Experimental
evidence for human precognition has been gathered by
by Cornell University emeritus professor Daryl Bem. The research was
published in a peer-reviewed scientific publication, the Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology.
The widely discussed paper
was entitled, “Feeling the Future: Experimental Evidence for
Anomalous Retroactive Influences on Cognition and Affect.”
In Experiment 1
described in the paper, subjects sat in front of a computer screen
that displayed two images of a screen. The 100 subjects were told
behind one of the screen was an image, and behind the other screen
was nothing. The subjects were asked to guess which screen had the
image behind it, during a series of trials running 20 minutes. When
an erotic picture was used as the image behind the screen, subjects
were able to guess correctly somewhat more often which screen had the
image behind it. With erotic pictures, they guessed correctly 53% of
the time, much more than the 50% expected by chance. With pictures
that were not erotic, the subjects got results very close to the
result expected by chance, 49.8%. Other similar experiments reported
in the paper also got more statistically significant results.
Despite
repeated claims by skeptics that these results have not been
replicated, they have actually been well-replicated, as Bem has shown
in a meta-analysis of similar experiments. His meta-analysis was
published in the paper “Feeling
the future: A meta-analysis of 90 experiments on the anomalous
anticipation of random future events.” The meta-analysis
can be found here.
Bem's
meta-analysis discussed
90 experiments from 33 laboratories in 14 different countries. The
analysis reported an overall effect of p=1.2 X 10-10.
Roughly speaking, this means the results had a probability of about 1
in 10 billion. This is a very impressive result, showing statistical
significance millions of times stronger than what is shown in typical
papers reported by mainstream media. A typical paper that gets
covered by the press will have an effect of only about p=.01 or
p=.05.
There
is also episodic evidence from human experiences outside of the
laboratory. Larry Dossey's book The
Science of Premonitions
is an excellent summary of such episodic evidence. Below are some of
the very interesting accounts in that book.
- A woman awoke at 2:30 AM, having had a nightmare that the chandelier above her baby's crib had fallen, crushing the child. In her dream she saw a clock with the numbers 4:35. She took the child out of the room with the chandelier, and brought the child to sleep with her. At 4:35 that morning, the chandelier did fall into the crib, exactly as in her dream.
- William Cox researched train accidents between 1950 and 1955, and found that in every case the number of people traveling on the trains was less than the number who rode similar trains that did not crash, suggesting a possible precognitive ability of humans.
- Quite a few people reported premonitions of the September 11, 2001 disaster before it happened. The four jet planes involved in the disaster had an average of only 21% of their seats filled, as if people had sensed something bad was going to happen.
- On May 3, 1812, John Williams had the same dream three times in a single night: a very specific dream about someone assassinating Spencer Perceval, the British Prime Minister. Eight days later Perceval was assassinated, and several of the details matched William's dream.
- A few days before he was assassinated, Abraham Lincoln had a dream that he would be assassinated.
- The famous writer Mark Twain had a dream about the death of his brother that turned out to closely match what happened a few days later.
- Several people had premonitions that something would go wrong on the Titanic before it sunk. One person who had a ticket on the ill-fated ship had two dreams that the ship would overturn, with passengers in the water.
- In 1950 a church blew up in Beatrice, Nebraska, at a time when the church normally would have had a choir practice. Amazingly, no one was hurt, because the church was empty. We can only guess at how many of these people felt a premonition of doom, and avoided their regular choir practice.
- According to research published in the Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, dozens of people had premonitions of disaster before the Aberfan avalanche that killed 144 people. Some had dreams about such a disaster before it happened.
- During World War II Winston Churchill had two premonitions that may have saved his life or those of others. One premonition led him to switch sides on his staff car. A bomb then went off near the side he moved away from. Another premonition led him to tell his kitchen staff to leave the kitchen and go underground. A bomb then destroyed the kitchen.
- Lawrence Francis Boisseau had a dream that the World Trade Center was collapsing around him. Boisseau was killed in the attack.
On
page 263 of the book Phenomena: The Secret History of the
U.S. Government's Investigations Into Extrasensory Perception and
Psychokinesis by journalist
Annie Jacobsen, we have an astonishing case of apparent precognition.
The book states:
Out
of Langford's mouth came a prophecy. “A United States Pentagon
official would be kidnapped by terrorists on the evening of 17
December 1981.”....Langford said he saw the terrorists breaking
into the Pentagon official's apartment, binding and gagging the man,
and then kidnapping him. Even more specifically, Langford saw this
high-ranking official being shoved inside a trunk and secreted in the
back of a van.
Sure enough, on
December 17, 1981 exactly such a thing happened to Brigadier General
James L. Dozier, who was kidnapped by a terrorist group called the
Red Brigades. The van even had the same color mentioned by Langford.
I
was not at all surprised to read about Boisseau's dream of the World
Trade Center collapsing, for I had such a dream myself, several
months before September 11, 2001. It was a very simple dream. In my
dream, first I was standing inside the World Trade Center, and then
the floor collapsed underneath my feet. In the dream I saw myself
plunging as the whole building seemed to collapse. That day I told my
wife that I had dreamed that the World Trade Center had collapsed.
Several months later I was in the World Trade Center when a jet plane
hit, but I was able to escape before the whole building collapsed.
This is the only dream I have ever had about a building collapsing.
This
is only one of many cases in which there was an uncanny match between
something I dreamed and something that occurred. According to a
wikipedia.org list, the most recent major earthquake in California
was the Richter 6.0 quake of August 24, 2014, which caused over 300
million dollars of damage. About 4 hours before the earthquake, at
about 2:00 AM I had a dream of a trash can mysteriously moving around
on the floor, even though no one was touching it. I thought to
myself: this might have been a dream of an earthquake tremor. Lying
in my bed, I decided to send out a Tweet describing my dream – as
soon as I woke up in the morning. When I woke up and checked the
news, I saw it was too late – the earthquake had already occurred,
a few hours after my dream.
One night I was eating dinner with my wife, watching the very entertaining and funny TV show The Carbonaro Effect. In this hidden camera reality TV show, magician Michael Carbonaro performs magic tricks in front of people who do not know that Michael is a magician and do not know that they are on TV.
I
was watching the show in my living room, while my TV screen showed
Carbonaro sitting with some other person at a table (I had not
noticed they were in a room that was an office dining area). I went
into my kitchen, where I could not see the show, and suddenly an idea
popped into my head. It was an idea for something that would be very
funny if it were done on The Carbonaro Effect show. My
idea was that Michael Carbonaro could take a frozen fish and put it
in a microwave oven, kind of saying, “I'm going to heat up my lunch
now” in front of someone. Then when he opened the microwave door,
there would be a live, moving fish about the same size as the fish he
put in the microwave. I thought to myself: that would be very funny,
to see something like that on this TV show.
I
returned from my kitchen to the living room, to watch some more of
the TV show. About 30 or 40 seconds later I saw Michael doing exactly
what I had imagined. He took a frozen fish, and put it into the
microwave. We saw the microwave oven apparently running, and then
Michael appeared to take a live fish out of the microwave. He was
saying something like, “Wow, I guess the fish came back to life,”
or something to that effect. They might have done this trick by
having a trick back door in the microwave, or maybe Michael had the
live fish up his sleeve.
I
had never seen the TV episode in question before, nor had I seen
anything like it on any TV show. But my mind somehow managed to get
the idea of exactly what was going to happen 30 or 40 seconds into
the future – a totally weird and unpredictable type of thing. What
are the odds of that happening by chance, maybe a million to one, or
a billion to one?
The
evidence for human precognition (cases of a paranormal foreknowledge
of the future) is not as strong as the evidence for extra-sensory
perception (ESP). But the evidence for human precognition is
nonetheless an additional reason for concluding that the human mind
has a source other than mere neurons.
There
is also strong evidence for another human paranormal ability: what is
known as remote viewing. Most of this evidence has been gathered by
a surprising source: the US government itself.
Remote
viewing seems to occur when a human uses only his mind to gather
information about external locations. The US government became
interested in this topic because it thought that such a technique
would have military applications, particularly in intelligence
gathering.
A
surprising fact is that between 1975 and 1995 the United States spent
many millions of dollars investigating psychic phenomena. The
investigations originated out of fears of falling behind the Soviet
Union in this area (the Soviets were believed to have a vigorous
program of psychic research). The US programs went under a variety of
names, including the famous STARGATE program to investigate remote
viewing (the alleged ability of certain people to gain knowledge of
remote locations through paranormal means).
In 1995 the government paid a group called the American Institutes for Research to evaluate the program. The group issued a report recommending that the research be canceled, and it was. But many thought there was something very strange about this sudden termination of the program. If the remote viewing programs had not been producing positive results, why were they funded for twenty years? If humans are not capable of remote viewing, it should have taken no more than twenty days to discover that through testing, not twenty years.
In fact, there is every reason to think that the US government investigations into psychic phenomena were extremely successful, in terms of providing substantial evidence for the reality of certain paranormal phenomena. The historical record indicates that the US government experiments on remote viewing did produce positive results time and time again. One remote viewer, Joe McMoneagle, was awarded a Legion of Merit award for his successful remote viewing. A remote viewer working for the US government was apparently able to detect details of a new type of Soviet sub before its existence was known to the US government. There were numerous other remarkable successes, some involving the famous psychic Ingo Swann. Swann was reported to have detected rings around Jupiter at a time before such rings had been discovered by US spacecraft.
What is also interesting is that the very American Institutes for Research report that led to a cancellation of the program contained quite a few pages indicating that it was actually successful.
In 1995 the government paid a group called the American Institutes for Research to evaluate the program. The group issued a report recommending that the research be canceled, and it was. But many thought there was something very strange about this sudden termination of the program. If the remote viewing programs had not been producing positive results, why were they funded for twenty years? If humans are not capable of remote viewing, it should have taken no more than twenty days to discover that through testing, not twenty years.
In fact, there is every reason to think that the US government investigations into psychic phenomena were extremely successful, in terms of providing substantial evidence for the reality of certain paranormal phenomena. The historical record indicates that the US government experiments on remote viewing did produce positive results time and time again. One remote viewer, Joe McMoneagle, was awarded a Legion of Merit award for his successful remote viewing. A remote viewer working for the US government was apparently able to detect details of a new type of Soviet sub before its existence was known to the US government. There were numerous other remarkable successes, some involving the famous psychic Ingo Swann. Swann was reported to have detected rings around Jupiter at a time before such rings had been discovered by US spacecraft.
What is also interesting is that the very American Institutes for Research report that led to a cancellation of the program contained quite a few pages indicating that it was actually successful.
For
example, on page 23 the report states the following (in a section
written by University of California statistician Dr. Jessica
Utts):
Using the standards applied to any other area of science, it is concluded that psychic functioning has been well established. The statistical results of the studies examined are far beyond what is expected by chance. Arguments that these results could be due to methodological flaws in the experiments are soundly refuted.
Then on page 35 of the report Dr. Utts reviews 154 experiments consisting of over 26,000 trials with 227 subjects. She says, “The statistical results were so overwhelming that results that extreme or more so would occur only about once in every 1020 such instances if chance alone is the explanation.” This is a statement that you would have to run the experiments 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 times before you would get by chance a result as significant as the results that were achieved. On page 50 of the report, Dr. Utts concludes the following:
It is clear to this author that anomalous cognition is possible and has been demonstrated. This conclusion is not based on belief, but rather on commonly accepted scientific criteria.
Journalist Annie Jacobsen has written an excellent new 500-page book entitled Phenomena: The Secret History of the U.S. Government's Investigations Into Extrasensory Perception and Psychokinesis. The book is a very fascinating look into decades of governmental involvement in paranormal phenomena.
We are told on page
72 that in 1960 a Soviet scientist said this:
Today
the American Navy is investigating telepathy on their atomic
submarines. Soviet scientists conducted a great many successful
telepathy tests over a quarter of a century ago.
On page 78 the book
tells us that the Russian woman known as Nina Kulagina (born as Ninel
Kulagina) was filmed apparently stopping the heart of a frog through
psychokinesis. We are told, “The film caused uproar within the
American defense community.” Page 79 tells us that in one test
Kulagina attempted to increase the heart rate of a skeptical
physician. An analyst wrote, “Abrupt changes were noted in both
people [Kulagina and the skeptical physician] within one minute after
the experiment began.”
Page 95 tells us
that psychic Uri Geller said that the president of Egypt (Gamal Abdel
Nasser) “had just died or is about to die,” at a time shortly
before Nasser unexpectedly died of a heart attack. In a declassified
documents obtained as part of a 2015 Freedom of Information Act, a
researcher named Puharich claimed that he and another person had seen
Geller “breaking a gold ring held in another person's clenched
fist; concentrating on a pair of bimetal-type thermometers, and
selectively making the temperature rise 6 to 7 degrees Fahrenheit on
one or the other instrument; starting broken clocks and watches
solely by concentration; moving the hands of a watch forward or
backward without any physical contact with the watch,” and also
“telepathy...with 90% accuracy in telepathy tests, where Dr.
Puharich would think of a 3-digit number” (page 98).
The
government funded lab tests of Geller, who did well in the
clairvoyance tests reported here.
Another psychic investigated by scientists using government funds was
Ingo Swann. In one test with Swann, he was asked to describe a
“superconducting-shielded magnetometer” he had never seen. At
this time witnesses observed a strange disturbance in the output of
the device, something they couldn't explain (page 134). In one
impromptu test, a scientist found a small moth and placed it in a
sealed box. Asked to describe what was in the box, Swann said it was
something like a leaf, “except that it seems very much alive, like
it's even moving” (page 136).
Under controlled
laboratory conditions, Geller was able to guess the faces of unseen
dice with an accuracy that had a chance probability of 1 in a
million, while in another clairvoyance test he produced results with
a chance probability of 1 in a trillion (page 143-144). A
psychokinesis test involving Geller and some fancy scientific
apparatus “indicated an apparent ability of Geller to affect the
apparatus by an as yet unidentified means,” a scientist reported
(page 144).
The government began
to fund a program to test the feasibility of remote viewing, a
process in which a person attempts by clairvoyance to obtain a
physical description of a remote location. The program ended up being
funded by the government for many years, because it continued to
achieve impressive results. On page 161 a report is quoted on Pat
Price's remote viewing of a secret location: “The names on the
folders were correct...The location of the doors and the elevator,
the number of floors, where the cabinets were located. The color of
the cabinet was correct...It was all correct.”
Skeptics are fond of
mentioning that Geller was unable to bend a spoon on the Johnny
Carson show, but they neglect to discuss a later radio appearance on
November 23, 1973 in which Geller asked for audience participation.
Not only was Geller able to bend a spoon to the host's satisfaction,
but phone calls started flooding in from the audience reporting
things such as bent spoons in their houses or the hands of broken
watches starting. Shortly thereafter a newspaper reported these
results: “Clocks and watches restarted: a total of 1,031; forks and
spoons bent or broken, a total of 293; other objects bent or broken:
a total of fifty one.” (See page 174-176 of Jacobsen's book for
details.)
The book includes
some details of successes in remote viewing. On page 213 to 216 we
are told about a remote viewer named Graff was apparently able to use
a psychic “map dowsing” technique to specify the coordinates
where a downed plane had crashed. Former president Jimmy Carter
described the incident by saying:
[She]
gave some latitude and longitude figures. We focused our satellite
camera on that point and the plane was there.
On page 218 to 219
we have a story of how a psychic infuriated an army general. The
government had hatched a plan to hide atomic missiles in a “shell
game” setup in which the missiles would move around on rail tracks
between different locations, making it hard for the Russians to guess
where the missile was. But in a guessing simulation in which the
chance of success was 10 percent per guess, a psychic was able to
guess the correct location of the simulated moving missile 80% of the
time. An infuriated general ordered a halt in ESP tests.
On page 235 to 236
we are told how Joe McMoneagle used remote viewing to psychically
provide details of a new type of Soviet submarine, before anyone else
in the US knew about them. The book says:
Joe
McMoneagle had provided seminal information on the Typhoon submarine
before any other intelligence asset in the United States. Fort
Meades's Detachment G now had what is known in military and
intelligence circles as an “intelligence first.”
On page 245 through
246 the book tells us about psychokenesis experiments in China:
A young girl could move an object across a desk using only her mind. Another could cause a flower bud inside a sealed jar to blossom in a matter of seconds. A boy could snap tree branches from a distance of several feet. Children with EHBF were tested in psychokinesis experiments. They could “turn the hands of watches, bend metal, break matches, and cause spontaneous combustion of flammable materials at the wave of a hand,” wrote an analyst with DIA.
On
page 257 to 259 we are told that during the 1980's an American
aerospace engineer named Jack Houck began hosting “spoon bending
parties” in which people tried to bend spends by thought alone.
Supposedly more than 1000 people were able to successfully bend
spoons at such parties. This
document in a recently declassified CIA repository describes these
parties. The document says that when there was one helper between 20
people, the success rate would be between 80% and 100%.
Referring to PK
(mind-over-matter psychokinesis) and “warm forming,” meaning a
person experiencing heat in a spoon he is trying to bend through
mind-over-matter, the document states this:
In
the spring of 1983, Cynthia Siegel, a graduate student at the John F.
Kennedy University in Orinda, California did a survey of the first
800 people to attend Houck's PK Parties. Of the 311 people who
returned her questionnaire, 72% believed that they experienced warm
forming...A very high percentage of the people attending PK Parties
now believed that PK really works.
Such an account
should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with the table-tipping
phenomenon that was very popular for quite a few years during the
nineteenth century. People used to gather together and put their
hands on a table, urging the table to rise. Very often heavy tables
would rise in a way no one could explain. You can see amazing
demonstrations of such a thing by going to youtube.com and searching
for “table tipping.”
On page 263 of
Jacobsen's book we are told this astonishing account:
Out
of Langford's mouth came a prophecy. “A United States Pentagon
official would be kidnapped by terrorists on the evening of 17
December 1981.”....Langford said he saw the terrorists breaking
into the Pentagon official's apartment, binding and gagging the man,
and then kidnapping him. Even more specifically, Langford saw this
high-ranking official being shoved inside a trunk and secreted in the
back of a van.
Sure enough, on
December 17, 1981 exactly such a thing happened to Brigadier General
James L. Dozier, who was kidnapped by a terrorist group called the
Red Brigades. The van even had the same color mentioned by Langford.
On
page 321 we are told of a remote viewing session in which Angela
Dellafiora described with remarkable accuracy a randomly chosen
target. On page 333 to 334 we are told how the US government
apparently used Uri Geller to try to psychically influence a Soviet
official so that he would support an arms control treaty, one the
Soviets did agree to support. We are told on page 10 of this
document (from a CIA repository) that “Dellafiora eschewed
remote-viewing and instead 'channeled' her psychic data through a
group of entities named 'Maurice' and 'George.'”
On page 343-345 of
the book we are told of a case of a remote viewer named Paul Smith
employed by the government to obtain information through
clairvoyance. On May 15, 2017 he described an incident similar to
what happened to the USS Stark two days later.
On page 358-360 we
are told how Dellafiora said that a fugitive (believed to be out of
the country) was in "Lowell, Wyoming." When informed that
there was no such town, but only a Lovell, Wyoming, Dellafiora said,
"That's probably it." After the fugitive was found, it was
determined that he had actually been in Lovell, Wyoming.
Government-sponsored
remote viewing investigations such as the StarGate project were
supposedly closed down in the 1990's, although we have no idea
whether such research is continuing in secret. On page 380 of
Jacobsen's book we are told the government embarked in 2014 on a
multi-million dollar program to explore premonition and intuition, so
that sailors and Marines can make better use of it.
As
Jacobsen's mesmerizing book documents, evidence for paranormal
phenomena is very strong. Skeptics use two techniques to try to sweep
such evidence under the rug. The first technique is simply the
technique of "total denial," in which they dishonestly
state that there is "no evidence whatsoever" for such
phenomena. Another technique is for skeptics to invent imaginative
explanations trying to account for the facts. As Jacobsen notes on
page 173, an article in New
Scientist tried
to account for ESP in people like Geller by suggesting that Geller
was using a radio receiver implanted in his tooth. Will our skeptics
next be telling us that secretly implanted bionic fingers are behind
all the cases of spoon bending?
The
CIA recently declassified a set of documents that include extensive
references to paranormal activies. An
interesting paper in the CIA documents can be found here.
It discusses a Chinese practice called qigong, and claims that 20
million people were practicing it by the 1980's. (The Washington Post
describes qigong as "a 5000-year old Eastern healing art.")
The paper discusses some “qigong masters.” A man named Zhang
Baosheng is described as having the ability to read sealed envelopes,
remove small insects from sealed bottles, burn cloth with a touch of
his fingers, and write a message on a paper sealed in a box. The
paper asserts: “Countless tests were performed, all under tightly
controlled conditions, and their results published without a single
attempted fraud.”
Another
paper
discusses efforts in China during the 1980's to find children with
“extraordinary functions of the human body” (EFHB). We are told
“many hundreds of children with EFHB were found throughout the
nation.” A test in Beijing of ESP in children around age 10
reported that 40 to 63 percent of children around age 10 were found
to have EFHB “to some extent.”
There is mention of the same person figuring prominently in the previously mentioned report, Zhang Baosheng. The report says he could “perform incredible miracles.” We are told, “Zhang caused objects, such as someone's photo identification card or personal name stamp to move to another room which had not been entered, or caused a torn personal letter to be restored to a single piece.” The paper also claims that Zhang could remove from sealed bottles (in a paranormal manner) things such as insects or small pills.
There is mention of the same person figuring prominently in the previously mentioned report, Zhang Baosheng. The report says he could “perform incredible miracles.” We are told, “Zhang caused objects, such as someone's photo identification card or personal name stamp to move to another room which had not been entered, or caused a torn personal letter to be restored to a single piece.” The paper also claims that Zhang could remove from sealed bottles (in a paranormal manner) things such as insects or small pills.
The
paper also says that another “qigong master” named Yan Xing was
associated with many paranormal healings, and “performed various
transformations of the physical characteristics of samples at a
distance of several meters,” also doing the same thing at a
distance of 2000 kilometers.
Another
100-page document
discussed Chinese paranormal research, while also advancing some
interesting philosophical ideas. On page 11 the document says:
There were a number of
experiments called “psychokinesis” experiments where the subject
with paranormal abilities would turn the hand of watches, bend metal,
break matches, pluck off twigs...as well as cause exposure of sealed
unexposed film, and “spontaneous combustion” of some flammable
materials with the wave of a hand, without touching the materials in
the experiment. Successes in these experiments followed one after
another.
All of the evidence mentioned in this long post counts as evidence that your mind comes from some source other than the brain. There is no way in which a brain could be producing phenomena such as precognition, telekinesis, clairvoyance and remote-viewing. But if your mind is not produced by your brain, but by some other unknown reality, then it could have such powers.
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