T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1756.1 | Keith Harary vs Blue Harary | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Oct 30 1992 15:02 | 20 |
| In my opinion, Keith Harary has been trying for some time to distance
himself from his past as the noted psychic Blue Harary. He is
unwilling to actually repudiate his past, and still maintains an
interest (for example, he usually shows up at the annual meetings of
the Parapsychology Association as a reporter for Omni -- though he
didn't this year) in parapsychology. But he is constantly downplaying
and distancing himself from work he was previously involved with -- for
example, by challenging descriptions of the extent of his own
involvement.
In particular, he is in the middle of a dual of papers in the Journal
of the American Society for Psychical Research with Stephan Schwartz
about a commercial treasure-hunting/underwater-psychic- archeology
project he worked on with Stephen. Many of his points are good -- the
project was no where near as rigorous as it could have been, the
commercial and scientific goals got somewhat muddled, and claims about
his role are not as well documented as they should have been. On the
other hand, he is doing a whole lot of nit-picking without much point.
Topher
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1756.2 | Squirming to sound conventional | DWOVAX::STARK | TV, cathode ray nipple | Fri Oct 30 1992 15:26 | 12 |
| I didn't have many of the details of Harary's past, but that was
pretty much the impression I was getting, that he seemed *very*
anxious about improving his credibility in certain circles by
removing himself from possible 'non-mainstream' implications of
his aspects of his past work. The whole Harary quote has to me that
distinctive 'squirming to sound conventional' sound to it. :-)
Thanks for the comments.
kind regards,
todd
|
1756.3 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Oct 30 1992 16:22 | 1 |
| How do they test for stuff like remote viewing anyway?
|
1756.4 | Remote viewing tests. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Oct 30 1992 16:41 | 21 |
| RE: .3 (Mary)
"Remote viewing" actually describes a kind of test, although there is a
heavy implication of the kind of target -- and people have used the
word to describe any ESP about a location.
The standard test has someone (the "agent") going to a randomly
selected location. The percipient -- unaware of the choice of course
-- describes (or draws, etc.) impressions that they get. The
impressions are then compared to a "pool" of locations which includes
the target location. Generally this is done with photos of the
locations but it has also been done with impressions gotten of each
location by someone who has gone there. The comparison may be done by
the percipient, or by independent judges, or both. If the target
location is judged most similar to the impressions, that is considered
a "hit". Partial scores may or may not be counted in the particular
experiment. Although "scoring" is done as I described, a lot of
attention is generally paid to the unquantifiable "quality" of the
match.
Topher
|
1756.5 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Oct 30 1992 16:42 | 1 |
| .. sounds like fun actually...
|
1756.6 | Fun is fine. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Oct 30 1992 16:59 | 4 |
| Yup -- I kinda' suspect that part of its popularity as an experimental
procedure is because it *is* fun.
Topher
|
1756.7 | But not as much fun as a full blown seance | DWOVAX::STARK | TV, cathode ray nipple | Fri Oct 30 1992 17:58 | 5 |
| More interesting than trying to guess Zener card outcomes
1,000,000 times in a row or trying to guess random numbers ?
Not hard to believe almost anything would be fun in comparison.
todd
|
1756.8 | | SWAM2::BRADLEY_RI | Holoid in a Holonomic Universe | Tue Nov 10 1992 18:04 | 44 |
| It IS fun! I've done it a few times at Esalen Institute, with George
Leonard, as the "instigator". He likes to try some of this "daring"
stuff when I come to the group. Yes, I have experienced a few "hits".
I've also experienced them when not "trying" to.
A theoretical underpinning (paradigm) which, for me, provides an
adequate frame for understanding this phenomenae is:
o The Universe we are in consists of stuff we can see (a very small
percentage of what there is. (The visible spectrum for Humans)
o The largest part of the Universe consists of stuff we cannot see:
Cosmic Rays, Neutrinos, X-Rays, etc. This "stuff" is physical
(Einstein showed that); yet, this kind of "stuff" goes through our
bodies all of the time. (If you have a very small radio or TV [small
enough to fit in your hand] you can demonstrate this easily.)
Moreover, you already know radio and tv "waves" go through your
dwelling and nearly all other buildings (except those lead shielded),
or in "Faraday Cages". Thus, we're always in and have always been in,
and electromagnetic soup. We are, furthermore, always "connected"
within this soup. To contact someone, one needs to access the right
"frequency". This part is fuzzy. My guess is that the Right
Hemisphere (in right-handed people) is the locus of the tuning and
sending parts of our equipment, with communication across the Corpus
Collosum to the speaking part of our brain, the Left Cerebral Cortex.
Holonomic Brain theory combined with David Bohm's speculation that we,
apparently, inhabit a Holograpic (nomic) Universe. And as Karl Pribram
said, when talking with Bohm, we have a Holonomic Brain interpreting a
Holonomic Universe. So Remote Viewing is one of the things we do.
o In my Workshops I've experimented with this. It is better with
groups, and the group needs to have done a lot of meditation together
during a day (let's say). I'd say an hours worth, at least, during an
8-hour period. It should be in a quiet place with few external noises
and influences (telephones, radios, talk, trucks, airplanes). Then set
up any kind of experiment whose resolution requires remote viewing or
"thought transference", and see what you get. You know, have someone
drive for 10 minutes, stop for 10 minutes, then have people draw, sing,
the location--don't try to use linear, left-brained functions for this.
My experience suggests Right Hemispheric functions. Left-brained
functions seem to act as inhibitors. You can do your logical analysis
later.
Richard B
|
1756.9 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Wed Nov 11 1992 11:08 | 2 |
| That sounds like fun, Richard. Why don't they pay people to do
interesting stuff like that? :-)
|
1756.10 | | SWAM2::BRADLEY_RI | Holoid in a Holonomic Universe | Wed Nov 11 1992 23:59 | 3 |
| I do plan to be paid $$$$$
Richard B
|
1756.11 | Why always hemispheres ? | DWOVAX::STARK | Controlled floundering | Thu Nov 12 1992 08:48 | 10 |
| re: .8,
Yes, sounds like interesting work.
Regarding your theoretical underpinning, Richard,
do you have any indications that there is actually
differential activity of the brain hemispheres, or
is that a speculation based on extrapolation from
the infamous commisurotomy experiments ?
todd
|
1756.12 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Thu Nov 12 1992 09:35 | 7 |
| .10
Wow! Are they taking resumes? :-)
Seriously Richard.... how do they know who should be on the team and
who shouldn't? It's not exactly something one can produce work samples
of.. and be believed (that is).
|
1756.13 | | SWAM2::BRADLEY_RI | Holoid in a Holonomic Universe | Fri Nov 13 1992 01:10 | 13 |
| Todd: This is speculation, partially based the Commisurotomy
experiments by Bogen, Gazzaniga, etal. I certainly was not using EEG's
during my workshops. Somebody's got to do the wild speculation--so,
I've chosen myself. :-)
Mary:
I didn't understand your question? But, this work is both fun and
enlightening, and it has taken a lot of work, study, money, books to
gain the knowledge base for me to do it. That's a good enough set of
reasons to charge money.
Richard B
|