ESP
(extrasensory perception)
ESP is most commonly called the "sixth
sense." It is sensory information that an individual
receives which comes beyond the ordinary five senses sight,
hearing, smell, taste, and touch. It can provide the individual
with information of the present, past, and future; as it seems
to originate in a second, or alternate reality.
History:
The term "ESP" was used in 1870
by Sir Richard Burton. A French researcher, Dr. Paul Joire,
in 1892 used the term ESP to describe the ability of person
who had been hypnotized or were in a trance state to externally
sense things without using their ordinary senses.
However, the phenomena of ESP activity has
been indicated much earlier, some say even in Biblical times.
Although there is no clear evidence as to the certainty of
the phenomena it has attracted the attention and enthusiasm
of many throughout the centuries.
In the 1920's a Munich ophthalmologist, Dr.
Rudolph Tischner, used ESP in describing the "externalization
of sensibility." Then in the 1930s the American parapsychologist
J. B. Rhine popularized the term to include psychic phenomena
similar to sensory functions. Rhine was among the first parapsychologists
to test ESP phenomena in the laboratory.
The first systematic study of ESP was conducted
in 1882, when the Society for Psychical Research was founded
n London. The journals of this society Proceedings and Journal
were published as well as other publications in the United
States and the Netherlands. Soon other countries were reporting
similar findings.
However, these first studies of ESP were rarely
experimental. The studies consisted of mostly spontaneous
incidents that were located. Many of the individuals studied
were self-claimed "sensitives" or psychics. Rarely
were they examined under anything resembling laboratory conditions.
The researchers conducting the examinations resembled prosecuting
lawyers. The subjects were bombarded with questions, those
standing up the best were judged creditable.
The
Rhine experiments:
The first card-guessing ESP experiments were
conducted by Rhine at Duke University in 1930. The cards consisted
of five designs, now called ESP symbols, a square, a circle,
a plus sign, a five pointed star, and a set of three wavy
lines. The symbols were printed singly, in black ink, on cards
resembling playing cards.
In the classic Rhine experiments on ESP, the
subject tries to guess or "call" the order of the
five symbols when they are randomly arranged in a deck of
25 ESP cards. The likelihood of calling a card correctly by
chance is one in five. Therefore, it is possible to calculate
how often a particular score is likely to occur by chance
in a given number of calls. It was Rhine'' argument that when
his subjects made high scores that could be expected by chance
only once in a thousand tries, or once in a million, they
displayed "extrachance" results, or ESP.
The early experiments faced several criticisms.
Two were automatically dismissed: (1) The statistics were
unsound which was refuted by the president of the American
Mathematical Association. (2) That ESP is physical impossibility
which begs the question.
Several appropriate criticisms were accepted
by Rhine which he used to improve his experiments. Examples
are: (1) There may have been sensory cues. An example of this
is that if a strong light shined on the back of the ESP cards,
it might be possible to see the symbol through the back. Currently
to avoid this possibility the target card is covered by an
oblique shielding, or kept far from the subject. (2) An experimenter
that knows the target might whisper it or otherwise give a
cue to the subject. Presently no one in contact with the subject
knows the target. (3) More hits might be recorded than actually
occurred.. Currently hits and responses are recorded by machine
or by someone not knowing either.
Three criticism remain: (1) The "file
drawer" effect. Only favorable results are published.
Larger experimental data like one in a million make this unlikely.
(2) Results are inconsistent and not repeatable. This can
be remedied statistically. (3) Charges of fraud. Can be refuted
by other reputable investigators obtaining similar results.
There was a finding which seemed puzzling
until better understood. While some label it "missing-ESP"
it might be thought of as reverse-ESP too. It is found among
subject who dislike ESP. Even though the subjects were consciously
trying to achieve good scores, they scored lower than chance.
An unconscious factor seemed to come into play here. Experimenters
have found they can predict higher scores for some groups
(for example, those who are interested and relaxed), and lower
scores for other groups (those who show fear, negativity,
or boredom). The factor of missing-ESP indicates why ESP data
is unreliable.
More recently computer games are increasingly
being used to test ESP. The computer is programmed so that
a random series determines the targets, and the subjects attempt
to outguess the computer.
Another factor that researchers and experimenters
must watched for in ESP and all psychical experiments is preconceived
or previously learned knowledge. This concerns any knowledge
which might influence the subject's activity. For example,
a person might say she sensed her son would telephone her
on that certain day at that specific time. If the son had
previously called her in such a fashion, then her sensation
must be suspect for it might have been based upon knowledge
of her son's previous performance. A person might strongly
feel that he would receive an email message from a friend
on a certain day, and he does; but, can this be considered
a ESP phenomenon considering that this person had not head
from the other person for sometime and was expecting the message.
The point being made is that when dealing with psychic phenomena
all factors must be considered when examining the performance.
ESP
in General:
In New Frontiers of the Mind (1937) Rhine
said that ESP experiments were changing the way people thought
the mind sensed information. Historically learned people held
the human mind received information through the ordinary five
senses, and that therefore, the mind is subject to the laws
of the mechanical world. Laboratory tests have attempted to
determine the existence of ESP, and discover the physical
mechanism by which it operates. "The mind has been equated
with the brain, and scientists search to discover how ESP
registers in the brain/mind."
However, increasing evidence is demonstrating
that ESP does exist, but it cannot be explained or quantified
by physical laws; and furthermore, that the mind (consciousness)
and the brain are two separate entities. Simultaneously, research
in quantum physics points to the existence of a second, nonmaterial
universe. So, the time is fast approaching when Western scientists
must come to terms with the Eastern mystical concept: "that
an extrasensory force exists in another realty, and intersects
and integrates with the physical world."
In function, ESP is dissimilar to the ordinary
senses. There is no location like governs the other senses
which receive information through various parts of the body;
and it is not dependent on any of the other five senses. ESP
is independent of such factors as geography, time, intelligence,
age, or education.
ESP has been given various names. In the 19th
century is was called "cryptesthesia," later it
was labeled "relesthesia" which since became clairvoyance,
or "seeing in the distance." It was Rhine who coined
the term "general extrasensory perception" (GESP)
to include both telepathy and clairvoyance. Later the term
psi was designated to cover ESP and PK.
It was researcher Lousia E. Rhine who proposed
the theory that ESP starts in the unconscious, a storehouse
of memories, hopes and fears. At this point a contact is made
between the objective world and the center of the mind. The
person remains unaware of this contact until or unless the
information is brought to the conscious level. Also, the psychiatrist
Carl G. Jung proposed a similar theory that the conscious
mind has subliminal psychic access to the collective unconscious,
a vast repository of accumulative wisdom and experience of
the human race.
Others theories attempting to explain ESP
have been produced. One such theory involved macrophages,
cells present in connective tissue, lymph nodes, and bone
marrow and tied to nerve endings. The person thought these
might be the body's ESP organs, sending and receiving impressions
below the normal perceptive level. Such cells are more sensitive
and active during childhood, but deteriorate without proper
diet.
Some theories involve the discussion of two
subconsciousnesses, the second one sometimes called the superconsciousness,
soul, subliminal self, transcendent ego, dream self and several
other terms. The argument rest on the hypothesis that two
realities exist, the physical one and a second one. ESP can
occur when there is a integration between both realities.
This occurs infrequently only when the barriers between the
realities are broken which does not happen often because if
it did all unconscious thought would flood and overflow the
conscious mind. A condition which the mind could not withstand.
When considering types or forms that ESP might
take dreams become an important factor, especially in relationship
to the theory of two realities. Upon this basis dreams were
separated into two categories: realistic, vivid having detailed
imagery of the information conveyed, and intuition which includes
"gut feelings." forebodings, and premonitions; and
unrealistic dreams containing fantastical imagery and symbols.
Hallucinations that relayed visual and auditory information
also were included. Rhine suggested the reason for dreams
being efficient carriers of ESP messages is because the barriers
surrounding the conscious mind appear to be thinnest.
It has been discovered that the natural tendency
for ESP in individuals can be distorted by previous prejudices,
thoughts, and conditioning. Likewise, inaccurate ESP messages
may be the result of distortions and blockages of the conscious
mind. However, in times of crisis such as accidents and death
of loved ones, ESP messages seem to occur spontaneously. It
is theorized that perhaps trauma and shock enable negative
information to penetrate the subliminal barriers more easily
than happy information.
There
are theories concerning individuals who possess ESP and how
they acquired this ability. One theory holds that some people
such as seers, prophets and diviners were bore with the gift
which was inherited by their relatives. Another theory hold
that it is` a primordial sense which has decreased in populations
as their cultures advanced. Still another theory claims ESP
is a supersense which evolves in the nervous system.
-
A.G.H.
|