T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
622.1 | Tough question... | NEXUS::MORGAN | In your heart you KNOW it's flat. | Tue Jan 12 1988 22:35 | 3 |
| Well, they could use a glass cutter to get her out of there but I
don't know what they will have to do to get her back to size again.
B^)
|
622.2 | SUNshine and clouds | INK::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Wed Jan 13 1988 08:12 | 6 |
| Re .0 (John):
_Which_ paper called the _Sun_? Surely not that one published in
Lowell, Mass. ...
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
622.3 | | BEES::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Jan 13 1988 09:13 | 1 |
| Hey John, how did the jilted lover use the boa to commit suicide?
|
622.4 | Thanks! I needed that! | BUSY::MAXMIS11 | Serendipity 'R' us | Wed Jan 13 1988 09:47 | 5 |
| John, you have made my day. It's nice to get the "giggle of the
day" so early. It sort of sets a pleasing tone for the rest of
the day.
Marion
|
622.5 | speaking of paranormal ... | INK::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Wed Jan 13 1988 10:19 | 9 |
| Re Supermarket Tabloid headlines:
Ny absolute favorite of these I read some time ago:
NEW JERSEY WOMAN CAN MOVE CREAM CHEESE WITH HER MIND
What a wild talent! :-P
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
622.6 | Hirsute Headlines | INK::GRACE | Delirium Clemens | Wed Jan 13 1988 10:36 | 2 |
| My all-time fave: I WAS BIGFOOT'S LOVE-SLAVE
|
622.7 | Just Curious | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Wed Jan 13 1988 11:17 | 7 |
| re: .6 (M.L.)
Was that your all-time fave *experience*, or your all-time
fave headline????? =;*)
Carla
|
622.8 | Mine Too | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Wed Jan 13 1988 12:13 | 5 |
622.9 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Ratholier-than-thou | Wed Jan 13 1988 14:54 | 9 |
| RE: .5, .6
Hahahahaha! Those are as good as my two faves:
CABBAGE PATCH DOLL STRANGLES ITS MOM
I GAVE BIRTH TO 17 LIVE RABBITS
John M.
|
622.10 | More from The Sun | DECWET::MITCHELL | Ratholier-than-thou | Wed Jan 13 1988 15:15 | 37 |
| People will pay for anything.
ARTIST PAINTS PEOPLE LIVING BEYOND THE GRAVE
(Condensed by JM)
If you've ever wondered what your dearly departed loved ones look like after
they've died and gone to Heaven, you can now find out courtesy of a 22-year-old
psychic with the astounding ability to paint portraits of people as they
appear beyond the grave.
Nan had her first psychic experience when her dead grandfather spoke through
her from the great beyond to transmit a message to his widow.
Now Nan, who graduated from college last June, has combined her two
extraordinary skills in order to paint portraits of people who have died.
Nan studies a picture of the person when he or she was alive, meditates
until her mind is in a trance-like state and then puts brush to canvas as
her spirit guide gives her telepathic directions on how to paint the portrait.
..."I am given directions but make the actual brush strokes myself. In
this way, I am allowed the artistic freedom to express myself while still
being able to render an accurate portrait."
"It's a great comfort to actually be able to see what your loved ones look
like after they die," notes one satisfied customer.
Not surprisingly, most souls in the afterlife look almost nothing like they
did here on Earth.
"The main thing is the aura," Nan observes. "In death it becomes radiant
and reflects a person's true beauty. Most people appear much more alive
after they die."
*************************************************************************
John M.
|
622.11 | It takes cream cheese to move cream cheese | SALES::RFI86 | White Dopes on Punk | Wed Jan 13 1988 16:48 | 4 |
| RE: .5
Like effects like:-)
Geoff
|
622.12 | I don't believe you...... | CLUE::PAINTER | Remembering the Challenger | Wed Jan 13 1988 19:01 | 11 |
|
Hey John,
Are you *SURE* it was this newspaper called the 'SUN' and *not*
'The Skeptical Inquirer'??????
It's OK - I will understand if you are trying to save face here.
(;^)
Cindy
|
622.13 | Psychic Artists | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Thu Jan 14 1988 14:14 | 22 |
|
Re: .10
A little side note.....
There are genuine psychic artists. I have two friends that are
psychic artists. What they do is tune in to what the person looks
like and draw what they see in pastels. In their cases, the portraits
look exactly like the people as they looked in the physical...
Pretty good proof & evidence of something paranormal...
An acquaintance of mine met one of my artist friends and had her
do a portrait of a relative who had recently passed on. She did
not tell the artist which relative, had never met the artist before,
and I knew nothing about it at all. My artist-friend drew a picture
of an older man. It turned out that the person that was drawn was the
woman's father who had passed on the year before. At a later time she
showed several people who had seen the portrait a photograph of her
father and it looked exactly like him....
Linda
|
622.14 | Sounds interesting. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Jan 14 1988 16:57 | 7 |
| RE: .13
By what process do they "tune in to what the person looks like"?
Do they use psychometry, just the person's name, feedback with
the client, or something else?
Topher
|
622.15 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | you are a shining star... | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:02 | 9 |
|
Re: .last few
I would think that they use clairvoyant faculties to see the
person in spirit.
Carole
|
622.16 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Quetzalcoatl was a feather boa | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:25 | 6 |
| Do they ever draw relatives in hell?
John M.
|
622.17 | Foreign Powers? | KYOMTS::COHEN | BOB | Thu Jan 14 1988 17:43 | 5 |
| Re: .0
Its obvious the Soviets have used their miniturazition process
on her, simply have them deminiturize her.
|
622.18 | And if she does grow, the afghan she's knitting won't fit! | DECWET::MITCHELL | Quetzalcoatl was a feather boa | Thu Jan 14 1988 20:55 | 6 |
| RE: .17
No, the shrinkage resulted from an overdose of Preparation H.
John M.
|
622.19 | billet cards | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Fri Jan 15 1988 09:43 | 41 |
|
Re: .14, .15
The person who wants a psychic portrait done fills out a billet
card. A billet card for a psychic drawing basically is an index
card that has been "cleansed" in a cabinet. The person who wants
the billet can write down either the exact name of the person they
want drawn, or some reference to the person (like some relative
that is near me since they past on, or a spirit guide, or a master
teacher). The person then signs his name at the bottom of the card,
folds the card in half, and puts their first name on the outside
(if more than one person is having a drawing at a time). Once this
is done, the person holds the card at the solar-plexus for a couple
of minutes, letting their vibration enter the card. The artist
will then take the card and hold it, or place at their forhead or
the back of their neck, and tune in to the person. They, usually,
do not read what has been written on the card. If the portrait
is not being done in front of the person that has requested it,
sometimes the billet card is placed in an envelope and sealed and
marked so as you can tell if it has been opened....
Billet cards are also used in psychic readings. In that case, you
would write down your questions on the card, sign it, fold it, write
your first name on the outside, & hold it to your solar-plexus. The
card is then placed in a box (with other cards if more than one
person is having a reading). The psychic then will pick up the
card, and will tune in to anything he/she picks up with the card.
Once they have spoken all that they can sense, they then will open
the card and try to answer any of the unanswered questions, if
karmically allowed.
This is the system that is used in the "church" or "school" (whatever
you want to call it) that I go to. It is called the "Aquarian
Foundation". It is the only church I know that is based on scientific
proof & evidence....
Linda
P.S. Re: .16
In my belief system, there is no hell, so I don't know.
|
622.20 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | you are a shining star... | Fri Jan 15 1988 11:43 | 11 |
|
Linda,
Could you send me some information on the "Aquarian Foundation"
off-line? I would really appreciate it.
Thanks,
Carole
|
622.21 | Request | CLUE::PAINTER | Remembering the Challenger | Fri Jan 15 1988 13:21 | 7 |
|
Linda,
Yes - I'm interested in the Aquarian Foundation as well. Perhaps
would it be possible to discuss it here?
Cindy
|
622.22 | | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Fri Jan 15 1988 13:37 | 1 |
| I'm also interested.
|
622.23 | Conditions for science. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jan 15 1988 16:53 | 51 |
| RE: .19
Thank's, Linda, that's what I wanted to know.
By-the-way, if you care about scientific evidence and/or proof (and
I'm not saying that anyone should) the conditions that would have
to be met in this case to qualify would be (at least):
1) The person who makes the request should not be known by the
artist and should have no contact with the artist. In
particular they should not be present when the drawing is
made.
2) They should choose who is to be drawn from a number of different
people they have known who have passed on. The choice should
be made randomly by use of some appropriate device, such
as by rolling a die.
3) Nothing written on the billet should distinguish among
the individuals who might be chosen, purely visually. For
example, the name should be equally likely to apply to all
the people. Any clue which could even help someone guess
invalidates the test.
4) The picture should be compared to pictures or descriptions
of all the potential subjects by someone who doesn't know
which of them was supposed to be the actual subject. This
person (the judge) should not have had any contact with anyone
who knows which person was the subject.
If under these conditions the judge can reliably pick out the correct
subject, then you have substantial scientific evidence.
The hard condition to meet in practice, for this, would be making
up the "target pool" (finding someone who had sufficient connections
with enough no-longer-living people that condition 3 could be met).
How hard this would be depends on how strong a connection needed
to be made. Another way, which might be simpler to arrange, would
have a bunch of requestors (none of them known to the artist) each
with a single possible request. In this case the requestor is
selected at random for the trial.
Although I am sure it isn't relevant to your organization, when
trying to figure out whether a particular "psychic" is "for real"
keep in mind that any information on a billet should be assumed
to be obtainable by the "psychic" by normal means. There are literally
thousands of ways known to magicians to find out what is on a billet,
and there are whole books devoted exclusively to "billet tricks"
(as these techniques are called).
Topher
|
622.24 | Proof & Evidence? | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Fri Jan 15 1988 17:28 | 23 |
|
RE: .23
Topher, I have a question. Would this be classified as proof and
evidence?...
On several occasions when I have travelled, I have gone to the local
branch of the Aquarian Foundation and had billets done by mediums I either
do not know, or do not know well. I have had questions answered that
I had not written down, nor talked to any one anywhere about. The
medium would say "You've been wondering about such-and-such..."
and it would be worded exactly as I had been asking mentally. I
stress that these questions where questions no one knew about (not
even my dog.....).
In order to do billets at the Foundation the person (medium) has
to submit at least 4 affidavits regarding their mediumistic abilities
to the board. Once these affidavits have been verified, and the
person seeking the "designation" of medium has shown a genuine desire
to serve the people with their ability, the person becomes designated
and is allowed to do billets officially for the organization.
Linda
|
622.25 | Proof & Evidence. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Jan 19 1988 17:19 | 197 |
| RE: .24
Hi Linda:
I'm going to assume that you wished as straight an answer as I can
give, so here goes --
That's a much more subtle question than it appears.
I *can* give a clear unqualified partial answer: it is unquestionably
evidence for something (I don't mean that sarcastically).
As for the rest:
First we have to think about what is meant by "proof". If we look to
rationality (e.g., accumulating evidence) to determine truth, than real
"proof" in the mathematical sense does not exist. There is always some
degree of uncertainty, however small, in any determination of truth.
There is, however, a practical definition for proof. At times the
likelihood of any hypothesis significantly different from the one being
considered is so small that it can be neglected -- life is made simpler
with almost no risk by assuming that the thing "proven" is indeed true.
Notice, however, that proof in this sense is tentative. That Newton's
laws of mechanics and gravity were proven did not preclude Einstein
from later disproving them. It was required, however, that Einsteinian
mechanics be indistinguishable from Newtonian mechanics under the
conditions which the latter had been "proven correct".
Proof, even in this sense, is rather hard to come by. What is much
easier is disproof. For example the events you describe serves much
better as negative evidence against conventional beliefs than as
positive evidence for any particular set of unconventional beliefs
(including my own). There are many modern philosophers of science (the
first being Karl Popper) who don't believe that evidence *for*
something can exist but only evidence *against* (I both agree and
disagree: I think they're right but I think the concept of positive
evidence can be given a practical definition just like the concept of
proof can).
We also have to distinguish "scientific" proof/evidence from "rational
personal" proof/evidence.
You are in a unique position in regards to the events you described.
You bring a knowledge of yourself (and the inevitable self-delusions)
and of the events which only you have. You weighed what you observed
against various possibilities of error and reached a conclusion. Much
of the basis of that conclusion is, however, personal. It is based on
your judgments about the likelihood of you making an error. I am not
in a position to judge but it seems quite likely that your conviction
in the "truth" of what you observed was perfectly rational.
I am, however, in a different position than you. Perhaps most
important I am not in a position to evaluate your experience but only
your *report* of your experience. Automatically there is less detail
and more ambiguity. Also, I don't know a whole lot about you, only
what I know from some notes in this conference. The best I can *in
fact* testify to is that you are at times rational enough and lucid
enough to seem rational and lucid in your writing (let me add, to avoid
any misunderstanding, that I have no evidence to make me believe that
you are *not* lucid and rational virtually all the time and I would
guess that you almost certainly are).
Also I look at these events with a different set of assumptions and
background than you. In particularly I am intensely aware of the
fallibility of human observation -- any human's observation.
Therefore, this is weaker evidence to me than to you -- quite properly,
and with no slight implied.
Others know even less about you than I do, and will -- quite properly
-- evaluate the evidence as even weaker than I do.
The strength of evidence *for science* consists of what any reasonable,
rational person would evaluate the strength of the evidence: science is
about *shared* reality (of course, scientific controversy arises from
disagreements about what this constitutes in any particular case, since
there are no perfectly reasonable and rational people to ask).
Let's shift this from you to me for a moment. Currently, I believe
that the evidence for extraterrestrial visitation probably comes
entirely from misinterpretation, delusion and (some) fraud (this topic
is not the place to debate this). If I walked out of this building
this evening and a flying saucer landed and little green men came out
and talked to me, I would likely change that belief (though I would be
less sure than most people, who have what I believe is a naive belief
in the infallibility of their own perceptions). My personal conviction
would change -- I would have personal rational proof of
extraterrestrial visitation -- but I would *not* equate that personal
evidence with scientific evidence. I would then have a personal reason
for believing that scientific evidence might be found, but my *report*
of that experience would not constitute anything but a tiny piece of
such evidence.
Another question that has to be answered is "proof or evidence for
what?" One hundred years ago the Spiritualist movement made a very
similar statement: that their beliefs were, unlike all other religions,
subject to scientific verification. The field of psychical research
was founded essentially to investigate this claim. There was a bit of
disagreement because the psychical researchers made many rather strict
requirements for scientific evidence which the Spiritualists did not
feel was necessary. Eventually, however, the psychical researchers
gathered what they felt was sufficient scientific evidence to indicate
that *something* unexplained was taking place. In the process they
discovered a whole lot about the strange quirks of the human mind and
body which ended up as the foundations of modern psychology.
The psychical researchers then asked whether or not there was *another*
explanation than discorporeal spirits for the evidence they had. Such
a possible alternate explanation was found: what we would now call ESP
and PK. After a number of years, strong evidence for these phenomena
which could not be explained very well as the effects of spirits was
gotten. When psychical researchers started studying these phenomena
rather than spiritist phenomena, the nature of the field changed and it
became known as parapsychology.
There is now many orders of magnitude more evidence for psi (ESP and
PK) than for spiritist phenomena. If we feel that there is sufficient
scientific evidence to conclude that spiritualist mediums have done
something which is not conventionally explainable then objectively we
also have to accept the scientific conclusion of the existence of the
non-spiritualistic psi phenomena. But the latter alone, combined with
the amazing abilities of the subconscious, is sufficient to explain
spiritualistic phenomena. Until we know more about the limits of psi
it is unlikely that any phenomena will provide good scientific evidence
for the existence of non-corporeal spirits as opposed to psi phenomena
(personal evidence is another matter).
I do not know what claims the Aquarian Foundation makes, but I suspect,
from its use of the term "medium", that it is at least spiritist and
probably spiritualist (though presumably not affiliated with the modern
Spiritualist Church -- N.B. my use of capitals). If that is so, then
the same status for scientific evidence applies to its claims -- we
need to understand more about non-spirit mediated psi before we can
take anything as *scientific* evidence for the existence of a spirit
world.
As to how strong the evidence you present is for something paranormal
taking place -- what you have presented so far has much too little
information to constitute very good evidence. Partially that's because
you were being brief but could presumably provide more details.
But partially its because the requirements of good scientific evidence
are tough to meet under more or less "natural" settings. People's
memories (*all people's*) are influenced by what later happens so a
written record of (in this case) the question needs to be made.
People's perception of what takes place (again, *all people's*) is
influenced by what they expect so we need an objective record of what
took place. Billets are quite easy to read surreptitiously (you may be
legitimately convinced that the people involved are sincere, but I am
not in a position to reach such a conclusion; there *are* frauds out
there and I can not rule out that your people are such. Besides,
people in a trance are quite capable of doing quite complex things
which they are not consciously aware of), so the billet cannot contain
the actual question or anything which may hint of it. People can
communicate (without being aware of it) amazing amounts of detailed
information using body language which other people can read (either
consciously or subconsciously) so no one who knows what the question is
can have any contact with the medium. People are frequently much more
predictable than they are aware of so an element of unpredictability
has to be introduced. People are "designed" to find connections and
therefore tend to find them when they don't exist, so the
correspondences have to be judged by someone who doesn't know what the
"correct" answer is.
So, in summary -- what you describe may well constitute reasonable
*personal* evidence for the Foundation's claims, and may even
constitute reasonable personal "proof" (may be sufficient to convince
you, as a rational person, of the truth of their claims). It does not
constitute very strong *scientific* evidence for those claims, and only
comparatively stronger scientific evidence for the paranormal. If all
the conditions I mentioned (and usually a few more less general ones
also are needed) were met then it would constitute *fairly* good
evidence for the paranormal, but still would not constitute scientific
proof. The real world is just too complex and the phenomena we are
dealing with too subtle to get really strong evidence of the paranormal
this way. For that we need the simplified (and, unfortunately,
artificial) environment of the laboratory. Even then, no single
experiment constitutes scientific proof -- for that we need a large
body of consistent experiments.
One final clarification -- What I have been discussing is the status of
your experiences as *evidence*, i.e., for its ability to shift a
rational evaluation of the likelihood of existence of the paranormal.
The evaluation of the likelihood that your experiences constitute
examples of paranormal phenomena *given a belief* (presumably
rationally arrived at by other means) in the existence of paranormal
phenomena is a completely different issue. To put it another way: I
have answered the question "Do you think that these observations would
help convince an objective, rational judge as to the existence of
certain unconventional phenomena?" , and I have been rather negative.
The question "Do you think that it is likely that these observations
are of phenomena of paranormal nature?" is different and my answer is,
as it happens, considerably more positive.
Topher
|
622.26 | Beware the Dream Cream | GENRAL::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Fri Mar 04 1988 11:52 | 4 |
| re: 18...
Preparation H was used in combination with cream that makes wrinkles
disappear...!!! wasn't much left after that...
|
622.27 | {Billet Switching} | JUNIOR::DISMAIN | | Fri May 27 1988 11:51 | 13 |
| Re: .23
Topher, An entire chapter or more on what is known as "Billet
Switching" can be found in "Annemann's Practical Mental Effects"
By Theodore (Ted) Annemann written I believe in the 1940's.
I can look up the exact date and publisher if you need it.
Magically
Paul
|
622.28 | Billet Switching. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri May 27 1988 12:17 | 15 |
| RE: .27 (Paul)
Thanks, Paul; I'm familiar with it, it being *the* standard reference
in mentalism. I know the theory of many billet tricks and have some
more in my small library of magic (which isn't to say I wouldn't
love to learn more). But as I said, there are thousands of them,
and I doubt that anyone knows them all.
So the important point, from the viewpoint of a parapsychologist,
is that if a psychic has access to a billet, or has access to whatever
is being used to conceal the billet, or has supplied the equipment
used to produce or conceal the billet, then the possibility that
the psychic has read the billet cannot be excluded from consideration.
Topher
|