fbpx
Wikipedia

Clairvoyance

Clairvoyance (/klɛərˈvɔɪ.əns/; from French clair 'clear', and voyance 'vision') is the magical ability to gain information about an object, person, location, or physical event through extrasensory perception.[2][3] Any person who is claimed to have such ability is said to be a clairvoyant (/klɛərˈvɔɪ.ənt/)[4] ("one who sees clearly").

Diagram by the French esotericist Paul Sédir to explain clairvoyance[1]

Claims for the existence of paranormal and psychic abilities such as clairvoyance have not been supported by scientific evidence.[5] Parapsychology explores this possibility, but the existence of the paranormal is not accepted by the scientific community.[6] The scientific community widely considers parapsychology, including the study of clairvoyance, a pseudoscience.[7][8][9][10][11][12]

Usage

Pertaining to the ability of clear-sightedness, clairvoyance refers to the paranormal ability to see persons and events that are distant in time or space. It can be divided into roughly three classes: precognition, the ability to perceive or predict future events, retrocognition, the ability to see past events, and remote viewing, the perception of contemporary events happening outside the range of normal perception.[13]

In history and religion

Throughout history, there have been numerous places and times in which people have claimed themselves or others to be clairvoyant.

In several religions, stories of certain individuals being able to see things far removed from their immediate sensory perception are commonplace, especially within pagan religions where oracles were used. Prophecy often involved some degree of clairvoyance, especially when future events were predicted. This ability has sometimes been attributed to a higher power rather than to the person performing it.

Christianity

A number of Christian saints were said to be able to see or know things that were far removed from their immediate sensory perception as a kind of gift from God, including Padre Pio and Anne Catherine Emmerich. Jesus Christ in the Gospels is also recorded as being able to know things that were far removed from his immediate human perception. Some Christians today also share the same claim.

Jainism

In Jainism, clairvoyance is regarded as one of the five kinds of knowledge. The beings of hell and heaven (devas) are said to possess clairvoyance by birth. According to Jain text Sarvārthasiddhi, "this kind of knowledge has been called avadhi as it ascertains matter in downward range or knows objects within limits".[14]

Anthroposophy

Rudolf Steiner, famous as a clairvoyant himself,[15][16] claimed that for a clairvoyant, it is easy to confuse his own emotional and spiritual being with the objective spiritual world.[17][18]

Parapsychology

Early research

The earliest record of somnambulist clairvoyance is credited to the Marquis de Puységur, a follower of Franz Mesmer, who in 1784 was treating a local dull-witted peasant named Victor Race. During treatment, Race reportedly would go into trance and undergo a personality change, becoming fluent and articulate, and giving diagnosis and prescription for his own disease as well as those of others.[19] Clairvoyance was a reported ability of some mediums during the spiritualist period of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and psychics of many descriptions have claimed clairvoyant ability up to the present day.[20]

 
Character reader and clairvoyant in a British travelling show of the 1940s, collected by Arthur James Fenwick (1878–1957)

Early researchers of clairvoyance included William Gregory, Gustav Pagenstecher, and Rudolf Tischner.[21] Clairvoyance experiments were reported in 1884 by Charles Richet. Playing cards were enclosed in envelopes and a subject put under hypnosis attempted to identify them. The subject was reported to have been successful in a series of 133 trials but the results dropped to chance level when performed before a group of scientists in Cambridge. J. M. Peirce and E. C. Pickering reported a similar experiment in which they tested 36 subjects over 23,384 trials which did not obtain above chance scores.[22]

Ivor Lloyd Tuckett (1911) and Joseph McCabe (1920) analyzed early cases of clairvoyance and came to the conclusion they were best explained by coincidence or fraud.[23][24] In 1919, the magician P. T. Selbit staged a séance at his own flat in Bloomsbury. The spiritualist Arthur Conan Doyle attended the séance and declared the clairvoyance manifestations to be genuine.[25][26]

A significant development in clairvoyance research came when J. B. Rhine, a parapsychologist at Duke University, introduced a standard methodology, with a standard statistical approach to analyzing data, as part of his research into extrasensory perception. A number of psychological departments attempted to repeat Rhine's experiments, with failure. W. S. Cox (1936) from Princeton University with 132 subjects produced 25,064 trials in a playing card ESP experiment. Cox concluded, "There is no evidence of extrasensory perception either in the 'average man' or of the group investigated or in any particular individual of that group. The discrepancy between these results and those obtained by Rhine is due either to uncontrollable factors in experimental procedure or to the difference in the subjects."[27] Four other psychological departments failed to replicate Rhine's results.[28][29] It was revealed that Rhine's experiments contained methodological flaws and procedural errors.[30][31][32]

Eileen Garrett was tested by Rhine at Duke University in 1933 with Zener cards. Certain symbols that were placed on the cards and sealed in an envelope, and she was asked to guess their contents. She performed poorly and later criticized the tests by claiming the cards lacked a psychic energy called "energy stimulus" and that she could not perform clairvoyance to order.[33] The parapsychologist Samuel Soal and his colleagues tested Garrett in May 1937. Most of the experiments were carried out in the Psychological Laboratory at the University College London. A total of over 12,000 guesses were recorded but Garrett failed to produce above chance level.[34] In his report Soal wrote "In the case of Mrs. Eileen Garrett we fail to find the slightest confirmation of Dr. J. B. Rhine's remarkable claims relating to her alleged powers of extra-sensory perception. Not only did she fail when I took charge of the experiments, but she failed equally when four other carefully trained experimenters took my place."[35]

Remote viewing

Remote viewing, also known as remote sensing, remote perception, telesthesia and travelling clairvoyance is the alleged paranormal ability to perceive a remote or hidden target without support of the senses.[36]

A well known study of remote viewing in recent times has been the US government-funded project at the Stanford Research Institute during the 1970s through the mid-1990s. In 1972, Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ initiated a series of human subject studies to determine whether participants (the viewers or percipients) could reliably identify and accurately describe salient features of remote locations or targets. In the early studies, a human sender was typically present at the remote location, as part of the experiment protocol. A three-step process was used, the first step being to randomly select the target conditions to be experienced by the senders. Secondly, in the viewing step, participants were asked to verbally express or sketch their impressions of the remote scene. Thirdly, in the judging step, these descriptions were matched by separate judges, as closely as possible, with the intended targets. The term remote viewing was coined to describe this overall process. The first paper by Puthoff and Targ on remote viewing was published in Nature in March 1974; in it, the team reported some degree of remote viewing success.[37] After the publication of these findings, other attempts to replicate the experiments were carried out [38][39] with remotely linked groups using computer conferencing.[40]

The psychologists David Marks and Richard Kammann attempted to replicate Targ and Puthoff's remote viewing experiments that were carried out in the 1970s at the Stanford Research Institute. In a series of 35 studies, they were unable to replicate the results so investigated the procedure of the original experiments. Marks and Kammann discovered that the notes given to the judges in Targ and Puthoff's experiments contained clues as to which order they were carried out, such as referring to yesterday's two targets, or they had the date of the session written at the top of the page. They concluded that these clues were the reason for the experiment's high hit rates.[41][42] Marks was able to achieve 100 per cent accuracy without visiting any of the sites himself but by using cues.[43] James Randi has written controlled tests by several other researchers, eliminating several sources of cuing and extraneous evidence present in the original tests, produced negative results. Students were also able to solve Puthoff and Targ's locations from the clues that had inadvertently been included in the transcripts.[44]

In 1980, Charles Tart claimed that a rejudging of the transcripts from one of Targ and Puthoff's experiments revealed an above-chance result.[45] Targ and Puthoff again refused to provide copies of the transcripts and it was not until July 1985 that they were made available for study when it was discovered they still contained sensory cues.[46] Marks and Christopher Scott (1986) wrote "considering the importance for the remote viewing hypothesis of adequate cue removal, Tart's failure to perform this basic task seems beyond comprehension. As previously concluded, remote viewing has not been demonstrated in the experiments conducted by Puthoff and Targ, only the repeated failure of the investigators to remove sensory cues."[47]

In 1982 Robert Jahn, then Dean of the School of Engineering at Princeton University wrote a comprehensive review of psychic phenomena from an engineering perspective. His paper included numerous references to remote viewing studies at the time.[48] Statistical flaws in his work have been proposed by others in the parapsychological community and within the general scientific community.[49][50]

Scientific reception

According to scientific research, clairvoyance is generally explained as the result of confirmation bias, expectancy bias, fraud, hallucination, self-delusion, sensory leakage, subjective validation, wishful thinking or failures to appreciate the base rate of chance occurrences and not as a paranormal power.[5][51][52][53] Parapsychology is generally regarded by the scientific community as a pseudoscience.[54][55] In 1988, the US National Research Council concluded "The committee finds no scientific justification from research conducted over a period of 130 years, for the existence of parapsychological phenomena."[56]

Skeptics say that if clairvoyance were a reality, it would have become abundantly clear. They also contend that those who believe in paranormal phenomena do so for merely psychological reasons.[57] According to David G. Myers (Psychology, 8th ed.):

The search for a valid and reliable test of clairvoyance has resulted in thousands of experiments. One controlled procedure has invited 'senders' to telepathically transmit one of four visual images to 'receivers' deprived of sensation in a nearby chamber (Bem & Honorton, 1994). The result? A reported 32 percent accurate response rate, surpassing the chance rate of 25 percent. But follow-up studies have (depending on who was summarizing the results) failed to replicate the phenomenon or produced mixed results (Bem & others, 2001; Milton & Wiseman, 2002; Storm, 2000, 2003).

One skeptic, magician James Randi, had a longstanding offer of U.S. $1 million—"to anyone who proves a genuine psychic power under proper observing conditions" (Randi, 1999). French, Australian, and Indian groups have parallel offers of up to 200,000 euros to anyone with demonstrable paranormal abilities (CFI, 2003). Large as these sums are, the scientific seal of approval would be worth far more to anyone whose claims could be authenticated. To refute those who say there is no ESP, one need only produce a single person who can demonstrate a single, reproducible ESP phenomenon. So far, no such person has emerged. Randi's offer has been publicized for three decades and dozens of people have been tested, sometimes under the scrutiny of an independent panel of judges. Still, nothing. "People's desire to believe in the paranormal is stronger than all the evidence that it does not exist." Susan Blackmore, "Blackmore's first law", 2004.[58]

Clairvoyance is considered a hallucination by mainstream psychiatry.[59]

See also

References

  1. ^ Paul Sédir (1907). Les Miroirs Magiques (PDF). Librairie Générale des Sciences Occultes (3rd ed.). Paris. p. 22. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 3, 2019.
  2. ^ "clairvoyance". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved February 22, 2022. . Archived from the original on February 27, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ . Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on February 18, 2008. Retrieved October 7, 2007. The ESP entry includes clairvoyance.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  4. ^ "clairvoyant". Oxford Learners Dictionaries. Retrieved April 8, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Carroll, Robert Todd. (2003). "Clairvoyance". Retrieved 2014-04-30.
  6. ^
    • Bunge, Mario. (1983). Treatise on Basic Philosophy: Volume 6: Epistemology & Methodology II: Understanding the World. Springer. p. 226. ISBN 90-277-1635-8 "Despite being several thousand years old, and having attracted a large number of researchers over the past hundred years, we owe no single firm finding to parapsychology: no hard data on telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, or psychokinesis."
    • Stenger, Victor. (1990). Physics and Psychics: The Search for a World Beyond the Senses. Prometheus Books. p. 166. ISBN 0-87975-575-X "The bottom line is simple: science is based on consensus, and at present a scientific consensus that psychic phenomena exist is still not established."
    • Zechmeister, Eugene; Johnson, James. (1992). Critical Thinking: A Functional Approach. Brooks/Cole Pub. Co. p. 115. ISBN 0534165966 "There exists no good scientific evidence for the existence of paranormal phenomena such as ESP. To be acceptable to the scientific community, evidence must be both valid and reliable."
    • Hines, Terence. (2003). Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. p. 144. ISBN 1-57392-979-4 "It is important to realize that, in one hundred years of parapsychological investigations, there has never been a single adequate demonstration of the reality of any psi phenomenon."
  7. ^ "Dictionary.com "Pseudoscience"". Dictionary.reference.com. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  8. ^ "Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy "Science and Pseudo-Science"". Plato.stanford.edu. September 3, 2008. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  9. ^ "Science Needs to Combat Pseudoscience: A Statement by 32 Russian Scientists and Philosophers". Quackwatch.com. July 17, 1998. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  10. ^ "International Cultic Studies Association "Science Fiction in Pseudoscience"". Csj.org. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  11. ^
    • Gross, Paul R; Levitt, Norman; Lewis, Martin W (1996), The Flight from Science and Reason, New York Academy of Sciences, p. 565, ISBN 978-0801856761, The overwhelming majority of scientists consider parapsychology, by whatever name, to be pseudoscience.
    • Friedlander, Michael W (1998), At the Fringes of Science, Westview Press, p. 119, ISBN 978-0-8133-2200-1, Parapsychology has failed to gain general scientific acceptance even for its improved methods and claimed successes, and it is still treated with a lopsided ambivalence among the scientific community. Most scientists write it off as pseudoscience unworthy of their time.
    • Pigliucci, Massimo; Boudry, Maarten (2013), Philosophy of Pseudoscience: Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem, University Of Chicago Press, p. 158, hdl:1854/LU-3161824, ISBN 978-0-226-05196-3, Many observers refer to the field as a 'pseudoscience'. When mainstream scientists say that the field of parapsychology is not scientific, they mean that no satisfying naturalistic cause-and-effect explanation for these supposed effects has yet been proposed and that the field's experiments cannot be consistently replicated.
  12. ^ Cordón, Luis A. (2005). Popular Psychology: An Encyclopedia. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-313-32457-4. The essential problem is that a large portion of the scientific community, including most research psychologists, regards parapsychology as a pseudoscience, due largely to its failure to move beyond null results in the way science usually does. Ordinarily, when experimental evidence fails repeatedly to support a hypothesis, that hypothesis is abandoned. Within parapsychology, however, more than a century of experimentation has failed even to conclusively demonstrate the mere existence of paranormal phenomenon, yet parapsychologists continue to pursue that elusive goal.
  13. ^ Melton, John. (2001). The Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology. p. 297. Gale Group, Detroit. ISBN 978-0810385702.
  14. ^ S. A. Jain 1992, p. 16.
  15. ^ Steiner, Correspondence and Documents 1901–1925, 1988, p. 9. ISBN 0880102071
  16. ^ Ruse, Michael (2018). The Problem of War: Darwinism, Christianity, and Their Battle to Understand Human Conflict. Oxford University Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-19-086757-7.
  17. ^ Rudolf Steiner, Errors in Spiritual Investigation: Meeting the Guardian of the Threshold, A Lecture Berlin, March 6, 1913, Bn 62; GA 62; CW 62, Mercury Press, Spring Valley, New York, 1983, https://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/19130306p01.html Quote: "He therefore must learn above all else to know himself, so that when he is able to confront a spiritual outer world in the same way as he confronts an objective being he can distinguish himself from what is truth. If he does not learn to delimit himself in this way, he will always confuse that which is only within him, that which is only his subjective experience, with the spiritual world picture; he can never arrive at a real grasp of spiritual reality."
  18. ^ Rudolf Steiner An Esoteric Cosmology Eighteen Lectures delivered in Paris May 25 to June 14, 1906, Bn 94.1, GA 94, France. St. George Publications, Spring Valley, New York, 1978, IX. The Astral World, https://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA094/English/SGP1978/19060602p01.html Quote: "Another result of this inverse unraveling of things in the astral world is that it teaches man to know himself. Feelings and passions are expressed by plant and animal forms. When man begins to behold his passions in the astral world he sees them as animal forms. These forms proceed from himself, but he sees them as if they were assailing him. This is because his own being is objectivised—otherwise he could not behold himself. Thus it is only in the astral world that man learns true self knowledge in contemplating the images of his passions in the animal forms which hurl, themselves upon him. A feeling of hatred entertained against another being appears as an attacking demon."
  19. ^ Taves, Ann. (1999). Fits, Trances, and Visions: Experiencing Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James. Princeton University Press. p. 126. ISBN 0-691-01024-2
  20. ^ Hyman, Ray. (1985). A Critical Historical Overview of Parapsychology. In Kurtz, Paul. A Skeptic's Handbook of Parapsychology. Prometheus Books. pp. 3–96. ISBN 0-87975-300-5
  21. ^ Roeckelein, Jon. (2006). Elsevier's Dictionary of Psychological Theories. Elsevier Science. p. 450. ISBN 0-444-51750-2
  22. ^ Hansel, C. E. M. The Search for a Demonstration of ESP. In Paul Kurtz. (1985). A Skeptic's Handbook of Parapsychology. Prometheus Books. pp. 97–127. ISBN 0-87975-300-5
  23. ^ McCabe, Joseph. (1920). Is Spiritualism Based On Fraud? The Evidence Given By Sir A. C. Doyle and Others Drastically Examined. Chapter The Subtle Art of Clairvoyance. London: Watts & Co. pp. 93–108
  24. ^ Tuckett, Ivor Lloyd. (1911). The Evidence for the Supernatural: A Critical Study Made with "Uncommon Sense". Chapter Telepathy and Clairvoyance. K. Paul, Trench, Trübner. pp. 107–142
  25. ^ Baker, Robert A. (1996). Hidden Memories: Voices and Visions From Within. Prometheus Books. p. 234. ISBN 978-1-57392-094-0
  26. ^ Christopher, Milbourne. (1996). The Illustrated History of Magic. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 264. ISBN 978-0-435-07016-8
  27. ^ Cox, W. S. (1936). "An experiment in ESP". Journal of Experimental Psychology. 19 (4): 437. doi:10.1037/h0054630.
  28. ^ Jastrow, Joseph. (1938). ESP, House of Cards. The American Scholar. Vol. 8, No. 1. pp. 13–22. "Rhine's results fail to be confirmed. At Colgate University (40, 000 tests, 7 subjects), at Chicago (extensive series on 315 students), at Southern Methodist College (75, 000 tests), at Glasgow, Scotland (6, 650 tests), at London University (105, 000 tests), not a single individual was found who under rigidly conducted experiments could score above chance. At Stanford University it has been convincingly shown that the conditions favorable to the intrusion of subtle errors produce above-chance records which come down to chance when sources of error are eliminated."
  29. ^ Hansel, C. E. M. The Search for a Demonstration of ESP. In Paul Kurtz. (1985). A Skeptic's Handbook of Parapsychology. Prometheus Books. pp. 105–127. ISBN 0-87975-300-5
    • Adam, E. T. (1938). "A summary of some negative experiments". Journal of Parapsychology. 2: 232–236.
    • Crumbaugh, J. C. (1938). An experimental study of extra-sensory perception. Masters thesis. Southern Methodist University.
    • Heinlein, C. P; Heinlein, J. H. (1938). "Critique of the premises of statistical methodology of parapsychology". Journal of Parapsychology. 5: 135–148. doi:10.1080/00223980.1938.9917558.
    • Willoughby, R. R. (1938). Further card-guessing experiments. Journal of Psychology 18: 3–13.
  30. ^ Gulliksen, Harold. (1938). Extra-Sensory Perception: What Is It?. American Journal of Sociology. Vol. 43, No. 4. pp. 623–634. "Investigating Rhine's methods, we find that his mathematical methods are wrong and that the effect of this error would in some cases be negligible and in others very marked. We find that many of his experiments were set up in a manner which would tend to increase, instead of to diminish, the possibility of systematic clerical errors; and lastly, that the ESP cards can be read from the back."
  31. ^ Wynn, Charles; Wiggins, Arthur. (2001). Quantum Leaps in the Wrong Direction: Where Real Science Ends...and Pseudoscience Begins. Joseph Henry Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-309-07309-7 "In 1940, Rhine coauthored a book, Extrasensory Perception After Sixty Years in which he suggested that something more than mere guess work was involved in his experiments. He was right! It is now known that the experiments conducted in his laboratory contained serious methodological flaws. Tests often took place with minimal or no screening between the subject and the person administering the test. Subjects could see the backs of cards that were later discovered to be so cheaply printed that a faint outline of the symbol could be seen. Furthermore, in face-to-face tests, subjects could see card faces reflected in the tester's eyeglasses or cornea. They were even able to (consciously or unconsciously) pick up clues from the tester's facial expression and voice inflection. In addition, an observant subject could identify the cards by certain irregularities like warped edges, spots on the backs, or design imperfections."
  32. ^ Hines, Terence. (2003). Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. Prometheus Books. p. 122. ISBN 978-1573929790 "The procedural errors in the Rhine experiments have been extremely damaging to his claims to have demonstrated the existence of ESP. Equally damaging has been the fact that the results have not replicated when the experiments have been conducted in other laboratories."
  33. ^ Hazelgrove, Jenny. (2000). Spiritualism and British Society Between the Wars. Manchester University Press. p. 204. ISBN 978-0719055591
  34. ^ Russell, A. S; Benn, John Andrews. (1938). Discovery the Popular Journal of Knowledge. Cambridge University Press. pp. 305–306
  35. ^ Soal, Samuel. A Repetition of Dr. Rhine's work with Mrs. Eileen Garrett. Proc. S.P.R. Vol. XLII. pp. 84–85. Also quoted in Antony Flew. (1955). A New Approach To Psychical Research. Watts & Co. pp. 90–92.
  36. ^ Blom, Jan (2009). A dictionary of hallucinations. New York: Springer. p. 451. ISBN 978-1-4419-1222-0. OCLC 618047801.
  37. ^ Targ, Russel; Puthoff, Harold (1974). "Information transmission under conditions of sensory shielding". Nature. 251 (5476): 602–607. Bibcode:1974Natur.251..602T. doi:10.1038/251602a0. PMID 4423858. S2CID 4152651.
  38. ^ Hastings, A.C.; Hurt, D.B. (October 1976). "A confirmatory remote viewing experiment in a group setting". Proceedings of the IEEE. 64 (10): 1544–1545. doi:10.1109/PROC.1976.10369. S2CID 36582119.
  39. ^ Whitson, T.W.; Bogart, D.N.; Palmer, J.; Tart, C.T. (October 1976). "Preliminary experiments in group 'Remote viewing'". Proceedings of the IEEE. 64 (10): 1550–1551. doi:10.1109/PROC.1976.10371. S2CID 27302086.
  40. ^ Vallee, J.; Hastings, A.C.; Askevold, G. (October 1976). "Remote viewing experiments through computer conferencing". Proceedings of the IEEE. 64 (10): 1551–1552. doi:10.1109/PROC.1976.10372. S2CID 24096224.
  41. ^ Marks, David; Kammann, Richard (1978). "Information transmission in remote viewing experiments". Nature. 274 (5672): 680–681. Bibcode:1978Natur.274..680M. doi:10.1038/274680a0. S2CID 4249968.
  42. ^ Marks, David (1981). "Sensory cues invalidate remote viewing experiments". Nature. 292 (5819): 177. Bibcode:1981Natur.292..177M. doi:10.1038/292177a0. PMID 7242682. S2CID 4326382.
  43. ^ Bridgstock, Martin (2009). Beyond belief: skepticism, science and the paranormal. Cambridge Port Melbourne, Vic: Cambridge University Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-521-75893-2. OCLC 652432050. The explanation used by Marks and Kammann clearly involves the use of Occam's razor. Marks and Kammann argued that the 'cues'—clues to the order in which sites had been visited—provided sufficient information for the results, without any recourse to extrasensory perception. Indeed Marks himself was able to achieve 100 percent accuracy in allocating some transcripts to sites without visiting any of the sites himself, purely on the ground basis of the cues. From Occam's razor, it follows that if a straightforward natural explanation exists, there is no need for the spectacular paranormal explanation: Targ and Puthoff's claims are not justified.
  44. ^ Randi, James (n.d.) [1995 (print)]. "Remote Viewing". An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural. Digital adaptation by Gilles-Maurice de Schryver. (Online ed.). James Randi Educational Foundation [St. Martin's Press (print)]. Retrieved January 26, 2022.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  45. ^ Tart, Charles; Puthoff, Harold; Targ, Russell (1980). "Information Transmission in Remote Viewing Experiments". Nature. 284 (5752): 191. Bibcode:1980Natur.284..191T. doi:10.1038/284191a0. PMID 7360248. S2CID 4326363.
  46. ^ Hines, Terence (2003). Pseudoscience and the paranormal. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-57392-979-0. OCLC 50124260.
  47. ^ Marks, David; Scott, Christopher (1986). "Remote Viewing Exposed". Nature. 319 (6053): 444. Bibcode:1986Natur.319..444M. doi:10.1038/319444a0. PMID 3945330. S2CID 13642580.
  48. ^ Jahn, R.G. (February 1982). "The persistent paradox of psychic phenomena: An engineering perspective" (PDF). Proceedings of the IEEE. 70 (2): 136–170. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.15.8760. doi:10.1109/PROC.1982.12260. S2CID 31434794. (PDF) from the original on May 14, 2011.
  49. ^ Stanley Jeffers (May–June 2006). "The PEAR proposition: Fact or fallacy?". Skeptical Inquirer. 30 (3). Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  50. ^ George P. Hansen. "Princeton Remote-Viewing Experiments (PEAR) – A Critique". Tricksterbook.com. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
  51. ^ Rawcliffe, Donovan. (1988). Occult and Supernatural Phenomena. Dover Publications. pp. 367–463. ISBN 0-486-20503-7
  52. ^ Reed, Graham. (1988). The Psychology of Anomalous Experience: A Cognitive Approach. Prometheus Books. ISBN 0-87975-435-4
  53. ^ Zusne, Leonard; Jones, Warren. (1989). Anomalistic Psychology: A Study of Magical Thinking. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. pp. 152–168. ISBN 0-8058-0508-7
  54. ^ Friedlander, Michael W. (1998). At the Fringes of Science. Westview Press. p. 119. ISBN 0-8133-2200-6 "Parapsychology has failed to gain general scientific acceptance even for its improved methods and claimed successes, and it is still treated with a lopsided ambivalence among the scientific community. Most scientists write it off as pseudoscience unworthy of their time."
  55. ^ Pigliucci, Massimo; Boudry, Maarten. (2013). Philosophy of Pseudoscience: Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem. University of Chicago Press p. 158. ISBN 978-0-226-05196-3 "Many observers refer to the field as a "pseudoscience". When mainstream scientists say that the field of parapsychology is not scientific, they mean that no satisfying naturalistic cause-and-effect explanation for these supposed effects has yet been proposed and that the field's experiments cannot be consistently replicated."
  56. ^ Gilovich, Thomas. (1993). How We Know What Isn't So: The Fallibility of Human Reason in Everyday Life. Free Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-02-911706-4
  57. ^ French, Chis; Wilson, Krissy. (2007). Cognitive Factors Underlying Paranormal Beliefs and Experiences. In Sala, Sergio. Tall Tales About the Mind and Brain: Separating Fact From Fiction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–22. ISBN 978-0198568773
  58. ^ Myers, David. (2006). Psychology. Worth Publishers; 8th edition. ISBN 978-0716764281
  59. ^ Blom, Jan Dirk (2010). A Dictionary of Hallucinations. New York, Dordrecht, Heidelberg, London: Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. p. 99. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-1223-7. ISBN 978-1-4419-1222-0. Retrieved January 11, 2012. Clairvoyance

    Also known as lucidity, telesthesia, and cryptestesia. Clairvoyance is French for seeing clearly. The term is used in the parapsychological literature to denote a * visual or * compound hallucination attributable to a metaphysical source. It is therefore interpreted as * telepathic, * veridical or at least * coincidental hallucination.

    Reference
    Guily, R.E. (1991) Harper's encyclopedia of mystical and paranormal experience. New York: Castle Books.

Bibliography

  • S. A. Jain (1992). Reality. Jwalamalini Trust. Not in Copyright. Alt URL

Further reading

External links

clairvoyance, this, article, about, alleged, extrasensory, ability, 1986, album, album, 1899, book, charles, webster, leadbeater, clairvoyant, redirects, here, other, uses, clairvoyant, disambiguation, ɛər, ɔɪ, from, french, clair, clear, voyance, vision, magi. This article is about the alleged extrasensory ability For the 1986 album see Clairvoyance album For the 1899 book see Charles Webster Leadbeater Clairvoyant redirects here For other uses see Clairvoyant disambiguation Clairvoyance k l ɛer ˈ v ɔɪ e n s from French clair clear and voyance vision is the magical ability to gain information about an object person location or physical event through extrasensory perception 2 3 Any person who is claimed to have such ability is said to be a clairvoyant k l ɛer ˈ v ɔɪ e n t 4 one who sees clearly Diagram by the French esotericist Paul Sedir to explain clairvoyance 1 Claims for the existence of paranormal and psychic abilities such as clairvoyance have not been supported by scientific evidence 5 Parapsychology explores this possibility but the existence of the paranormal is not accepted by the scientific community 6 The scientific community widely considers parapsychology including the study of clairvoyance a pseudoscience 7 8 9 10 11 12 Contents 1 Usage 2 In history and religion 2 1 Christianity 2 2 Jainism 2 3 Anthroposophy 3 Parapsychology 3 1 Early research 3 2 Remote viewing 4 Scientific reception 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksUsage EditPertaining to the ability of clear sightedness clairvoyance refers to the paranormal ability to see persons and events that are distant in time or space It can be divided into roughly three classes precognition the ability to perceive or predict future events retrocognition the ability to see past events and remote viewing the perception of contemporary events happening outside the range of normal perception 13 In history and religion EditThroughout history there have been numerous places and times in which people have claimed themselves or others to be clairvoyant In several religions stories of certain individuals being able to see things far removed from their immediate sensory perception are commonplace especially within pagan religions where oracles were used Prophecy often involved some degree of clairvoyance especially when future events were predicted This ability has sometimes been attributed to a higher power rather than to the person performing it Christianity Edit A number of Christian saints were said to be able to see or know things that were far removed from their immediate sensory perception as a kind of gift from God including Padre Pio and Anne Catherine Emmerich Jesus Christ in the Gospels is also recorded as being able to know things that were far removed from his immediate human perception Some Christians today also share the same claim Jainism Edit Main article Jain epistemology In Jainism clairvoyance is regarded as one of the five kinds of knowledge The beings of hell and heaven devas are said to possess clairvoyance by birth According to Jain text Sarvarthasiddhi this kind of knowledge has been called avadhi as it ascertains matter in downward range or knows objects within limits 14 Anthroposophy Edit Rudolf Steiner famous as a clairvoyant himself 15 16 claimed that for a clairvoyant it is easy to confuse his own emotional and spiritual being with the objective spiritual world 17 18 Parapsychology EditEarly research Edit The earliest record of somnambulist clairvoyance is credited to the Marquis de Puysegur a follower of Franz Mesmer who in 1784 was treating a local dull witted peasant named Victor Race During treatment Race reportedly would go into trance and undergo a personality change becoming fluent and articulate and giving diagnosis and prescription for his own disease as well as those of others 19 Clairvoyance was a reported ability of some mediums during the spiritualist period of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and psychics of many descriptions have claimed clairvoyant ability up to the present day 20 Character reader and clairvoyant in a British travelling show of the 1940s collected by Arthur James Fenwick 1878 1957 Early researchers of clairvoyance included William Gregory Gustav Pagenstecher and Rudolf Tischner 21 Clairvoyance experiments were reported in 1884 by Charles Richet Playing cards were enclosed in envelopes and a subject put under hypnosis attempted to identify them The subject was reported to have been successful in a series of 133 trials but the results dropped to chance level when performed before a group of scientists in Cambridge J M Peirce and E C Pickering reported a similar experiment in which they tested 36 subjects over 23 384 trials which did not obtain above chance scores 22 Ivor Lloyd Tuckett 1911 and Joseph McCabe 1920 analyzed early cases of clairvoyance and came to the conclusion they were best explained by coincidence or fraud 23 24 In 1919 the magician P T Selbit staged a seance at his own flat in Bloomsbury The spiritualist Arthur Conan Doyle attended the seance and declared the clairvoyance manifestations to be genuine 25 26 A significant development in clairvoyance research came when J B Rhine a parapsychologist at Duke University introduced a standard methodology with a standard statistical approach to analyzing data as part of his research into extrasensory perception A number of psychological departments attempted to repeat Rhine s experiments with failure W S Cox 1936 from Princeton University with 132 subjects produced 25 064 trials in a playing card ESP experiment Cox concluded There is no evidence of extrasensory perception either in the average man or of the group investigated or in any particular individual of that group The discrepancy between these results and those obtained by Rhine is due either to uncontrollable factors in experimental procedure or to the difference in the subjects 27 Four other psychological departments failed to replicate Rhine s results 28 29 It was revealed that Rhine s experiments contained methodological flaws and procedural errors 30 31 32 Eileen Garrett was tested by Rhine at Duke University in 1933 with Zener cards Certain symbols that were placed on the cards and sealed in an envelope and she was asked to guess their contents She performed poorly and later criticized the tests by claiming the cards lacked a psychic energy called energy stimulus and that she could not perform clairvoyance to order 33 The parapsychologist Samuel Soal and his colleagues tested Garrett in May 1937 Most of the experiments were carried out in the Psychological Laboratory at the University College London A total of over 12 000 guesses were recorded but Garrett failed to produce above chance level 34 In his report Soal wrote In the case of Mrs Eileen Garrett we fail to find the slightest confirmation of Dr J B Rhine s remarkable claims relating to her alleged powers of extra sensory perception Not only did she fail when I took charge of the experiments but she failed equally when four other carefully trained experimenters took my place 35 Remote viewing Edit Remote viewing also known as remote sensing remote perception telesthesia and travelling clairvoyance is the alleged paranormal ability to perceive a remote or hidden target without support of the senses 36 A well known study of remote viewing in recent times has been the US government funded project at the Stanford Research Institute during the 1970s through the mid 1990s In 1972 Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ initiated a series of human subject studies to determine whether participants the viewers or percipients could reliably identify and accurately describe salient features of remote locations or targets In the early studies a human sender was typically present at the remote location as part of the experiment protocol A three step process was used the first step being to randomly select the target conditions to be experienced by the senders Secondly in the viewing step participants were asked to verbally express or sketch their impressions of the remote scene Thirdly in the judging step these descriptions were matched by separate judges as closely as possible with the intended targets The term remote viewing was coined to describe this overall process The first paper by Puthoff and Targ on remote viewing was published in Nature in March 1974 in it the team reported some degree of remote viewing success 37 After the publication of these findings other attempts to replicate the experiments were carried out 38 39 with remotely linked groups using computer conferencing 40 The psychologists David Marks and Richard Kammann attempted to replicate Targ and Puthoff s remote viewing experiments that were carried out in the 1970s at the Stanford Research Institute In a series of 35 studies they were unable to replicate the results so investigated the procedure of the original experiments Marks and Kammann discovered that the notes given to the judges in Targ and Puthoff s experiments contained clues as to which order they were carried out such as referring to yesterday s two targets or they had the date of the session written at the top of the page They concluded that these clues were the reason for the experiment s high hit rates 41 42 Marks was able to achieve 100 per cent accuracy without visiting any of the sites himself but by using cues 43 James Randi has written controlled tests by several other researchers eliminating several sources of cuing and extraneous evidence present in the original tests produced negative results Students were also able to solve Puthoff and Targ s locations from the clues that had inadvertently been included in the transcripts 44 In 1980 Charles Tart claimed that a rejudging of the transcripts from one of Targ and Puthoff s experiments revealed an above chance result 45 Targ and Puthoff again refused to provide copies of the transcripts and it was not until July 1985 that they were made available for study when it was discovered they still contained sensory cues 46 Marks and Christopher Scott 1986 wrote considering the importance for the remote viewing hypothesis of adequate cue removal Tart s failure to perform this basic task seems beyond comprehension As previously concluded remote viewing has not been demonstrated in the experiments conducted by Puthoff and Targ only the repeated failure of the investigators to remove sensory cues 47 In 1982 Robert Jahn then Dean of the School of Engineering at Princeton University wrote a comprehensive review of psychic phenomena from an engineering perspective His paper included numerous references to remote viewing studies at the time 48 Statistical flaws in his work have been proposed by others in the parapsychological community and within the general scientific community 49 50 Scientific reception EditAccording to scientific research clairvoyance is generally explained as the result of confirmation bias expectancy bias fraud hallucination self delusion sensory leakage subjective validation wishful thinking or failures to appreciate the base rate of chance occurrences and not as a paranormal power 5 51 52 53 Parapsychology is generally regarded by the scientific community as a pseudoscience 54 55 In 1988 the US National Research Council concluded The committee finds no scientific justification from research conducted over a period of 130 years for the existence of parapsychological phenomena 56 Skeptics say that if clairvoyance were a reality it would have become abundantly clear They also contend that those who believe in paranormal phenomena do so for merely psychological reasons 57 According to David G Myers Psychology 8th ed The search for a valid and reliable test of clairvoyance has resulted in thousands of experiments One controlled procedure has invited senders to telepathically transmit one of four visual images to receivers deprived of sensation in a nearby chamber Bem amp Honorton 1994 The result A reported 32 percent accurate response rate surpassing the chance rate of 25 percent But follow up studies have depending on who was summarizing the results failed to replicate the phenomenon or produced mixed results Bem amp others 2001 Milton amp Wiseman 2002 Storm 2000 2003 One skeptic magician James Randi had a longstanding offer of U S 1 million to anyone who proves a genuine psychic power under proper observing conditions Randi 1999 French Australian and Indian groups have parallel offers of up to 200 000 euros to anyone with demonstrable paranormal abilities CFI 2003 Large as these sums are the scientific seal of approval would be worth far more to anyone whose claims could be authenticated To refute those who say there is no ESP one need only produce a single person who can demonstrate a single reproducible ESP phenomenon So far no such person has emerged Randi s offer has been publicized for three decades and dozens of people have been tested sometimes under the scrutiny of an independent panel of judges Still nothing People s desire to believe in the paranormal is stronger than all the evidence that it does not exist Susan Blackmore Blackmore s first law 2004 58 Clairvoyance is considered a hallucination by mainstream psychiatry 59 See also EditAstral projection Aura Clairvoyance book Inner eye List of topics characterized as pseudoscience Out of body experience Mediumship Photoacoustic effect Postdiction retroactive clairvoyance Precognition Remote viewing Second sight Scientific skepticism Synchronicity Thought Forms book References Edit Paul Sedir 1907 Les Miroirs Magiques PDF Librairie Generale des Sciences Occultes 3rd ed Paris p 22 Archived PDF from the original on April 3 2019 clairvoyance Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved February 22 2022 Clairvoyance Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Archived from the original on February 27 2012 Retrieved October 6 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link clairvoyance Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on February 18 2008 Retrieved October 7 2007 The ESP entry includes clairvoyance a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint postscript link clairvoyant Oxford Learners Dictionaries Retrieved April 8 2017 a b Carroll Robert Todd 2003 Clairvoyance Retrieved 2014 04 30 Bunge Mario 1983 Treatise on Basic Philosophy Volume 6 Epistemology amp Methodology II Understanding the World Springer p 226 ISBN 90 277 1635 8 Despite being several thousand years old and having attracted a large number of researchers over the past hundred years we owe no single firm finding to parapsychology no hard data on telepathy clairvoyance precognition or psychokinesis Stenger Victor 1990 Physics and Psychics The Search for a World Beyond the Senses Prometheus Books p 166 ISBN 0 87975 575 X The bottom line is simple science is based on consensus and at present a scientific consensus that psychic phenomena exist is still not established Zechmeister Eugene Johnson James 1992 Critical Thinking A Functional Approach Brooks Cole Pub Co p 115 ISBN 0534165966 There exists no good scientific evidence for the existence of paranormal phenomena such as ESP To be acceptable to the scientific community evidence must be both valid and reliable Hines Terence 2003 Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Prometheus Books p 144 ISBN 1 57392 979 4 It is important to realize that in one hundred years of parapsychological investigations there has never been a single adequate demonstration of the reality of any psi phenomenon Dictionary com Pseudoscience Dictionary reference com Retrieved September 22 2012 Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Science and Pseudo Science Plato stanford edu September 3 2008 Retrieved September 22 2012 Science Needs to Combat Pseudoscience A Statement by 32 Russian Scientists and Philosophers Quackwatch com July 17 1998 Retrieved September 22 2012 International Cultic Studies Association Science Fiction in Pseudoscience Csj org Retrieved September 22 2012 Gross Paul R Levitt Norman Lewis Martin W 1996 The Flight from Science and Reason New York Academy of Sciences p 565 ISBN 978 0801856761 The overwhelming majority of scientists consider parapsychology by whatever name to be pseudoscience Friedlander Michael W 1998 At the Fringes of Science Westview Press p 119 ISBN 978 0 8133 2200 1 Parapsychology has failed to gain general scientific acceptance even for its improved methods and claimed successes and it is still treated with a lopsided ambivalence among the scientific community Most scientists write it off as pseudoscience unworthy of their time Pigliucci Massimo Boudry Maarten 2013 Philosophy of Pseudoscience Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem University Of Chicago Press p 158 hdl 1854 LU 3161824 ISBN 978 0 226 05196 3 Many observers refer to the field as a pseudoscience When mainstream scientists say that the field of parapsychology is not scientific they mean that no satisfying naturalistic cause and effect explanation for these supposed effects has yet been proposed and that the field s experiments cannot be consistently replicated Cordon Luis A 2005 Popular Psychology An Encyclopedia Westport Conn Greenwood Press p 182 ISBN 978 0 313 32457 4 The essential problem is that a large portion of the scientific community including most research psychologists regards parapsychology as a pseudoscience due largely to its failure to move beyond null results in the way science usually does Ordinarily when experimental evidence fails repeatedly to support a hypothesis that hypothesis is abandoned Within parapsychology however more than a century of experimentation has failed even to conclusively demonstrate the mere existence of paranormal phenomenon yet parapsychologists continue to pursue that elusive goal Melton John 2001 The Encyclopedia of Occultism amp Parapsychology p 297 Gale Group Detroit ISBN 978 0810385702 S A Jain 1992 p 16 Steiner Correspondence and Documents 1901 1925 1988 p 9 ISBN 0880102071 Ruse Michael 2018 The Problem of War Darwinism Christianity and Their Battle to Understand Human Conflict Oxford University Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 19 086757 7 Rudolf Steiner Errors in Spiritual Investigation Meeting the Guardian of the Threshold A Lecture Berlin March 6 1913 Bn 62 GA 62 CW 62 Mercury Press Spring Valley New York 1983 https wn rsarchive org Lectures 19130306p01 html Quote He therefore must learn above all else to know himself so that when he is able to confront a spiritual outer world in the same way as he confronts an objective being he can distinguish himself from what is truth If he does not learn to delimit himself in this way he will always confuse that which is only within him that which is only his subjective experience with the spiritual world picture he can never arrive at a real grasp of spiritual reality Rudolf Steiner An Esoteric Cosmology Eighteen Lectures delivered in Paris May 25 to June 14 1906 Bn 94 1 GA 94 France St George Publications Spring Valley New York 1978 IX The Astral World https wn rsarchive org Lectures GA094 English SGP1978 19060602p01 html Quote Another result of this inverse unraveling of things in the astral world is that it teaches man to know himself Feelings and passions are expressed by plant and animal forms When man begins to behold his passions in the astral world he sees them as animal forms These forms proceed from himself but he sees them as if they were assailing him This is because his own being is objectivised otherwise he could not behold himself Thus it is only in the astral world that man learns true self knowledge in contemplating the images of his passions in the animal forms which hurl themselves upon him A feeling of hatred entertained against another being appears as an attacking demon Taves Ann 1999 Fits Trances and Visions Experiencing Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James Princeton University Press p 126 ISBN 0 691 01024 2 Hyman Ray 1985 A Critical Historical Overview of Parapsychology In Kurtz Paul A Skeptic s Handbook of Parapsychology Prometheus Books pp 3 96 ISBN 0 87975 300 5 Roeckelein Jon 2006 Elsevier s Dictionary of Psychological Theories Elsevier Science p 450 ISBN 0 444 51750 2 Hansel C E M The Search for a Demonstration of ESP In Paul Kurtz 1985 A Skeptic s Handbook of Parapsychology Prometheus Books pp 97 127 ISBN 0 87975 300 5 McCabe Joseph 1920 Is Spiritualism Based On Fraud The Evidence Given By Sir A C Doyle and Others Drastically Examined Chapter The Subtle Art of Clairvoyance London Watts amp Co pp 93 108 Tuckett Ivor Lloyd 1911 The Evidence for the Supernatural A Critical Study Made with Uncommon Sense Chapter Telepathy and Clairvoyance K Paul Trench Trubner pp 107 142 Baker Robert A 1996 Hidden Memories Voices and Visions From Within Prometheus Books p 234 ISBN 978 1 57392 094 0 Christopher Milbourne 1996 The Illustrated History of Magic Greenwood Publishing Group p 264 ISBN 978 0 435 07016 8 Cox W S 1936 An experiment in ESP Journal of Experimental Psychology 19 4 437 doi 10 1037 h0054630 Jastrow Joseph 1938 ESP House of Cards The American Scholar Vol 8 No 1 pp 13 22 Rhine s results fail to be confirmed At Colgate University 40 000 tests 7 subjects at Chicago extensive series on 315 students at Southern Methodist College 75 000 tests at Glasgow Scotland 6 650 tests at London University 105 000 tests not a single individual was found who under rigidly conducted experiments could score above chance At Stanford University it has been convincingly shown that the conditions favorable to the intrusion of subtle errors produce above chance records which come down to chance when sources of error are eliminated Hansel C E M The Search for a Demonstration of ESP In Paul Kurtz 1985 A Skeptic s Handbook of Parapsychology Prometheus Books pp 105 127 ISBN 0 87975 300 5 Adam E T 1938 A summary of some negative experiments Journal of Parapsychology 2 232 236 Crumbaugh J C 1938 An experimental study of extra sensory perception Masters thesis Southern Methodist University Heinlein C P Heinlein J H 1938 Critique of the premises of statistical methodology of parapsychology Journal of Parapsychology 5 135 148 doi 10 1080 00223980 1938 9917558 Willoughby R R 1938 Further card guessing experiments Journal of Psychology 18 3 13 Gulliksen Harold 1938 Extra Sensory Perception What Is It American Journal of Sociology Vol 43 No 4 pp 623 634 Investigating Rhine s methods we find that his mathematical methods are wrong and that the effect of this error would in some cases be negligible and in others very marked We find that many of his experiments were set up in a manner which would tend to increase instead of to diminish the possibility of systematic clerical errors and lastly that the ESP cards can be read from the back Wynn Charles Wiggins Arthur 2001 Quantum Leaps in the Wrong Direction Where Real Science Ends and Pseudoscience Begins Joseph Henry Press p 156 ISBN 978 0 309 07309 7 In 1940 Rhine coauthored a book Extrasensory Perception After Sixty Years in which he suggested that something more than mere guess work was involved in his experiments He was right It is now known that the experiments conducted in his laboratory contained serious methodological flaws Tests often took place with minimal or no screening between the subject and the person administering the test Subjects could see the backs of cards that were later discovered to be so cheaply printed that a faint outline of the symbol could be seen Furthermore in face to face tests subjects could see card faces reflected in the tester s eyeglasses or cornea They were even able to consciously or unconsciously pick up clues from the tester s facial expression and voice inflection In addition an observant subject could identify the cards by certain irregularities like warped edges spots on the backs or design imperfections Hines Terence 2003 Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Prometheus Books p 122 ISBN 978 1573929790 The procedural errors in the Rhine experiments have been extremely damaging to his claims to have demonstrated the existence of ESP Equally damaging has been the fact that the results have not replicated when the experiments have been conducted in other laboratories Hazelgrove Jenny 2000 Spiritualism and British Society Between the Wars Manchester University Press p 204 ISBN 978 0719055591 Russell A S Benn John Andrews 1938 Discovery the Popular Journal of Knowledge Cambridge University Press pp 305 306 Soal Samuel A Repetition of Dr Rhine s work with Mrs Eileen Garrett Proc S P R Vol XLII pp 84 85 Also quoted in Antony Flew 1955 A New Approach To Psychical Research Watts amp Co pp 90 92 Blom Jan 2009 A dictionary of hallucinations New York Springer p 451 ISBN 978 1 4419 1222 0 OCLC 618047801 Targ Russel Puthoff Harold 1974 Information transmission under conditions of sensory shielding Nature 251 5476 602 607 Bibcode 1974Natur 251 602T doi 10 1038 251602a0 PMID 4423858 S2CID 4152651 Hastings A C Hurt D B October 1976 A confirmatory remote viewing experiment in a group setting Proceedings of the IEEE 64 10 1544 1545 doi 10 1109 PROC 1976 10369 S2CID 36582119 Whitson T W Bogart D N Palmer J Tart C T October 1976 Preliminary experiments in group Remote viewing Proceedings of the IEEE 64 10 1550 1551 doi 10 1109 PROC 1976 10371 S2CID 27302086 Vallee J Hastings A C Askevold G October 1976 Remote viewing experiments through computer conferencing Proceedings of the IEEE 64 10 1551 1552 doi 10 1109 PROC 1976 10372 S2CID 24096224 Marks David Kammann Richard 1978 Information transmission in remote viewing experiments Nature 274 5672 680 681 Bibcode 1978Natur 274 680M doi 10 1038 274680a0 S2CID 4249968 Marks David 1981 Sensory cues invalidate remote viewing experiments Nature 292 5819 177 Bibcode 1981Natur 292 177M doi 10 1038 292177a0 PMID 7242682 S2CID 4326382 Bridgstock Martin 2009 Beyond belief skepticism science and the paranormal Cambridge Port Melbourne Vic Cambridge University Press p 106 ISBN 978 0 521 75893 2 OCLC 652432050 The explanation used by Marks and Kammann clearly involves the use of Occam s razor Marks and Kammann argued that the cues clues to the order in which sites had been visited provided sufficient information for the results without any recourse to extrasensory perception Indeed Marks himself was able to achieve 100 percent accuracy in allocating some transcripts to sites without visiting any of the sites himself purely on the ground basis of the cues From Occam s razor it follows that if a straightforward natural explanation exists there is no need for the spectacular paranormal explanation Targ and Puthoff s claims are not justified Randi James n d 1995 print Remote Viewing An Encyclopedia of Claims Frauds and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural Digital adaptation by Gilles Maurice de Schryver Online ed James Randi Educational Foundation St Martin s Press print Retrieved January 26 2022 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint url status link Tart Charles Puthoff Harold Targ Russell 1980 Information Transmission in Remote Viewing Experiments Nature 284 5752 191 Bibcode 1980Natur 284 191T doi 10 1038 284191a0 PMID 7360248 S2CID 4326363 Hines Terence 2003 Pseudoscience and the paranormal Amherst NY Prometheus Books p 136 ISBN 978 1 57392 979 0 OCLC 50124260 Marks David Scott Christopher 1986 Remote Viewing Exposed Nature 319 6053 444 Bibcode 1986Natur 319 444M doi 10 1038 319444a0 PMID 3945330 S2CID 13642580 Jahn R G February 1982 The persistent paradox of psychic phenomena An engineering perspective PDF Proceedings of the IEEE 70 2 136 170 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 15 8760 doi 10 1109 PROC 1982 12260 S2CID 31434794 Archived PDF from the original on May 14 2011 Stanley Jeffers May June 2006 The PEAR proposition Fact or fallacy Skeptical Inquirer 30 3 Retrieved January 24 2014 George P Hansen Princeton Remote Viewing Experiments PEAR A Critique Tricksterbook com Retrieved April 6 2014 Rawcliffe Donovan 1988 Occult and Supernatural Phenomena Dover Publications pp 367 463 ISBN 0 486 20503 7 Reed Graham 1988 The Psychology of Anomalous Experience A Cognitive Approach Prometheus Books ISBN 0 87975 435 4 Zusne Leonard Jones Warren 1989 Anomalistic Psychology A Study of Magical Thinking Lawrence Erlbaum Associates pp 152 168 ISBN 0 8058 0508 7 Friedlander Michael W 1998 At the Fringes of Science Westview Press p 119 ISBN 0 8133 2200 6 Parapsychology has failed to gain general scientific acceptance even for its improved methods and claimed successes and it is still treated with a lopsided ambivalence among the scientific community Most scientists write it off as pseudoscience unworthy of their time Pigliucci Massimo Boudry Maarten 2013 Philosophy of Pseudoscience Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem University of Chicago Press p 158 ISBN 978 0 226 05196 3 Many observers refer to the field as a pseudoscience When mainstream scientists say that the field of parapsychology is not scientific they mean that no satisfying naturalistic cause and effect explanation for these supposed effects has yet been proposed and that the field s experiments cannot be consistently replicated Gilovich Thomas 1993 How We Know What Isn t So The Fallibility of Human Reason in Everyday Life Free Press p 160 ISBN 978 0 02 911706 4 French Chis Wilson Krissy 2007 Cognitive Factors Underlying Paranormal Beliefs and Experiences In Sala Sergio Tall Tales About the Mind and Brain Separating Fact From Fiction Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 22 ISBN 978 0198568773 Myers David 2006 Psychology Worth Publishers 8th edition ISBN 978 0716764281 Blom Jan Dirk 2010 A Dictionary of Hallucinations New York Dordrecht Heidelberg London Springer Science Business Media LLC p 99 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 1223 7 ISBN 978 1 4419 1222 0 Retrieved January 11 2012 ClairvoyanceAlso known as lucidity telesthesia and cryptestesia Clairvoyance is French for seeing clearly The term is used in the parapsychological literature to denote a visual or compound hallucination attributable to a metaphysical source It is therefore interpreted as telepathic veridical or at least coincidental hallucination ReferenceGuily R E 1991 Harper s encyclopedia of mystical and paranormal experience New York Castle Books Bibliography EditS A Jain 1992 Reality Jwalamalini Trust Not in Copyright Alt URLFurther reading EditJames Alcock 1981 Parapsychology Science or Magic A Psychological Perspective Pergamon Press ISBN 0 08 025772 0 Willis Dutcher 1922 On the Other Side of the Footlights An Expose of Routines Apparatus and Deceptions Resorted to by Mediums Clairvoyants Fortune Tellers and Crystal Gazers in Deluding the Public Berlin WI Heaney Magic Thomas Gilovich 1993 How We Know What Isn t So Fallibility of Human Reason in Everyday Life Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 911706 4 Henry Gordon 1988 Extrasensory Deception ESP Psychics Shirley MacLaine Ghosts UFOs Macmillan of Canada ISBN 0 7715 9539 5 Donald Hebb 1980 Extrasensory Perception A Problem In Essays on Mind Lawrence Erlbaum Associates ISBN 978 0 898 59017 3 C E M Hansel 1989 The Search for Psychic Power ESP and Parapsychology Revisited Prometheus Books ISBN 0 87975 516 4 Terence Hines 2003 Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Prometheus Books ISBN 1 57392 979 4 David Marks 2000 The Psychology of the Psychic 2nd Edition Prometheus Books ISBN 1 57392 798 8 Joseph McCabe 1920 Is Spiritualism Based On Fraud The Evidence Given By Sir A C Doyle and Others Drastically Examined Chapter The Subtle Art of Clairvoyance London Watts amp Co pp 93 108 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Clairvoyance Look up clairvoyance or clairvoyant in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article clairvoyance Springer Psychic A Study in Clairvoyance Joe Nickell Debunking the Sixth Sense Science Daily Clairvoyance The Skeptic s Dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clairvoyance amp oldid 1147784756 Clairaudience hearing or listening, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.