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Our future, our universe, and other weighty topics


Tuesday, October 15, 2024

NASA Just Launched a $5,000,000,000 "Snowball's Chance in Hell" Mission

Hurricane Milton delayed the launch of NASA's Europa Clipper mission, which occurred  on Monday. It's too bad nature can't whip up some time warp that would allow going back in time to cancel the ill-conceived mission, which will almost certainly be a waste of 5 billion dollars that won't produce any very important scientific results.

Europa is a moon of the planet Jupiter. The Europa Clipper mission will be solely focused on getting more information about this distant moon. But the Europa Clipper won't have the job of discovering what Europa looks like. We already know that, from previous space missions.

Europa (Credit: NASA)

The Europa Clipper spacecraft will take photos of Europa more close-up than previous photos. But there won't be any very interesting close-ups, due to the fact that the surface of Europa is almost featureless, consisting of frozen ice. So the Europa Clipper won't find any interesting geological features like the Valles Marineris on Mars. The most interesting features on the surface are merely cracks in the ice. Close-up photos of those won't provide photos that people will be pasting on their walls.

The reason why scientists are interested in Europa is that they think that there could be life in an ocean underneath the icy surface of Europa. Will the Europa Clipper be able to confirm that life exists on Europa? It seems not, for the mission does not include a lander.

But NASA scientists have a loony kind of “bet all your retirement savings on a 9-digit lottery number" idea about how the Europa Clipper spacecraft might detect life. The scientists hope that it might be able to fly through a water geyser erupting on Europa, and sniff signs of life in water vapor. A NASA video told us that Europa “might be erupting plumes of water,” and that “if that's true, then we could fly through those plumes with the spacecraft.” There are two reasons why there is virtually no hope that such a thing would ever succeed in detecting life.

The first reason is the enormous improbability of abiogenesis, life appearing from non-life in an under-the-ice ocean of Europa. To calculate this chance, we must consider all of the insanely improbable things that seemed to be required for life to originate from non-life. It seems that to have even the most primitive life originate, you need to have an “information explosion,” a vast organization windfall comparable to falling trees luckily forming into a big log-cabin hotel. Even the most primitive microorganism known to us seems to need a minimum of more than 200,000 very well-arranged base pairs in its DNA (as discussed here).

Scientists have been knocking their heads on the origin-of-life problem for decades, and have made very little progress. The origin of even the simplest life seems to require fantastically improbable events. Protein molecules have to be just-right to be functional. It has been calculated that something like 1070 random trials would be needed for a single type of functional protein molecule to appear, and many different types of protein molecules are needed for life to get started. And so much more is also needed: a complex cell, self-replicating molecules, a genetic code that is an elaborate system of symbolic representations, and also some fantastically improbable luck in regard to homochirality (like the luck of you tossing a big trash can full of pennies on the floor, and having them all turn up heads).  The complete failure of all attempts to search for radio signals from extraterrestrials would seem to provide further evidence against claims that the origin of life is relatively easy. 

There is another reason the “sniff life from a water geyser's vapor” would have virtually no chance of succeeding. The evidence that water plumes even occur on Europa is only borderline, with some research casting doubt on the evidence. If water plumes occur on Europa, they seem to occur only very rarely and for a short time. The paper here suggests plume “ballistic timescales of only 1000” seconds, making the chance of a spacecraft flying through a plume incredibly unlikely (less than the chance of me dying from stray gunfire).  Europa's suspected ocean (the only place where life could exist) is 10 to 25 kilometers below a layer of ice, making it all but impossible that geysers could shoot out microbes through such an ice layer. 

It would not at all be a situation like the following:

Mr. Spock: Captain, I detect a water plume from a geyser on Europa.
Captain Kirk: Quick, hurry over there while it lasts! Go to Warp Factor 8!

If a rare water geyser eruption occurred, the Europa Clipper spacecraft probably would not be anywhere close to Europa's surface. This is because the Europa Clipper mission plan does not have the spacecraft orbiting Europa. Instead, the plan is to just have the spacecraft repeatedly fly by Europa, flying by it about 45 times, so that the spacecraft does not pick up too much deadly radiation near Europa. With only such intermittent appearances close to Europa, the spacecraft would need an incredibly lucky coincidence to occur for the spacecraft to fly through some short-lived water plume ejected by a geyser.

We can compare this scheme to the loony “wing and a prayer” scheme of a traveler who plans to travel without any food to a city in a foreign country, the plan being that the traveler will walk with his mouth open and hope that someone discards food by throwing it into the air, with the food luckily landing in the traveler's mouth.

At a previous NASA video, we get some talk that revealed the main motivation behind Europa exploration. It's all about trying to prove (contrary to all the known facts) that “the origin of life must be pretty easy,” to use the words in the video. For people with certain ideological tendencies, proving that the origin of life was easy is like a crusade. But zealous crusaders often don't make logical plans, as we saw during the Middle Ages when there were foolish missions such as the Children's Crusade, in which an army of children marched off to try to capture the Holy Lands from Muslim armies. The Europa Clipper mission's odds of biological detection success seem like the odds of success faced by the Children's Crusade.

In a news story the director of the JPL laboratory central to these kind of space missions gives us a clue about how the Europa Clipper mission is a kind of materialist pilgrimage, by telling us that "I often talk about these missions as modern cathedrals." But cathedrals last for centuries, unlike Europa Clipper which will crash into one of Jupiter's moons.  In the same article we have a sample of Bill Nye's frequent bad reasoning. He says this:

" 'If there is something alive — imagine a Europanian microbe, let alone Europanian fish people — these things would be shot into space'  Nye said. 'If you sample water in any pond anywhere on Earth, anywhere there’s moisture, you’ll find all these viruses and bacteria and microbes, writ tiny, and so it’s reasonable we’d at least find organic compounds.' ”

Notice the quadruple sophistry in which (1) it is wrongly assumed that probably nonexistent Europa microbes way below a very thick ice layer on Europa "would be shot into space;" (2) it is suggested that so rare an event would luckily match the Europa Clipper's flying path, which would be like you firing a gun randomly into the sky and luckily downing a flying turkey;  (3)  the chance of finding life in earthly ponds (100%) is compared to the chance of sniffing life in a Europa flyby (probably less than .000000001), and (4) we have the witless  suggestion that fish people might be geyser-squirted through a thick ice layer of 10 to 20 miles, ending up high above Europa where they might be detected by a flyby spacecraft.  Bill Nye's reasoning here is as goofy a fairy-tale as his bad reasoning about biological origins on Earth.  

Oops, we got a quixotic quest

Saturday, October 12, 2024

Misleading Statements in a Recent Nobel Prize Announcement

 This week they announced the winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The award went to David Baker "for computational protein design" and Dennis Hassabis and John M. Jumper "for protein structure prediction." The Nobel Prize committee released a press release on this prize which contained quite a few examples of very misleading information. 

The press release had the extremely misleading title "They cracked the code for proteins’ amazing structures." No such thing was done by the winners of this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry. There is a real code used by protein molecules, what is called the genetic code. That is the code by which particular triple combinations of nucleotide base pairs represent particular amino acids. That code was cracked in the middle of the 20th century. No new code involving proteins was cracked by any of this year's Nobel Prize winners. The work done by Dennis Hassabis and John M. Jumper was work in developing a computer program (AlphaFold2) that achieved a higher  level of success in predicting the three-dimensional structure of proteins, using inputs of the amino acid sequences of such proteins. 

Rather than involving any great insight on how proteins achieve their three-dimensional structures (still a very great unsolved mystery called the protein folding problem), the AlphaFold2 program achieves its limited success by frequentist prediction. Frequentist prediction involves crunching data to find cases such as where someone or something with characteristic X is more likely to have characteristic Y, allowing you to predict that having characteristic X makes you more likely to have characteristic Y, even though you don't understand any causal relation between the two.  For example, you might have some computer program that crunches tons of data, and finds odd little facts such as that people who watched a particular movie are more likely to die of cancer. You might then create some program that predicts your likelihood of dying based on what movies you saw this year.  But you probably would not understand what causal relations were involved. It might be all kinds of hidden causal relations such as the fact that some movie might be preferred by older people more likely to die of cancer, and the fact that some other movie (maybe one of those car daredevil movies) might be preferred by people who drive more dangerously.

The press release misleads us in its very first paragraph by stating this: "Demis Hassabis and John Jumper have developed an AI model to solve a 50-year-old problem: predicting proteins’ complex structures." What is called the protein structure prediction problem (not to be confused with the protein folding problem) is the problem of trying to predict the three-dimensional structure of a protein from its amino acid sequence. Dennis Hassabis and John Jumper made progress on such a problem, but certainly did not solve it.  The three-dimensional structure of the more complex proteins cannot be reliably predicted from their amino acid sequence. 

We have here more of the triumphalist hogwash that institutional science is so often guilty of. Someone may make some progress on some problem, and then people in the world of science academia start shouting "Problem solved!" Often the claimed progress is no real progress at all, or only some very small progress that leaves 90% of the problem still unsolved. 

The Nobel Prize announcement press release then proceeds to  mislead about the nature of protein molecules and life. The press release claims that proteins "control and drive all the chemi­cal reactions that together are the basis of life." Chemical reactions are a very important part of life, but it is nonsense to claim that the totality of chemical reactions are "the basis of life." Life is a state of vast physical organization, and that is something vastly more than just chemical reactions. Human life requires amino acids that are organized into 20,000+ types of protein molecules, which are organized into many types of protein complexes, which are organized into many types of organelles, which are organized into hundreds of different types of cells, which are organized into many types of tissues, which are organized into many types of organs, which are organized into different types of organ systems.  None of those things is a chemical reaction.  So it is a glaring falsehood to refer to "the chemi­cal reactions that together are the basis of life," as if a human body was merely chemical reactions. 

It is also very false to claim that proteins "control and drive all the chemi­cal reactions that together are the basis of life," because there are very many chemical reactions in the body that are not controlled and driven by proteins. Some of these reactions involve other types of molecules such as nucleic acids and other molecules simpler than proteins. And since a protein molecule has no mind or will or intentions, it is misleading to claim that protein molecules "control and drive" chemical reactions.  An accurate statement would be that protein molecules participate in incredibly complex chemical reactions. 

The press release then makes this misleading statement: "Proteins generally consist of 20 different amino acids, which can be described as life’s building blocks." A  large fraction of the people reading the claim that "proteins generally consist of 20 different amino acids" will get the idea that a protein consists of only 20 amino acids.  No, instead the reality is that human protein molecules consist of hundreds or thousands of amino acids, and that there are 20 different types of amino acids. The press release should have said "proteins are built from 20 different types of amino acids," but instead it used a phrase prone to make us think that protein molecules are gigantically simpler than they are. And by using the misleading language in which amino acids are referred to as "building blocks," the press release furthered the misimpression that amino acids can be put together in no special sequence, because building blocks do not have to be arranged in any special order. Instead, amino acids must be arranged in sequences as special and hard-to-achieve as the characters in functional well-written prose. 

building blocks of life deceit

I can imagine some readers of the press release:

Bob: Wow, it says in this Nobel Prize announcement that "proteins generally consist of 20 different amino acids." I never knew that a protein molecule is so simple, with only 20 parts. 

Bill: That's strange, I could have sworn I read somewhere that protein molecules each consist of very many well-arranged parts, usually hundreds, and sometimes thousands. 

Bob: But the Nobel Prize guys say that proteins are made of only 20 amino acids, and surely they must have got things right. So a protein molecule must have only 20 parts. 

We can only wonder how many people were equally misinformed by the misleading press release of the Nobel Prize committee. Then there's a visual released with the press release. The visual makes it look like an amino acid has only one part. Instead amino acids have between 7 to 33 atoms each, which have to be arranged in special structures. The average human protein molecule has about 470 amino acids (according to the paper here), meaning that human protein molecules typically require thousands of atoms that have to be arranged just right.  Similarly, a page of well-written grammatical prose in fine print requires thousands of characters that have to be ordered just the right way to achieve a particular end, in contrast to "building blocks" that can be assembled just fine when no particular order is used. 

Failing to ever refer to cells, the Nobel Prize press release also describes proteins as "the building blocks of different tissues." The hierarchical structure of life is actually that proteins are components of protein complexes, which are components of organelles, which are components of cells, which are components of tissues. Saying that proteins are the building blocks of different tissues is like saying that body cells are the building blocks of football leagues, a statement ridiculous because there are four or five layers of organization (tissues, organs, organ systems, human beings and football teams) between a body cell and a football league. And it is misleading to use the term "building blocks" to describe proteins that require a very special arrangement of hundreds of thousands of parts (unlike building blocks, which require only a single part). 

Why do such mistakes of grotesque oversimplification and misrepresenting complexity keep happening over and over again in the literature of chemistry and biology? What's going on is that our scientists are misteaching us in the way they need to misteach us, in order to foist their triumphal boasts upon us. The groundless boast that human origins are well-understood cannot be widely sold if the vast complexity and enormous physical organization of organisms are realistically depicted, nor can such a boast be widely sold if human minds are depicted in their true complexity and diversity of experiences and capabilities.   So the people selling that false boast must constantly depict bodies and minds as being enormously simpler than they are. And so our biology educators keep miseducating us in so many ways, by doing things such as publishing phony cell diagrams that make cells look as if they have a thousand times fewer organelles than they have, and making statements prone to give people the false idea that a protein molecule has only 20 parts, and making absurdly false claims that life is just some chemical reactions. 

You might call it the Simplicity Scam. Here is how the scam works:

1. You keep claiming that life or mind is “just chemistry.”

2. You keep speaking as if life can be built from simple, unordered parts called “building blocks.”

3. You keep publishing diagrams that make cells look a million times simpler then they are.

4. You keep saying that humans are just “carbon stuff” or “star stuff.”

5. You keep saying that humans are just animals or little more than apes.

6. You keep trying to make the mind look a million times simpler than it is, by saying it is “just consciousness.”

7. You keep speaking as if biological innovations can appear by mere accumulations of genetic accidents, without mentioning the gigantic levels of fine-tuned arrangement, hierarchical organization and component interdependence required everywhere in the body. 

8. You tell the lie that DNA (which has no anatomy information) is a body blueprint, a deceit that makes bodies seem a million times simpler than they are, something simple enough to be built from a blueprint. 

9. You don't tell people about undisputed medical case histories that defy your simple little story that brains make minds and that brains store memories. 

10. You don't tell people about the many neuroscience facts that defy your simple little story that brains make minds and that brains store memories, facts such as the fact that each chemical synapse transmits a nerve signal with a reliability of 50 percent or less (meaning accurate recall should be impossible if it occurs from reading of information stored in brains).

11. You tell people hand-waving simplistic nonsense such as the claim that human memories (of such enormous diversity and information richness) can be stored by some mere bulking up of synapses. 

12. You suppress or ignore accounts of paranormal human abilities and unexplained paranormal phenomena.

13. You use “shame, blame and defame” tactics against the witnesses of such phenomena, to try to preserve the idea that minds are very simple. 

14. You make misleading claims trying to suggest that life can appear once there are "the right ingredients," thereby suggesting that the simplest life is some mere potion or mixture, rather than a state of enormous organization requiring hundreds of different types of complex protein inventions. 

15. You make equally misleading claims trying to suggest that life can arise from nonlife by a mere injection of energy, a "jumpstarting," which is like saying you can jolt your way to book authorship. 

16. You try to make very complex biological innovations look a trillion times easier to arise than they would be, by calling them mere "variants" or examples of "diversification." 

The scam artists who act this way are like the guy in the visual below:

oversimplification

The Nobel Prize press release has an "Advanced Information" link which takes us to the document here. That document starts misinforming us right at its beginning, by repeating the groundless claim known as Anfinsen's Dogma. We read, "In 1972, Christian Anfinsen was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the remarkable finding that protein 3D structures were basically encoded by the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain." No, the three-dimensional structures of proteins are not " encoded by the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain."  Anfinsen should not have been given the 1972 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, because he provided no robust evidence to support Anfinsen's Dogma, doing only some poorly replicated experiments with proteins of way-below-average complexity, with only about 127 amino acids (less than a third of the average number of amino acids in a human protein). See my post here for why Anfinsen's Dogma is not credible. An encyclopedia page says that "20 to 30 percent of polypeptide chains require the assistance of a chaperone for correct folding under normal growth conditions."  Such a figure helps discredit Anfinsen's Dogma, showing that a polypeptide sequence (a sequence of amino acids) is not sufficient to explain the 3D shapes of protein molecules. 

Alarm bells should go off in your head whenever you hear a scientist using the word "basically." It's very often a clue that what you are being told is not really true. 

It's amazing that the Nobel Prize organization was this week hailing the work that got Anfinsen the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1972, as if it were ignorant of the 2022 paper "The Anfinsen Dogma: Intriguing Details Sixty-Five Years Later," which tried to reproduce Anfinsen's experiments that got him that prize, but was unable to reproduce them. This epitomizes how today's Big Science machinery so often fails to pay attention to replication. That paper tells us about some of the false claims made about Anfinsen's work. We read, "The statement reported in many textbooks that Anfinsen removed denaturing and reducing agents by means of dialysis has no confirmation in the literature."  The authors state flatly that the main research result claimed by Anfinsen (a claim that got him the Nobel Prize) -- the result that "RNase refolds spontaneously into correct secondary and tertiary structures" is a result that "must be completely refused" (in other words, a result that is dead wrong). 

Never forget the important reality that false claims can arise in scientific literature, and may continue to be stated in scientific literature for decades or centuries after they have been discredited or disproven.

The Anfinsen story is a classic example of folly in modern science. A scientist (Anfinsen) did an experiment with a very small molecule (less than one third the average size of a human protein), and claimed that this showed that the 3D structure of most proteins is determined solely by their amino acid sequence (Anfinsen's Dogma, also called the thermodynamic hypothesis). This was rather like a man claiming that he built a house, and claiming that this shows that a single man can build an entire cathedral. Because scientists were eager to embrace the mechanistic dogma that protein shapes are determined solely by amino acid sequences, a Nobel Prize was soon awarded to Anfinsen, and innumerable science books and articles started claiming that his work proved his dogma (even though it made no sense to make such a claim based on Anfinsen's meager experimental results involving so small a molecule). There was little work done to try to do further experiments that might verify Anfinsen's claims, such as trying tests like his with average-sized proteins. Scientists had their triumphal story, and did not want to do further tests that might spoil that story. After fifty years of the science literature making the groundless claim that Anfinsen's experiments had proven his dogma, some diligent scientists finally tried in their 2022 paper to replicate his experiments, and found they could not even replicate them. So it was fifty years of science literature misinforming us on this important topic of whether the 3D structure of protein molecules is determined by their amino acid sequence, stretching right up to the present Nobel Prize announcement. The failure to replicate Anfinsen's results has been largely ignored, and the misleading claim about Anfinsen keeps being repeated. 

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

40+ Leading Researchers of the Paranormal

Below is a table listing alphabetically some of the leading researchers of paranormal phenomena. The list includes many scientists and physicians. Pressing the links in the right column will take you to relevant works by such persons, or articles about their work, almost all of which can be read online for free, without any login difficulties. 

 

Name

Description

Involvement

Link for 

more information

Barrett, Sir William

A physicist

Researched ESP and authored the book Deathbed Visions reporting deathbed apparitions

Link

Bem, Daryl

Professor of psychology

Author of a widely noted "Feeling the Future" paper documenting precognition

Link

Brittan, S. B.  MD

A medical doctor

Author of a classic of parapsychology "Man and His Relations"

Link

Link

Bozanno, Ernest

Psychologist and psychical researcher

Pioneered the study of deathbed visions in his paper "Apparitions of Deceased Persons at Death-beds." Also wrote one of the first books documenting out-of-body experiences. 

Link



Cahagnet, Louise Alphonse

Psychical researcher

His The Celestial Telegraph documented the most impressive clairvoyance in the subject Adele

Link

Link


Carrington, Hereward

Psychical researcher

His Eusapia Palladino and Her Phenomena is a classic of psychical research

Link


Chastanet, 

Armand-Marc-Jacques de,   the Marquis de Puységur


A pivotal figure in psychical research but little known, he  essentially discovered artificial somnambulism, later called hypnotism, inspired by the work of Franz Anton Mesmer. His work opened the door to later robust experimental evidence for clairvoyance (read here for an example).



Crawford, W. J

A mechanical engineer, which made him well-qualified for devising devices capable of testing whether paranormal phenomena were occurring at seances where levitation was reported

In three books published around 1920, he documented the most thorough and careful evidence of levitation occurring at seances

Link

Link

Link


Crookall, Robert

A geologist and psychical researcher

One of the first scholars to  write books documenting out-of-body experiences

Link

Link

Link


Crookes, Sir William

A leading physicist who discovered the element thallium, and invented the Crookes tube that was the forerunner of all TV sets.

Supervised successful tests of paranormal phenomena with the medium Daniel Dunglas Home and Florence Cook. 

Link

Link

Crowe, Catherine

Psychical researcher

Her 500-page The Night Side of Nature was a deep dive into mysterious phenomena

Link

Deleuze, Joseph-Philippe-François

A naturalist and botanist

Documented clairvoyance under hypnotism (then called animal magnetism)

Link

Link

Esdaille, James

Physician and surgeon

Achieved the most enormous success in performing very many painless surgeries in India by using only hypnosis for pain relief. Documented the paranormal in his book Natural and Mesmeric Clairvoyance.

Link

Flammarion, Camille

Professional astronomer and psychical researcher

Author of the monumental three-volume work Death and Its Mystery (which you can read herehere and here), as well as the massive tome The Unknown

Link

Fukarai, Tomokici

Professor and President of the Psychical Institute of Japan

Author of Clairvoyance &  Thoughtography documenting paranormal effects

Link

Geley, Gustave

Physician

Author of From the Unconscious to the Conscious documenting the paranormal

Link

Greyson, Bruce

Physician

A leading researcher of near-death experiences

Link

Gregory, William 

Professor of chemistry at the University of Edinburgh (founded in 1582, and the sixth oldest English university)

Documented very carefully dramatic cases of clairvoyance, in his book Letters to a Candid Inquirer, on Animal Magnetism

Link

Link 

Gully, Dr. J. M. 

Physician

Attested to the reality of the Florence Cook/Katie King materialization phenomenon

Link

Gurney, Edmund

Psychologist and psychical researcher

One of the three authors of the monumental two-volume work Phantasms of the Living, the first major study of apparitions

Link 

Link

Haddock, Dr. Joseph

Physician

His book Somnolism and Psycheism documented astonishing clairvoyance in his patient Emma

Link 


Haraldsson, 

Erlendur

Psychologist and psychical researcher

Co-author (with Karlis Osis) of At the Hour of Death, a major work studying deathbed visions

Link

Hare, Robert

Professor of chemistry at Harvard University

Authored the book Experimental investigation of the Spirit Manifestations asserting the reality of dramatic paranormal phenomena 

Link

Link

Hodgson, Richard

Psychical researcher

One of the main investigators of Leonora Piper, eventually becoming convinced she provided evidence of life after death

Link

Hyslop, J. W. 

Professor of Logic and Ethics in Columbia University

Author of the book Contact With the Other World documenting evidence for life after death

Link

Link (p. 585)

Link (p. 627)

James, William

Sometimes called the founder of American psychology

A noted contributor to psychical research, and one of the main investigators of Leonora Piper

Link

Joire, Dr. Paul 

Professor at the Pstcho-Physiologioal Institute of France, President of the Sooiete Univbbselle d'Etudes Pstchiques

Wrote a 633-page book "Psychical and Supernormal Phenomena, Their Observation and Experimentation."

Link


Kerner, Justinus

A physician

Pioneered the serious study of apparitions, and documented clairvoyance in  Frederica Hauffe

Link
Link

Lodge, Sir Oliver

A physicist

Author of the book Raymond, or Life and Death documenting successful encounters with mediums

Link

Link

Lombroso, Cesare

A physician and extremely influential criminology theorist

Author of the book After Death, What? documenting the paranormal, including observations of inexplicable events at seances of Eusapia Palladino

Link

Link

Maxwell, J. MD

Physician

Author of Metaphysical Phenomena: Methods and Observations, documenting many paranormal phenomena

Link

Link

Moody, Raymond

A psychiatrist and psychical researcher

Wrote the first widely-read book on near-death experiences

Link

Myers, F. W. 

One of the main founders of the Society for Psychical Research

Author of the monumental two-volume psychology and psychical research work Human Personality and Its Survival of Bodily Death

Link

Link

Ochorowicz,

Julien

Psychology professor

Ran successful levitation experiments with medium 

Stanislas Tomczyk. Documented the paranormal in his 1891 book Mental Suggestion. 

Link

Link

Link


Osty, Eugene

Medical practitioner and director of the Institut Métapsychique International in Paris

Author of the book Supernormal Faculties in Man

Link

Link

Owen, Robert Dale

Once a US congressman

Author of two classic works documenting the paranormal

Link
Link

Radin, Dean

Physicist

Has done experiments  showing psi effects


Link

Reiss, Bernard F. 

Professor at City College, CUNY

Despite a lack of enthusiasm for the topic, he ran the most successful ESP test ever, getting "smoking gun" evidence 

Link

Rhine, Joseph Banks

Professor of Psychology, Duke University

Did many years of experimental tests showing the reality of ESP

Link

Link

Rhine, Louisa

One of the leading collectors of accounts of spontaneous telepathy and spontaneous precognition.

Link

Richet, Charles

Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology in 1913

Author of the long book "Thirty Years of Psychical Research." Documented paranormal phenomena occurring with mediums.

Link

Schrenck-Notzing, Albert von. 

Physician

Author of the long work Phenomena of Materialization documenting paranormal phenomena

Link

Link

Sheldrake, Rupert

Biologist

Did experiments supporting the reality of ESP

Link

Wallace, Alfred Russel

Co-founder of the theory of evolution by natural selection

Documented the reality of paranormal phenomena in works such as Miracles and Modern Spiritualism


Link

Link

Zollner, Johann

Professor of physical astronomy 

Author of the book Transcendental Physics documenting paranormal phenomena

Link

Link


crossing over to the other side

Friday, October 4, 2024

When Dreams or Premonitions Seem to Act Prophetically

 In the series of posts below, I discussed dreams, visions, premonitions or mysterious voices that seemed to foretell a death or disaster:

When Dreams or Visions Foretell a Death

More Dreams or Visions That Seemed to Foretell a Death

Still More Dreams or Visions That Seemed to Foretell a Death

Still More Dreams, Visions or Voices That Seemed to Foretell a Death


Some More Dreams or Visions That Seemed to Foretell a Death or Disaster

When the Future Whispers to the Present

Let us look at some more cases of this type.

Below is an example of a dream that foretold a death:

prophetic dream

You can read the account here:

https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89053684/1902-12-18/ed-1/seq-9/

Below is a similar account of a dream foretelling a death:

prophetic dream

You can read the account here:

https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045293/1912-06-28/ed-1/seq-1/

Below is a similar account of dreams foretelling a death:

prophetic dreams

You can read the account here:


Below is a similar account of a dream foretelling a death:


dream foretelling a death

You can read the account below:

https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86090330/1909-01-02/ed-1/seq-2/


Below is a similar account of a dream foretelling a death:

prophetic dream

You can read the account below:


Below is a report of a clairvoyant who seemed to have an accurate premonition about how a husband would die:

clairvoyant accurately predicting death

You can read the account here:


Below is a tragic tale of a mother who had a dream that her son would drown, on the night before he did drown. 


You can read the account here:


Below we have a sad account of a wife who dreamed of her husband dying in a car crash a few days before he did die in a car crash.  The account can be read here