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Title: | Psychic Phenomena |
Notice: | Please read note 1.0-1.* before writing |
Moderator: | JARETH::PAINTER |
|
Created: | Wed Jan 22 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue May 27 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 2143 |
Total number of notes: | 41773 |
132.0. "An interesting apparition case" by PBSVAX::COOPER (Topher Cooper) Mon May 12 1986 14:48
The following is the abstract of an article which appeared in the
April (1986, Volume 80 #2 pp 175-194) issue of the _Journal of the
American Society for Psychical Research_. It is by Karlis Osis
and is entitled "Characteristics of Purposeful Action in an
Apparition Case." I thought people might be interested. I have
added some notes of my own to flesh out the abstract a bit. These
notes appear in "[...]" with a "-- T" signature. My source of
information for these is the article itself.
Some theories depict apparitions as mindless fragments,
whereas others point out their intelligent and purposive
side. This case involves apparitions of a businessman,
which occurred 2 days after he was killed in an airplane
disaster [he was seemingly the only victim so "disaster"
is probably a poor choice of words here -- T]. A distant
relative addressed a plea to his postmortem personality
[by talking to a picture of the deceased in a wedding
album --T], requesting that he appear to his mother in a
certain manner ["It would be a nice gesture if you would
go and find your little boy who was drowned a year ago and
take him by the hand and appear to your mother so that she
will know that you are not dead, just separated from your
body. And if she saw her little grandson with you, she
will be more comforted" -- T] that would constitute a sign
of his continued existence. This appeal was communicated
to a witness but was not disclosed to the mother or to
anyone else. Subsequently, the deceased man's mother saw
an apparition of him in the form her relative had requested
[I.e., holding the hand of the boy; there was no verbal or
gestural communication but a sense of peacefulness was felt.
This latter is unusual (though not unheard of) in apparition
cases not involving near-death experiences. Usually they are
emotionally neutral (ignoring obviously situational feelings
such as surprise) or frightening -- T]; he also appeared
in and identical form to his 6-year-old niece. All three
experients lived about 100 miles away from each other.
Neither the mother nor the niece knew of the request to
appear, and neither had information about the other's
experience at the time of her own. ...
This case, of course, *proves* nothing, since the participants could have
made up the whole thing and "cooked" up a hoax. However, it is not clear
what their motivations would be, since their identities are, at their
insistence, being kept quite secret (they would be anyway, of course).
I also thought that the first paragraph of the introduction to the article
might be of interest:
The characteristics of apparition experiences (AEs) are not
conveniently uniform but are of a bewildering variety. Some
AEs are shared in the way sensory experiences are: Everyone
present and attentive to the area can perceive the event.
Other AEs are private events, as unobservable to others as
are our thoughts and ESP impressions. Apparitions in the
context of near-death experiences result in experiences of
peace and fascination, whereas in other contexts, apparitions
can evoke fear and depression. Sometimes experients scream
and run away, even from apparitions of their own mothers!
Apparitions are rarely perceived as communicative: They do
not say or show percipients anything, nor do they seem to
communicate nonverbally. More often than not, apparitions
just stand there or float by. Some apparitions are veridical,
that is, they convey information in other ways, such as
appearing at the time of their deaths to the hitherto
uninformed percipient. Nevertheless, "the great majority of
experiences that might be regarded as apparitional are not
veridical" (Stevenson, 1982, p 341 [Stevenson, I. (1982) The
contribution of apparitions to the evidence of survival,
_Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research_, vol.
76, pp 341-358])...
Topher
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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132.1 | near-death apparition | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon May 12 1986 17:25 | 6 |
| What is meant by "an apparition connected with a near-death
experience"? Is this an apparition of someone appearing at the
time they nearly die? Any correlation with the strange visions
and experiences sometimes reported by the one nearly doing the dying?
Earl Wajenberg
|
132.2 | NDEs and Apparitions | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon May 12 1986 18:31 | 31 |
| RE: 132.1
The phrase is ambiguous. Apparitions of people having NDE (Near-Death
Experiences) certainly occur, including those people who never recover
apparent consciousness.
However, in this case I believe what is being referred to is with the
person having the NDE as the experient, i.e., they perceive the presence
of someone who has already "gone on". They commonly receive from this
presence (or perhaps from the complete experience, its a bit hard to
separate components) a sense of peace and serenity.
This is one of the almost-consistant factors of NDEs which have been
noted and studied.
There is a great deal of variation in the identity of the perceived
deceased. I don't have any of the statistical breakdowns with me, nor
is this an area I'm particularly expert at, but as I remember it,
loved ones and religious figures are both common. Somewhat less common,
but not super-rare are other people that were admired e.g., political
figures.
There are certainly stories around of someone having a NDE, and during
it having visited someone, and for the visited person to report an
apparition of the visitor. Offhand, though, I don't know if any have
been well documented (my not knowing of any doesn't mean they don't
exist, and in any case not being documented doesn't mean it didn't
happen, only that its hard for an outsider to be sure). Anyway, I don't
think that this is what was being referred to in this case.
Topher
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