Local or Nonlocal: A Chicken and Egg Question

There is an argument in Parapsychology whether psychic ability is a product of neural activity in the brain or of a non-corporeal mind. The first group are known as materialists and are able to point to some promising experiments both in neurobiology and quantum retrocausality. If all psychic ability is precognition, then perhaps the brain is getting information from the future in order to act on it in the present. As Stargate physicist Ed May puts it, the brain’s psychic retina, which has yet to be found, might be obtaining information from the future because, at the quantum level, things are time-symmetric or can go forward and backward in time. Stuart Hameroff an Anesthesiologist is looking into the structures of neurons in the brain, specifically the microtubules, which may receive information at a quantum level and which may either be the seat of consciousness, or just may be able to tap into the universal consciousness. I know, it’s hard to wrap your brain around your brain.

The group of no-local parapsychologists, such as Dean Radin, believe that the brain may perceive information psychically but it doesn’t start there. When I asked for some clarification, those in the room pointed to Near-Death experiences where the brain was supposedly non-functional at the time. “How can a dead brain perceive anything?” is their argument. Their hypothesis is that consciousness has a non-corporeal origin and utilizes the brain’s pre-frontal cortex just for interpretation. Both materialists and non-localists are pointing to quantum entanglement or retrocausality as the potential reason why psychic ability is not time-dependent.

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Cern is constantly adding new knowledge about the particles that make up atoms. Other physicists are looking into something called “entanglement” and yet more are considering the waveforms of String Theory. All of these are amazingly complex mathematical constructs that even physicists struggle to comprehend completely, yet parapsychologists will argue that Entanglement must explain psi (that unknown which makes psychic ability work). Entanglement was a problem for Albert Einstein who called it “Spooky Action at a Distance” whereby two particles will share the same attributes as soon as one of them is observed regardless of how far apart they are. Quantum entanglement is used in quantum computers, ultra-precise clocks, and cryptography. It also may be why birds and other organisms may be able to orient themselves via an internal magnetic compass. The question of material or non-local can only be answered through experimental testing. Right now, the materialists are winning the argument because they have the brain and particles to test. Non-locals, though, have experiments that show immediate response effects involving people who are separated so that they have no normal means of communication.

Consciousness exists like a vibration affecting all matter in different ways rather than being a construct of neural function they say, a kind of panpsychism: every dynamic, living thing has a level of conscious intent. Max Planck, the original Quantum physicist said “I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness. Everything that we talk about, everything that we regard as existing, postulates consciousness.” Essentially, which happened first? Brain or Mind? The jury is still out but when the scientific powers-that-be finally agree, it will be the next great leap of scientific endeavor.

Book Review: “Our Secret Powers: Telepathy, Clairvoyance, and Precognition. A Short History of (Nearly) Everything Paranormal” by Terje Simonsen

I do hope you’re enjoying the educational aspect of this blog but, I confess, it is a spit in the ocean compared to the vastness of fiction, non-fiction, periodicals and white papers in the topic of Parapsychology. I have read a few dozen or more to diminish my ignorance, and though they have been helpful, I have found “Our Secret Powers” to be my new favorite go-to book. It is filled with so much enjoyably wrought information, I struggle to disseminate it properly in a simple blog entry, but I will try to touch on some of my favorite highlights.

I enjoy watching the Youtube channel “New Thinking Allowed” hosted by Jeffrey Mishlove which pretty much covers everything parapsychological amongst other esoteric topics. I stumbled across an interview with the author Terje Simonsen who is a Norwegian journalist of esoteric traditions. Though much of the interview touched on the previous books the author has penned, they also spoke a bit about “Our Secret Powers” which intrigued me enough to purchase the Ebook.  

If you’re a die-hard paranormal fan or believe in ESP, this book will educate you on the history of parapsychology, the types of ESP that exist and provide some fun stories of psychics in action. However, its main goal is to convince fence-sitters and mild skeptics that ESP and paranormal phenomena do exist and that scientists other than parapsychologists have found compelling evidence to support ESP. The author provides logical arguments to support his position and even outs some scientists (Marie Curie and Isaac Newton among them) as believers in occultism.

Chapter One begins with the recent archeological finding of King Richard III’s remains under a parking lot in London. The account of Philippa Langley, a screenplay writer and member of the Richard III society, is that after having spent many years researching Richard III and where his body might be buried, she had a feeling that she was in the right spot. Ironically, the spot had a letter R spray-painted next to it. Several more stories of successful excavations through clairvoyant means follow. The next chapter involves the Cold War fear that Soviet psychics were using their powers to harm important Americans. or find strategic places using Remote Viewing. The U.S. launches it’s competing barrage with what would eventually be called the Stargate Project. We learn more about the relationship between occultism and the burgeoning field of parapsychology and the anthropologists like Charles Darwin who wrote about unusual experiences on their expeditions. One chapter delves into the question about consciousness, another into thought yet another into the physics of ESP and more about transpersonal psychology. The topics run amok.

However, threaded throughout is the question “How did this happen?” How did a man named Swedenborg in 1759 describe a fire in Stockholm from about fifty miles away as it was happening? How did objects appear in mid-air in a kindergarten room and land on the floor unscathed? How did a man heal a baby suffering from months of cholic without ever having met the child? Do we live in a world where a field of consciousness links us all together? Is time a block where future and past are simply a construct of our brains?

Also liberally peppered amongst the anecdotes looms the scientist’s dilemma. There is no society more authoritarian than that of the experimental scientist. They must toe the line of conventionality building upon the structures of their predecessors never to deviate or suffer censure. Those mavericks who point and laugh at convention send their white papers to stuffy periodicals hoping for publication. But more often than not they suffer the worst possible fate: “The Emperor’s Wrath”. Scathing rebukes from fellow scientists follow such “offending” articles and the funding for these mavericks dries up. Parapsychologists can’t even catch a break on Wikipedia! Scientific method insists upon replication of experiments to prove the hypothesis, but paranormal phenomena are not so easily replicated. As a result, parapsychology, more of a non-physical, soft science, receives scorn from physical scientists. If more of those skeptical academics were to read this book, it might bring them around to the possibility that parapsychological study is worth expanding their views beyond the scientific method.

Winner Adjacent

When I got on the good ship “Psychic Adventure”, I did not think myself psychically adept. Although I am far from adept, I have become more aware of events that may have more of a psychic nature than coincidence or inductive reasoning would explain.

I do not win things. On average, I will win one raffle or contest a decade. I do not often win games either which is kind of a bummer since my family are game players. After a raffle event where everyone at my, albeit, small table won something but me, I decided to pay closer attention at future raffle events.

I attended holiday dinner conversing with the three people closest to me but had no contact with the other three farther down the table. At the end of dinner, it was time for the raffles to be called. I calculated that there were a total of seventy people, give-or-take, and eleven possible prizes. I turned to my neighbor and said “I want to let you know that I am a winner adjacent. I will not win but there is a good chance you will.” and she did.

Of the eleven prizes, four were won by the other six people at my table. I also noted that some of the numbers called were one or two digits off from my number though the winner was not at my table. So one-tenth of the room got 28% of the prizes while others having numbers similar to mine got prizes, too. I’m no math whiz, but this seemed statistically significant. I notified John Kruth of the Rhine Institute since I had been a test subject of his in the past. He agrees that this is a significant effect, especially since it wasn’t a one off. I also couldn’t see how this was either coincidence or inductive reasoning on my part so how did it happen? Was it micro- psychokinesis? Had I some kind of effect on the tickets that were drawn? I can’t imagine it was precognition since the concentration of winners was near me and I hadn’t figured out who was to win throughout the room in a less concentrated fashion.

I know there are small experiments going on having to do with games of chance and psychokinesis. The casinos in Las Vegas feel those experimenters are successful enough to ban them from their premises. Have they done anything with passing on “the luck”? Not that I’m aware of, but I’d be happy to participate in any experiment that will pay my way to Vegas :P.

Spoonbenders: a book by Daryl Gregory

I  attended a talk given by Dr Joe Gallenberger last month on psychokinesis and winning in Las Vegas where he had briefly described spoon bending that seems to defy the laws of physics. When I was growing up, a self-proclaimed psychic known as Uri Geller would go on talk shows bending spoons at the neck between the bowl and the handle. Two rather famous people, Dean Radin and Michael Crichton, claimed success at gatherings known as “PK parties”. Mr Radin had folded the bowl of the spoon over without effort in front of several witnesses. He later attempted to bend the bowl of a similar spoon with conscious force but was unsuccessful without the aid of pliers. I asked Dr Gallenberger if there was a study done on spoons bent by mechanical force versus those bent by supposed psychic means. Apparently, there was a physicist, Dr Wilbur Franklin, who had placed spoons bent by Uri Geller and those bent by the usual method in an electron microscope and the findings are described in a book called “The Spoon Benders”. I could not find the book Dr Gallenberger recommended but did come across this award-winning work of fiction.

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St. Augustine

Here is a short story submitted to the Rhine Short Story contest 2017. It’s based on a true story. Enjoy 🙂

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The Evil Oneironaut

Here’s a short story my husband, Brian and I submitted to the Rhine Short Story Contest 2018. It is meant to be for a Halloween party so it’s creepier than I would normally write. If you want a good Psy related scare, then tarry on dear reader… Continue reading “The Evil Oneironaut”

Remote Viewing versus Out-of-Body Experience

“Is it live or is it Memorex” said the twentieth-century advertisement for that brand of audio tape. According to Memorex, Ella Fitzgerald could shatter a glass even if her voice was a taped recording. Yes tape, not digital. This is a metaphor to describe the difference between Out-of Body-Experience (OBE), and Remote Viewing.

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An Uncommon Experience

For the last three years, a very generous person who strongly believes in psychic ability and the paranormal opens his beautiful and ethereal Uncommon Garden to the Rhine for a fundraiser. This amazing place is nestled in a community in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. This year, we were serenaded with music that sounded like the soundtrack to “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”. I could almost see the misted mountains of China as I listened to them.

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Mentalism versus Telepathy

Calliope (the main character in my series) grew up among a special group of entertainers in unusual venues such as local State Fairs or Renaissance Faires. In North Carolina the State Fair can have over a million people attend during the week it’s open in October and the Carolina Ren Faire can have even more. Clair, Callie’s mother, is like the Carnival Medium in a semi-darkened tent surrounded by symbols of the mystical. She might have a small table with two or three small chairs or stools surrounding it. If she were a Tarot reader, her deck of cards would be arrayed over the surface of a tie-dyed cloth in a pattern well known to Tarot experts everywhere. There might even be the smoke of patchouli incense wafting through the close quarters as you sit in rapt attention awaiting news of your fate. The question in your mind is whether this Carnival Medium, Palmist or Tarot card reader truly has the Second Sight or if they are just really good at observing human behavior. Continue reading “Mentalism versus Telepathy”

Poltergeists: Psychic or Something Else?

If you’re a fan of the so-called Ghost Hunter shows that are all over cable television, please move on. There isn’t anything for you to see here. I require a lot of evidence before I will agree there is a possible haunting. This blog article is based on information from established Parapsychologists who have researched the phenomena known as Poltergeist hauntings. Many of them would tell you that there is not a discarnate entity involved in a majority of them, the rest simply may shrug their shoulders and respond “Could be anything.” That’s the fun part of Parapsychology: it’s open to possibilities. Continue reading “Poltergeists: Psychic or Something Else?”