PARANORMAL PHENOMENA PROFESSIONAL
I say this with some confidence, even in the face of the claptrap often associated with claims of the paranormal and the dull or cunning shysters who try to sell bogus “psychic readings” or inflated “remote viewing courses.” There’s substantial evidence - both anecdotal and laboratorial - for some paranormal phenomena, but it takes scientific savvy to sort out the trustworthy from the vast piles of dross.Īlthough the professional organization of academically qualified psi specialists has been an affiliate of the American Association for the Advancement of Science since 1969, its discipline remains the target of shrugs and eye-rolling from most scientists. One comes in two hefty volumes, while the other is a monstrous paperback. This review examines two formidable books presenting evidence and preliminary theory for psi (the catch-all term for such apparent impossibilities). It turns out that paranormal believers are right to accept the reality of at least some anomalous phenomena. What of the paranormal? Popular acceptance of telepathy (fetching knowledge directly from somebody else’s mind), remote viewing (detecting data from afar), precognition (accurately foretelling the future), and psychokinesis (moving stuff by wishing it) has been clocked at 41 percent and above.
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Others think they’ll go to heaven or perhaps suffer eternal punishment in hell. Meanwhile, 42 percent accept the reality of ghosts, 29 percent put their faith in astrology, and a quarter of the population think they’ll be reincarnated in another body. A Harris poll a few years back reported that only 47 percent of adult Americans accepted the reality of evolution: more than half the population still denies the basic lynchpin of scientific biology. MANY PEOPLE ACCEPT AS TRUE, or at least partially true, numerous assertions that seem laughable or absurd to critics.