accused of fraud, and he had
to fight a court case in 1902 to clear his name as an 'honest'
deceiver of the public.
Geller has made a reputation that can be seen in two ways depending
on your point of view. To some he is the second Home, to others
he is the Houdini of his time. His act may be unlike either of
theirs, yet he has combined something of what would seem to be
two incompatible careers: demonstrator of psychic phenomena and
purveyor of entertainment to the masses. Like Home, he has produced
so many apparently genuine psychic phenomena for so long that
to some he must be a magician. Like Houdini, he has mystified
audiences large and small so consistently that others believe
he must have genuine psychic powers.
Comparisons cannot be taken too far. Geller is not the second
Home or the second Houdini. He is the first Geller, and by any
standards he is an original. He has extended his fields of operation
far beyond the stage, studio and laboratory. He has put his talents
to work in those areas where we would expect psychic powers, if
there are such things, to be most useful, and he has literally
struck gold. It should be remembered that he has done so not on
his own initiative but on that of his employers, some of whom
he has named.
There is plenty of evidence that people have risen to the top
of many professions by making use of what they would call 'hunches',
'gut feelings' or simply 'intuition'. In 1962, three members of
the Industrial and Management Engineering Department of Newark
College of Engineering in New Jersey began to look more closely
into this matter. Two of them, Douglas Dean and John Mihalasky,
later co-authored a book entitled Executive ESP, and by
the time this was published in 1974 they had statistical evidence
to show that successful company presidents scored better at computerized
number-guessing tests than less successful ones. Their results,
they concluded, 'show that the probability of getting a superior
profit-maker is much increased by choosing a man who scores well
in precognition'. Curiously, few of their subjects professed to
have much interest in psychic matters. 'I do not know any psychics,'
said one. 'I believe in ESP for one reason because I use it.'
In December 1974, the magazine Psychic published interviews
with nine American business leaders who described numerous instances
in which they had made their own mind-power work for them. They
included the founder of the Ampex Corporation, a former director
of Phillips Petroleum, the owner of a steel company, a publisher,
a management consultant, and the head of a large property development
firm. Their comments included this revealing one (from the steel
man) on the subject of parapsychology, 'I've experienced it, felt
it, seen it - whatever it was!'
If top people speak in this vague-way about psychic powers (or
whatever they are), can we expect somebody who earns a living
by claiming to use them to be any more precise. Geller is in fact
considerably more articulate than many concerning his own powers
and the way he uses them. He has told us here all he can about
how he bends his spoons, receives and sends his telepathic messages,
and finds things. He makes it all sound quite easy, but unfortunately
most people who follow his instructions as given here will find
that they cannot do the same. For the use of psychic power is
far from easy to explain. It depends not so much on what you do
but on who you are.
Who do you have to be, then, in order to become a Uri Geller?
There are some clues to be found in his life story that may be
worth examining for a moment. First, let us take the incident
in which a spoon he was using during a meal when he was about
four years old bent and broke in front of his eyes. This was witnessed
by his mother, who has assured me that it happened just as he
described it. She has also confirmed to me that Uri was able to
read her mind from a very early age. So it seems that he grew
up accepting that this kind of thing was quite possible.
It is well known that children do not develop a sense of logic
and critical ability until both hemispheres of their brains are
fully formed, which is usually around the age of eight. Before
then, as any hypnotist knows, they are very highly suggestible
and will accept whatever comes along as part of their view of
reality.
It is also well known to the new generation of parapsychologists,
who are interested in how psychic phenomena occur spontaneously
rather than in how they would like them to occur in their carefully
controlled experiments, that the essential first condition for
their occurrence is a complete absence of resistance to them.
Once this resistance is allowed to build up, it is very hard to
break down. Psychic functioning is not a question of learning
how, but of avoiding being told that this or that cannot be done.
Psychic functions are not really as mysterious as they are often
made out to be. The American psychiatrist Jan Ehrenwald has shown
that such human 'hyperfunctions' as telepathy, clairvoyance and
psychokinesis are the exact mirror-images of the 'functional deficits'
of the hysterical conversion syndrome. The latter lead to a restriction
of human abilities, usually in the form of 'hysterical' blindness,
mutism and paralysis; the former expand the reach of the ego by
enabling it to transmit or receive information at a distance,
or to create motion of physical objects without contact. Writing
of the features of the 'psi syndrome' in his book New Dimensions
of Deep Analysis (1954), he noted that:
We have seen time and again that despite their apparently capricious,
haphazard nature they are governed by the same laws which apply
to the dream, to the neurotic symptom and to unconscious processes
in general. In short, they are subject to established psychodynamic
principles.
So we can look upon psychic powers as extensions of normal powers
rather than as something supernatural only bestowed on people
who come from outer space. When we describe somebody as having
been born psychic, what we really mean is that he, or more often
she, was born with abilities we probably all have, but which are
educated out of most of us. It has become socially acceptable
for women to have 'intuition', but less so for men. All the evidence
indicates that women have no more intuition, or any other psychic
powers, than men, but that they have much less resistance to them.
The majority of 'mediums' therefore tend to be women, but this
does not reflect the distribution of psychic gifts between the
sexes. (In the magazine article mentioned above, only one of the
top executives interviewed, publisher Eleanor Friede, was a woman.)
Ehrenwald has come across many examples of telepathy and precognition
in his own consulting room, and speculates that the doctor-patient
relationship is similar to the 'symbiotic' relationship of mother
and child. Symbiosis, in this context, means a close and mutually
beneficial relationship between two living beings. This is naturally
strongest between a mother and child, but it can also occur later
in the child's life whenever its interests are closely associated
with those of somebody else, whether or not personal emotions
are involved. It is a relationship that can be quite independent
of sexual or intellectual attachment.
As an only child, whose father was often away from home on military
service, Uri was inevitably in his mother's company relatively
more than he would have been as a member of a larger family with
a father in permanent residence. This did not lead to the unnaturally
prolonged dependence of child upon mother that is sometimes found
in families in similar circumstances. Indeed, Uri's childhood
seems to have been perfectly normal in every way. What interests
me is that his early psychic experiences, most of which involved
his mother, were allowed to remain undisturbed in his forming
mind. He grew up accepting them, and has never found any reason
to reject them.
I often wonder if that bending spoon in the hand of four-year-old
Uri actually fell apart by entirely normal means? It could have
been a spoon of poor post-war quality that had reached the end
of its useful life, implanting as it did so an image in Uri's
mind that was to remain there for good.
The psychologist Kenneth Batcheldor has studied the psychological
conditions necessary for the manifestation of psychokinesis for
more than twenty years, and as I described in my book If This
Be Magic he has put his theories into practice with remarkable
success. One of his most important discoveries is that inexplicable
phenomena, such as the tilting of a table, can be expected to
occur once those concerned believe, even wrongly, that they are
already occurring. He calls this process 'induction by artifact',
and I demonstrated it myself when I told Uri that he was making
the needle of my compass move by mind-power. As I have already
described, he did not in fact do this until after I had told him
(wrongly) that he had. He then made it move at once. A naturally
disintegrating spoon would be the ideal artifact to induce a belief
in the possibility of spoons bending by less normal means.
An important feature of the symbiotic relationship is what Ehrenwald
calls 'doctrinal compliance', whereby patients produce what they
believe the doctor, analyst or hypnotist expects. This, he says
in the book mentioned earlier, can be in the form of 'unintended
suggestion emanating from the therapist who is usually unaware
of its operation'.
Something like this seems to have taken place when Andrija Puharich
arrived in Israel in 1971. For the first time in his life, Uri
found himself being taken seriously by an experienced research
scientist, who also happened to be a skilled hypnotist. Uri has
described how ever since he can remember he has been interested
in space travel and the possibility of distant civilizations.
Puharich spelled out his own interest in such matters very plainly
in the preface to his book Uri:
I had suspected for a long time from my researches that man
has been in communication with beings not of this earth for thousands
of years. This personal opinion comes from a close reading of
the record of ancient religions and from my own observations and
data.
The latter included some remarkable information from an Indian
named Dr Vinod, obtained during a self induced trance and supposedly
originating from the intelligence source called The Nine.
The very day after Puharich first met Geller, they discussed space
matters, and Uri gave a detailed account of his longtime interest
in this area. At one of their first hypnosis sessions, Puharich
asked outright, 'Are you one of the Nine Principles that once
spoke through Dr Vinod?' The answer was 'Yes'. Doctrinal compliance
had been established, and what followed was inevitable: a sudden
and dramatic elaboration of all the space-fantasies that had been
in Uri's mind throughout most of his life.
It must be made clear that those fantasies were genuine. We have
the independent testimony of Mrs Agrotis and Joseph Charles, and
no doubt there are other pupils and teachers from Terra Santa
College in Nicosia who remember being entertained by Uri's spontaneous
end-of-term recitals of them. Neither Puharich nor Geller made
them up. They were there, and as we would expect they grew and
blossomed in the favourable climate of the hypnotic trance. They
may not have been literally true, any more than a dream need be
literally true, but they were unquestionably in Uri's mind. As
I have said, how they got there is a question I cannot answer.
Once rapport had been established between researcher and subject
and strengthened by this common interest in matters extraterrestrial,
Uri's psychic gifts developed rapidly. So did his already considerable
self-confidence. He was all set for a career as a psychic superstar.
However, Uri made it clear right from the start of his association
with Puharich that what he really wanted to do in life was become
rich and famous. This is not a surprising ambition for an only
child of a family of very modest means who already had more than
a year's experience as a professional entertainer, and a very
successful one.
Whatever we choose to think of Puharich's extraterrestrial theories,
we must give him the credit due to him. It was almost entirely
through his efforts that Geller ever set foot in a scientific
laboratory, which he never really wanted to do. And why on earth
should he? Would it be reasonable to have asked, say, Itzhak Perlman
to take part in a series of laboratory experiments in sound production
instead of playing his violin on concert platforms all over the
world?
Since 1971, Geller's whole career has been a succession of responses
to challenges and the suggestions of others. Although his stage
routine has not changed much in fifteen years, he has never been
able to resist a challenge in the form of a suggestion or an offer,
rather than the now-or-never confrontation favoured by hostile
critics. It was not even his own idea to become a public performer
in the first place - his original stage career evolved gradually,
from private demonstrations for Shipi and Hanna Shtrang, through
similar spontaneous shows in the homes of others to the school
performances arranged by the enterprising Shipi (who was fourteen
at the time) and finally to the public stage, where he might have
remained for some time if Puharich had not steered his career
in other directions.
It was Sir Val Duncan of Rio Tinto-Zinc who suggested that Uri
should apply his talent to such serious matters as finding oil
and minerals. This suggestion was later reinforced by a number
of hard-headed businessmen of whom two, Clive Menell and Peter
Sterling, have allowed their names to appear on the record. I
have met a third, who flew several thousand miles to London in
1985 for the sole purpose of securing Uri's services, and flew
home as soon as he had done so. He was not prepared to let me
quote him on anything at all, except that he had not informed
even his fellow directors of his plans. He gave me the impression
that he knew exactly what he was doing, proving Uri's observation
that people at the top do not question his abilities, but often
simply arrange to put them to work.
It was the man known as Mike who tried to entice Geller into
the intelligence community, and it was various American customs,
narcotics and FBI agents who on their own initiatives asked him
to look for kidnap victims, corpses, and assorted villains. His
success in all these areas was limited for reasons that are easily
understood: he is a public performer by nature, and not an undercover
agent, and he has good reason to fear for his personal safety
if he becomes too widely known as the psychic detective or the
super-dowser who cannot fail.
Credit for the original suggestions that he should expand his
horizons is due to two influential Israelis: Amnon Rubinstein,
who was to become minister of communications, and the defence
chief Moshe Dayan. Rubinstein, in whose home Uri gave one of his
first demonstrations, originally acted as adviser and guide and
has remained on friendly terms up to the present. As for Dayan,
we can assume that he passed on his impressions to those he reckoned
to have a need to know. The only service Uri will admit to having
performed for him was helping locate a piece of pottery during
a late-night archaeological dig. I would be surprised if Dayan
had failed to make any further use of skills of this kind.
Richard Deacon, a well-informed writer on espionage matters whom
I know personally, devoted a chapter of his book The Israeli
Secret Service (1978) to the controversial subject of 'psychic
espionage'. He makes it clear that this is something on which
the Israelis are considerably more up to date than any other Western
nation. According to one of his sources, Geller's activities were
closely monitored by Soviet-bloc observers from shortly after
his arrival in the USA, and it is known that they were monitored
by the Mossad long before then.
The idea of psychic espionage is an exciting one, and has led
to a good deal of wild speculation but very little hard evidence.
The only area in which it has been well established that there
is a useful role for psychically talented spies to play is that
of remote viewing. In 1984, columnist Jack Anderson published
a series of articles on a CIA project codenamed Grill Flame, a
development of the work already mentioned at SRI begun in 1972
by Ingo Swann, Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ. This project,
Anderson said, had produced information later verified by satellite
about a very sensitive nuclear test site at Semipalatinsk in Soviet
Kazakhstan, and had led to the location of a crashed Soviet Tu-95
'Backfire' bomber somewhere in Africa.
Targ, together with his colleague Keith Harary, visited the Soviet
Union in 1983, returning in October 1984 to carry out an experiment
in remote viewing between Moscow and California, with the Georgian
psychic healer Dzhuna Davitashvili as subject. During the experiment,
which was videotaped, she produced accurate information about
two target sites in San Francisco selected by a random number
generator and visited by Harary. The experiment, which was witnessed
by a member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (whom I have met),
demonstrated the possibility not only of remote viewing of a site
10,000 miles away, but also of precognition, for the targets were
not selected until six hours after they had been described.
The military applications of this kind of experiment would seem
to be potentially considerable. However, if I were in charge of
a team of psychic spies, Geller is the last person I would want
to be involved. Not only is he too well known and too accessible
to the media, but he has always refused to co-operate on any test
that could lead to negative or destructive use of psychic powers.
Psychic warfare is quite feasible in theory, but the problem in
practice would be finding subjects willing to take part.
A psychic peace campaign, of the kind described in Uri's Chapter
Twelve, is another matter. Here, the prospects are promising.
In the course of several visits to Eastern Europe, I have constantly
been given urgent pleas for helping research the peaceful uses
of psychic powers. I do not think this would have happened unless
those concerned were well aware that research into their less
peaceful uses is going on.
Recent events have shown that an individual's change of attitude
can have far-reaching effects. Barely three years after the Yom
Kippur War of 1973, Egypt's President Sadat made his historic
visit to Israel, changing the minds of millions simply by stepping
off an aeroplane. There followed the longest period of peace between
Israel and Egypt since the creation of the former. The Geneva
meeting in 1985 between the chief executives of the USA and the
USSR was another occasion on which the states of mind of Ronald
Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev may have achieved more effect than
anything they said to each other. The same may be true of the
ostensibly unsuccessful 1986 summit meeting in Iceland. The idea
that an individual like Uri Geller can help shape world events
simply by shaking hands with Adnan Khashoggi is less far-fetched
than it might appear. Events are caused by minds, and minds can
be changed both by their owners and by others.
There is a place for real magic in the modern world. Indeed, it
is much needed, although the distinction must be made between
co-operative and autocratic magic. If the magician seeks to dominate
his environment, in the manner of Dr Faustus, he will be destroyed
by the forces he creates or invokes. If he seeks to alter his
environment by invoking an already existing creative force and
collaborating with it for the common good, he will work apparent
miracles.
'Magic is not, as so many wrongly believe, merely a collection
of rites, ceremonies and supernatural feats. It is much more than
that. In a few words, it is a way of looking at the world.
In its very essence it implies a mental state.'
I apologize for taking this perceptive comment, by one of the
harshest critics of the paranormal, out of its context: a review
of Professor Lynn Thorndike's eight-volume A History of Magic
and Experimental Science by Eric J. Dingwall in the first
issue (1959) of the International Journal of Parapsychology.
Thorndike's monumental work, which took him fifty years to
write, is, in Dingwall's words, not only a history, but 'an illustration
of the dangers inherent in the magical way of looking at the world
and . . . an indication of the apparently enormous difficulties
that mankind has in escaping from such conceptions'.
That such dangers exist is undeniable. Nor can we challenge Dingwall's
assertion that 'it is where there is ignorance, as Montaigne pointed
out in the sixteenth century, [that] imposture has free scope'.
Yet this is only one side of the picture.
The 'slow escape from magic', to use Dingwall's term, coincided
with the emergence of modern science and the triumphs of such
demystifiers of nature as Newton, Descartes and Galileo. Yet magic
has refused to go away, partly because modern science, for all
its achievements, has not yet answered any of the questions most
of us really want answered. In many areas, such as the limits
of the human mind and its possible survival of physical death,
it has preferred not to look for answers. Meanwhile, it has been
our scientists and not our occultists who have found ever more
efficient ways of harming and killing us and of systematically
destroying the natural environment. Scientists have much less
cause for self-congratulation than some of them appear to think.
The idea that medieval magic evolved into or was replaced by modern
science is a myth. If mankind still believes in magic, it is because
there is a widespread and very deep-rooted awareness that there
is some truth in it. The psi phenomena of today are, as Ehrenwald
has pointed out, 'derivatives of magic that have been dehydrated,
deboned and filleted to make them digestible for scientific consumption'.
The term 'psi', he says, is 'an antiseptic, expurgated or sanitized
version of magic'.
The extraordinary reactions provoked by Uri Geller's appearance
on the scene, both favourable and hostile, show that today both
the desire for magic and the fear of it are as widespread as they
have ever been. Here was a talented and personable young entertainer
claiming to be performing real magic in the context of the dehydrated
and sanitized profession of conjuring. By doing so, he infuriated
the professional magicians by suggesting that he could do what
they could only pretend to do. He also upset many scientists,
who operate in a different reality, by showing that psi phenomena
cannot be studied in terms of science as currently understood.
'Is Chaos Necessary?' is the title of the chapter in Targ and
Puthoff's Mind Reach in which they discuss their SRI research
with Geller (whose name they seem to have done their best to avoid
mentioning ever since). To be fair to them, they were no more
prepared, despite their impressive scientific backgrounds, for
a laboratory subject like him than he was prepared for scientists
like them. Chaos is necessary, Geller knows it, and he has a remarkable
instinctive ability for producing it in almost any conditions.
The real magician cannot operate in everyday reality; he must
destabilize it and replace it with his own.
One criticism often made of Uri is that he is inclined to see
mysteries where others do not. If there is a thump on the ceiling
while he is talking to a reporter he will suggest that it was
something 'strange'. Or if somebody mentions a certain person
or a place, he might claim 'I was just going to say that - I'm
reading your mind!' and so on. This can easily be mistaken for
'fraud', but it is an essential part of the destabilization process,
one that has been fully validated by Kenneth Batcheldor's theoretical
and practical research into the psychology of paranormal physical
phenomena. Uri knew all about 'induction by artifact' long before
Batcheldor gave it a name.
'Once the belief in a supernatural world is established and the
conviction that, by appropriate methods, this world can be explored
and brought into a kind of subjection to the operator's wishes,
then magic follows as night follows day,' wrote Dingwall in the
article mentioned above. 'But,' he continued, 'once the belief
in a supernatural order of things is weakened, then doubts as
to the correct interpretation of obscure events arise and the
scientific way of looking at the world begins to make its appearance.'
As I have seen for myself time and time again, psi phenomena do
not take place until those concerned either expect them to do
so very soon, or believe that they already are taking place. This
has been my experience on several cases of the poltergeist type,
at experimental table-sessions with the Batcheldor group, and
on many occasions in Uri's company. His ability to induce psi
by artifact is unrivalled.
It may be asked why, if this is so, stage magicians do not occasionally
perform real magic by mistake, as it were, after inducing belief
in it in their audiences. The answer is that there is good reason
to believe that now and then they do. Houdini, for example, spent
much of his life tormented by the question of whether this had
happened to him, and he had private conversations on the subject
with a number of mediums as well as fellow magicians. Unfortunately,
he never found the answer, or if he did he kept it to himself.
This side of Houdini's complex and contradictory personality is
well discussed by his sympathetic biographer Raymund FitzSimons
in his book Death and the Magician.
David Berglas, one of Britain's best-known magical entertainers,
has been both president of the International Brotherhood of Magicians
and acting chairman of the British branch of the Committee for
Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. He has told
me that many of his professional colleagues do believe in psi
and that all of them (himself included) cannot always fully explain
how they produce their own effects.
After following Geller's career closely for more than twelve years,
and becoming one of the very few magicians to establish friendly
personal relations with him, Berglas had this to say in Psychic
News (13 December 1986): 'If he is a genuine psychic, and
genuinely does what he claims to by the methods he claims to use,
then he is the only person in the world who can do it. He is the
only one to have demonstrated consistently. He is a phenomenon,
and we must respect that. If, on the other hand, he is a magician
or a trickster or a con-man, he is also phenomenal - the best
there has ever been. So, whichever way you want to look at him,
we must respect him as one or the other.'
When I asked Berglas which way he wanted to look at Geller, he
made the enigmatic comment: 'I can do what he does. Whether I
do it in the same way that he does, I really don't know.'
Uri Geller is a magician. That is, he practises what appears to
be real magic as defined by Dingwall. If he were to use a few
simple tricks in order to induce the real stuff, this would not
affect the validity of the final product. (He has repeatedly assured
me that he does not.) In my opinion, his instinctive grasp of
the conditions - usually chaotic - necessary for the manifestation
of psi is the best evidence in favour of his genuineness. Others
argue that it is precisely this ability to control his surroundings
that points to his non-genuineness. How, then are we ever going
to settle the matter one way or the other? I can argue that Uri
has satisfied me that genuinely inexplicable things take place
in his presence - the episode of the shaving mirror would be enough
to establish that. Others, however, can claim that since even
professional magicians can be fooled, who am I to distinguish
between a real psychic and a fake one?
I can only testify that on the evidence of my own senses, I have
no reason to believe that he has ever tried to deceive either
me or anybody else. The case against him is founded on the shakiest
of evidence, not to mention several often repeated lies. His detractors
have done a very poor job, preferring the innuendo, the assumption
and the smear of dispassionate observation and careful study of
facts. They have rejected evidence that would be considered acceptable
in any other field of scientific inquiry, and they have used methods
that would be considered unacceptable in them. I am wholly unimpressed
by both their case and their methods of presenting it. Kangaroo
courts should not be mistaken for courts of law. On the evidence
I have seen and examined, of which it has been possible to summarize
only a small part in this book, there is only one possible verdict:
Geller is not guilty as charged.
The witch-hunters have been chasing after the wrong target. They
have failed to grasp the obvious: if there are such things as
what are generally known as psychic powers, they must be available
to observers as well as to those under observation. If somebody
can demonstrate them positively, others can demonstrate them negatively
and suppress the very effect they claim to be trying to observe.
Deciding for yourself whether there are such things as psychic
powers or not is really quite easy. What is difficult and impossible
for some, is accepting the fact that they might exist. The late
Sir Alister Hardy once designed an experiment whereby an agnostic
or even an atheist can test the efficacy of prayer, which can
be summarized like this: 'Whether you believe in it or not, try
it for yourself on the assumption that it might work. Obey the
rule scrupulously, then see if you get results.' Prayer, he said
is a 'formula for generating religious experience' whether you
are already 'religious' or not.
The same type of experiment can be carried out by anybody interested
in finding out whether there are such things as telepathy, clairvoyance
or psychokinesis. Expecting them to happen under your conditions
and when you are ready for them is no use at all. They happen
under their conditions and in their own time. The sensible researcher
will re-create those conditions and then allow them to occur.
The history of psychical research is full of frauds, con-men,
con-women and assorted nuisances who have wasted the time of a
lot of well-intentioned people. Uri Geller, in my opinion, is
not one of them. Nor is he just one more 'medium' in the Home-Palladino-Schneider
category, which is reserved for those very rare individuals who
demonstrate unusual and inexplicable powers and are not found
to be fraudulent.
What is he, then?
He has two firsts to his credit. He is the first professional
entertainer to bring ostensibly genuine psychic phenomena into
the homes and lives of millions. He is also the first to put psychic
powers to work successfully on a large scale in the 'real' world
of big business.
In the process, he has unnerved us all. He has given us a tantalizing
glimpse of what might be. Some of us have taken a quick look at
this and backed away in fear and confusion. Others have denounced
it as something that should not be allowed to exist. A few have
looked more closely.
What they have seen has forced them to question their assumptions
about the way the physical world and the human mind are supposed
to behave. Scientists have done their best to return to normal-work
after a brief visit to their calm laboratories by the travelling
Geller show. Millions of television viewers have sat and watched
this enigmatic and mischievous fellow going about his business
of reorganizing reality.
The bent spoons may be locked away in filing cabinets. The face
may have faded from the screens. But the subversive idea has remained
buried in the collective subconscious: things are not what
we have been taught they are.
It will not, I suspect, remain buried for long.
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