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1218.1 | well ... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift. | Tue Feb 20 1990 15:13 | 27 |
| I haven't seen the program, but from your description, it reminds
me very much of something that happened in the early 1950s.
At that time, a book came out called _The Search for Bridey Murphy_.
It concerned a woman who, under hypnosis, was "regressed" to "an
earlier life," where she'd been a girl living in Ireland named Bridey
Murphy. The woman described things that happened at the time "Bridey"
had lived, both in terms of events and landmarks, that could be
verified, and were! This, despite the fact that it took place in
Ireland, which the woman had never visited! It caused a stir, and
the book became an overnight sensation, since it "proved" the existence of
reincarnation. One youngster even killed himself because he was
curious to see what his next life would be.
However ....
Follow-up investigation revealed that the whole incident was the
result of some well-meaning but faulty work of the (amateur) folk
who hypnotized the woman. To make a long story short, the investigative
reporters found the "real" Bridey Murphy, in the person of an old
woman who had emigrated to the United States and who had reminisced
about things to the hypnotic subject when the latter was a little
girl. The old woman worked around the subject's house in some domestic
capacity, and she would chatter on to the child (the subject) about
her old home as she worked.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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1218.2 | Comments on Bridey Murphy | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Feb 20 1990 16:23 | 30 |
| RE: .1 (Steve K.)
Let me emphasize a couple of things about the Bridey Murphey case that
Steve mentioned:
First off -- we are not talking about conscious fraud on the part of
the pseudo-"channel". She almost certainly had no conscious memory
of where the Bridey Murphy memories came from. The subconscious
stores memories which the conscious has completely forgotten.
Sometimes, for "its own" purposes (perhaps stimulated by hypnosis,
perhaps not) it will use those memories in various ways, including
adding versimlitude to completely false pseudo-memories. Hypnosis
is one way that the subconscious can be inspired to create such
pseudo-memories.
Second -- Steve emphasized that the hypnotists involved were "amateurs"
but there are many professional hypnotists who don't understand this
fundamental characteristic of hypnosis. Hypnosis produces fantasy,
not truth. The fantasy may be convincing to all concerned. The
fantasy may (frequently is) theraputically useful. But it only
corresponds to literal truth by accident. The subconscious is a
"pathological liar" and hypnosis does nothing to change that.
No amount of skill on the part of the hypnotist will side-step this.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of professionals who have never learned
this. Treat all memories "brought out" under hypnosis, whoever the
hypnotist is, exactly as you would treat memories "brought out" under
massive doses of, say, LSD.
Topher
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1218.3 | Thruth is hard to find..... | UTROP1::DRAGSTRA_L | | Fri Feb 23 1990 09:51 | 25 |
| Didn't hear about the Bridey Murphy-case, however, a couple of years
ago we had a program on TV in Holland which dealt with the same
subject, reincarnation.
They followed four people back to their 'roots' in an earlier life.
These people were also hypnotised, with regression-techniques/therapy
(don't know exactly, or even if it's called different in US). In
three cases they could trace back those oldold memories, to long
forgotten happenings. F.i., a woman could speak a little swedish,
and it turned out that she had remembered from her grandfather
(who was Swedish), even though she had never spoken swedish herself.
But... there was one, of which they couldn't say it was
memory/fraud/whatever. So, that gives room for speculation, doesn't
it. I find it hard to believe that what comes out under hypnoses
is all fantasy.... Isn't it true that you can -under hypnoses- remember
things that happened when you were just a child?? So why can't you
go a little further?
Anyway, it's like with a lot of things that can't be explained.
You either believe it or not, or maybe you just hope it's true.
It would give me some pleasure to think that I would last a little
longer than just the odd 70/80 years....
Lindy
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1218.4 | Ah yes I remember it well... | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Feb 23 1990 12:43 | 39 |
| RE: .3 (Lindy)
> Isn't it true that you can -under hypnoses- remember things that
> happened when you were just a child??
Maybe -- but although this has been claimed often it has never really
been demonstrated. What *has* been demonstrated is that people under
hypnosis will have detailed hypnotic "dreams" (for lack of a more neutral
term) which they find to be highly plausible as "real" memories and
which they may thereafter experience as "real" memories. However,
if the details are checked they are sometimes found to be grossly in
conflict with reality (e.g., a detailed memory of the person's third
birthday party, when they had no third birthday party). Generally
the accuracy of these "memories" seem to be roughly the same as if
the person is simply asked to make up plausible details -- the
difference is that under hypnosis the person is unaware that they are
making up the plausible details.
Such pseudomemories seem quite useful in therapy. They may create
metaphors for real psychological conflicts which can form the basis of
healing and/or growth. Many hypnotherapists find themselves convinced
by their patients obvious sencerity and sense of conviction, by the
wealth of minute detail which appears, and by the theraputic
usefullness of the memories (which classical Freudian psychology claims
could only come from "real" memories). They are simply undervaluing
the power of the human imagination.
> Anyway, it's like with a lot of things that can't be explained...
Why? What have we spoken of which can't be explained in any
fundamental sense? (Those who know me, know that I don't reject the
existence of the unexplained -- but I ask that the phenomenon have at
least some unexplained aspect before I get excited. There have been
very, very few adult reincarnation/regression cases which contain any
thing even vaguly annomalous, and those seem adequately "explained"
by subconscious clairvoyance).
Topher
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1218.5 | pointer to more info | MARX::FLEMING | Prosecutors will be violated | Mon Feb 26 1990 12:57 | 13 |
| For more information on reincarnation and several other fascinating
subjects read "The After Death Experience - The Physics of the Non-Physical"
by Ian Wilson. In the early chapters the book details several cases where
small children had memories of previous lives and were able to describe
people and places they had never seen before. While many of these cases
turned out to be frauds (parents often claimed that their child seemed to
be the reincarnation of the child of a wealthy family) some others seemed
to be genuine. In these cases the child "remembered" things that were
known only to the family and in some cases were not known at all until the
child told people where to look. In one case, a child revealed who had
murdered him in a previous life and was able to prove it.
In general, a very thought provoking book.
John...
|
1218.6 | Different phenominon in adults and small children. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Feb 26 1990 15:16 | 12 |
| RE: .5
... Or go to the source and read the books and monographs by Dr. Ian
Stevenson where he describes his research uncovering these cases.
These books are described elsewhere in this conference.
My previous comments are only about memories of past lives in adults.
Past life memories in small children appear to be quite a different
set of phenomena, some of which are much more difficult to explain
than apparent past lives memories in adults.
Topher
|
1218.7 | different? | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Mon Feb 26 1990 16:03 | 10 |
| RE -1 (Topher)
> My previous comments are only about memories of past lives in adults.
> Past life memories in small children appear to be quite a different
> set of phenomena, some of which are much more difficult to explain
> than apparent past lives memories in adults.
What a REMARKABLE observation. Could you elaborate a bit more?
Arie
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1218.8 | ? | USAT05::KASPER | All life can be a ritual | Mon Feb 26 1990 16:36 | 9 |
| This reminds me of a dream my daughter had when she was about four. It was
during a nap and I happened to be with her when she awoke. The told me she
"saw" things when she was asleep, then described herself as covered in white
clothing with something covering (but something she could see through)
her face. She said she was with a man on a hill doing something with
"Bee houses". I asked her when it was (meaning time of day) and she replied,
"When I used to be older."
Terry
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1218.9 | Different! | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Feb 26 1990 17:56 | 90 |
| RE: .7 (Arie)
> What a REMARKABLE observation. Could you elaborate a bit more?
Now why do I feel that part of what makes the observation "REMARKABLE"
in your opinion, Arie, is that I made it? :-)
In any case, I'd be glad to elaborate "a bit more."
Basically, there are many fine points in which the character of adult
"onset" apparent past life memories and childhood "onset" apparent past
life memories differ. (Lets call them AOPLM and CHOPLM for
convenience -- acronyms which I just made up). You can find details
in Dr. Stevenson's writings (in particular, he has recently published
a book which, according to the reviews, concentrates on the overall
character of the evidence and his evaluation of its significance,
rather than on the details of individual cases. I can get the title,
and can tentativly recommend it on the basis of my knowledge of Dr.
Stevenson's other writing and on the basis of the reviews I have seen;
though I have not yet read it).
Differences in the two groups are not unexpected even if the phenomena
involved were purely psychological: after all, children just are not
like adults. But the character of many of the differences is such that
it would seem that AOPLM cases are not a very rich source of real
anomalies but that CHOPLM cases are. AOPLM cases, in almost all
instances, are explainable strictly in terms of the experiants'
beliefs about the life or period involved plus various consciously
forgotten sources of information. Only in a very few cases is there
any unambigously anomalous information (usually among a mash of
misinformation) and that seems rather easy to "explain" via ESP.
Many of the CHOPLM cases, of course, also break down under
investigation or are too ambiguous to be considered evidential. But when
the same intensive methods of investigation are applied to CHOPLM cases
which tend to break down the AOPLM cases, a rather large percentage
seem to survive. At first blush, one would expect on the basis of
purely psychological theories, the opposite to be true. One would not
expect children to be so much more successful than adults at
subconsciously covering up their sources of information. Of course,
there are other factors to consider which partially compensates for
this: the difficulty of communication with children, possible tendencies
of researchers to give children "the benefit of the doubt", the different
character of the reports themselves, and adult conspiracies to support
the child's word.
I don't consider that these cases are unambiguously paranormal (i.e.,
unexplainable in conventional terms) -- it is very difficult for any
field phenomena to be so unambiguous, there is too much uncontrolled
and the real world is just to complex to be sure about such things.
They do, however, provide very interesting data which one has to really
work at to "explain" in conventional terms. To put it in other terms:
they are just about as good evidence for the existence of this kind
of phenomena as one could reasonable expect to actually exist.
I am uncomfortable with reasoning which says that these cases must
be produced by reincarnation because they are inconsistent with how
ESP is supposed to operate. Such arguments rest on the false
assumption that we have some basis to say how ESP is supposed to operate.
Nevertheless, the CHOPLM cases are quite at variance with how
parapsychologists generally view ESP as operating, and so, one way or
another, provide a challenge to the completeness of that view.
Some characteristics I consider interesting which differs between AOPLM
and CHPLM:
- AOPLM are generally explicitly invoked, frequently deliberately.
CHPLM are either entirely spontaneous or are stimulated rather
casually: for example by the appearance in a crowd of someone known
only in the previous life.
- AOPLMs become more elaborate and clearer as time goes on. CHPLMs
fade and disappear.
- AOPLMs generally involve many past lives. CHOPLMs generally involve
a single apparent past life.
- AOPLMs generally involve distant times and places; not uncommonly
times and places which are partially or wholly mythical. CHPLMs
generally involve a lifetime nearby in place (within a few hundred
miles or less), time (generally the previous life ended at most a
few years before the birth of the child -- if that much), and culture
(perhaps this is confounded with nearness in place).
I have to admit, however, that as significant as I find all this, I
have never spent the time necessary to systematically study it -- I
have simply read this and that about it over the years. I believe,
however, that the above statements are all substantially correct.
Topher
|
1218.10 | | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Tue Feb 27 1990 01:15 | 25 |
| > Now why do I feel that part of what makes the observation "REMARKABLE"
> in your opinion, Arie, is that I made it? :-)
Hm. Why indeed?
:-):-)
> ....... I can get the title,
> and can tentativly recommend it on the basis of my knowledge of Dr.
> Stevenson's other writing and on the basis of the reviews I have seen;
If you get the title, please let me know.
It's all highly intriguing for me, what you wrote in there. Has there been found
any relationship with the age of the children? Or is it just that the
CHOPLMs appear less and less when the child grows up?
Somehow I relate this to the discussion we had a long time ago about eidetic
memory: it usually disappears after a certain age (six? eight?). Have there been
found any relationships with that? Or with other physiological/psychological
states?
I am familiar with theories about "state-dependent learning". What you describe
could best be described as "state-dependent UNlearning"..... It strikes me
that access to it becomes so difficult at a more advanced age....
Arie
|
1218.11 | | MFGMEM::ROSE | | Tue Feb 27 1990 07:13 | 12 |
| I read Stevenson's case histories "suggestive of reincarnation" many
years ago, and I as recall several of the children presented were
from India. I wonder to what extent the beliefs of the Indian culture
might have influenced the reports of the children and the interpreta-
tion of their reports. It seems to me that interpretations are often
made within the context of belief systems. For example, several of
the great Christian mystics end up experiencing a state which can be
described as "undifferentiated unity," but which they seem to assume
is a union with God.
Virginia
|
1218.12 | The book. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Tue Feb 27 1990 10:55 | 59 |
| RE: .18 (Arie)
The book is:
Children Who Remember Previous Lives: A Question of
Reincarnation. By Ian Stevenson. Charlottesville: University
Press of Virginia, 1987. $35.00 cloth; $14.95, paper. ISBN
0-8139-1140-0
I thought I would quote a few paragraphs from the review which appears
in the current issue of the Journal of the American Society for
Psychical Research (Jan. 1990, Vol 84, #1. pp88-93):
In this excellent and very readable book, Ian Stevenson
presents the general reader with a careful account of his
research on cases "suggestive" of reincarnation. In so doing,
he offers us a fascinating and compelling book with the
distinct potential for profoundly changing our way of
understanding the nature of human existence and death. As a
matter of fact, describing this book in terms such as
"excellent" or "important" is something of an understatement.
After all, if Stevenson is correct about what he has been
arguing these past 25 years in various books and articles, his
work constitutes nothing less than a Copernican breakthrough
in our understanding of human nature. This reviewer believes
that Stevenson is demonstrably correct in what he has been
arguing, namely, that belief in reincarnation is simply the
best available *empirical* (rather than philosophical or
theological) explanation for an important body of data we can
no longer ignore or disregard for whatever reasons we have
done so.
Even so, in this book Stevenson does not offer what he takes
to be detailed evidence for reincarnation. That evidence he
has offered elsewhere in other books and detailed case
studies. Rather, his primary concern is to give a general
account of his research on cases "suggestive" of
reincarnation. As such, the book describes the nature of his
research methodology, the more important results obtained, and
his present conclusions. Modestly [a term I would never think
to apply to Dr. Stevenson. :-) TC] enough, Stevenson claims
that he will be content simply to succeed in showing the
general plausibility of belief in reincarnation and in
inspiring a certain open-mindedness to the discussion. He
would very much disapprove of anybody coming to believe in
reincarnation solely as a result of reading this book. Along
the way, he seeks to clear up some pervasive confusions,
objections, and questions about what belief in reincarnation
does and does not imply. He has a secondary interest in both
eliciting reports of new cases in the West (such cases he
believes are very much under-reported), and in exposing a
shamefully exploited enthusiasm for hypnosis and regression as
a way of recovering past-life memories.
The review is by Robert M. Almeder of the Georgia State University
Department of Philosophy. I do not know him either personally or by
reputation.
Topher
|
1218.13 | Hypnosis after childhood | DPDMAI::EASTERLING | Keep an Ace in the Hole | Thu Mar 08 1990 15:22 | 7 |
|
Does anyone know if Dr. Stevenson (or anyone else) has done
on-going research with hypnosis on these children who seem to
remember past lives. Specifically have any of them been regressed
several years after these memories have faded to find out if the
same memories are recalled under hypnosis. Just thought it might
be an interesting study.
|
1218.14 | FYI - repeat of show tomorrow night | FSDEV2::LWAINE | Linda | Tue Jul 10 1990 10:58 | 8 |
|
The Unsolved Mysteries program with this woman is on again tomorrow night
(Wed 7/11/90).
Linda
|
1218.15 | Unsolved Mysteries | SALEM::BOUTHILLIER | | Thu Sep 23 1993 15:09 | 19 |
| Another 'Unsolved Mysteries" program was on (9/22/93)dealing with a
regression session with a man who claimed to have a phobia about water
and found it difficult to take a tub bath.Under regression by a
hypnotherapist he suddenly started writhing in anxiety on the couch,
when asked what was the problem , he said he was on a submarine in
WWII off New Guinea which was being depth charged by the Japanese and
he was drowning.He gave the therapist his name and the submarine's
name as well as a friend trapped with him in the compartment.
A check of the archives revealed his sub called "Shark" was sunk in
1943 in that area and the name given was revealed to have been on
board.
"Unsolved Mysteries" arranged to have him reunited with people who
knew the person on the submarine in his hometown, where he felt
"dejavue" of his surroundings and was able to answer questions that
was peculiar to the person he claimed to be on the submarine.
A suggestion of reincarnation is one possibility? It certainly would
solve the fear of water and drowning he was experiencing.
Any other thoughts on this?
|