In my previous post When Rhine and
Pearce Got "Smoking Gun" Evidence for ESP, I discussed the
astonishingly successful ESP tests conducted during the 1930's by
Professor Joseph Rhine and Hubert E. Pearce Jr. There
were 10,030 trials in which Pearce scored 3746 successes (despite an
expected chance result of only about 2060 successes). When we
plug these results into a binomial probability calculator it gives us
a probability of about 1 in 10 trillion. This means that if one were
to try the same test on every person on Earth 1000 times, we would
not expect that even one person would get a result so high. Another series of tests with Pearce was conducted
by Rhine's assistant J. Gaither Pratt. In this series, Pratt dealt
out one card a minute from a shuffled deck. Pearce (located in a
building far away) recorded his guesses as to the cards, at the same
time. 1850 cards were dealt, and the expected chance success rate was
about 370 cards. Instead, Pearce got 558 correct guesses. The chance
probability of such a result was less
than 1 in 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
In another informal test conducted in front of Rhine, Pearce
correctly guessed 25 cards in a row. The chance of that? One in three
hundred quadrillion.
Faced with such evidence, skeptics are
reduced to advancing ridiculous theories of cheating (which I debunk
here), such as the claim that Pearce spent hours peeking through the
transom of Pratt's office without being noticed, or the theory that
Pearce was able to peek at cards many times without being noticed by
observers who were sitting at arm's length from him across a table. Such absurd theories are futile in dismissing the ESP test
conducted by Bernard F. Riess in 1937, a professor at Hunter College
in New York. The test was the most successful ESP test ever
recorded. The abstract of the paper is here. The Riess experiment is discussed on page 167-168 of Rhine's book Extra-sensory Perception After Sixty Years ( see here or here). Another discussion of the experiment is here.
Riess was very skeptical about ESP, but
when one of his students said that a friend claimed to have ESP,
Riess began an ESP test with a 26-year-old woman who was never
identified by name. At 9:00 PM on each evening the test was run, the woman
stayed in a room a quarter of a mile away, in a room facing away
from the home of Riess. Riess at that time would be in a room facing
away from the room in which the woman was in. Before 9:00 PM Riess
would shuffle a deck of ESP cards, and lay out one card each minute,
recording the value of each card. At the same time the woman would
make one guess each minute as to the value of the card.
Each such test involved two series of
25 cards, so a total of 50 cards were laid out in each session.
Thirty-seven such sessions were held, meaning the woman guessed a
total of 1850 cards. The woman returned her response sheets to
Riess, and was never told the degree of success she obtained.
Symbols used in ESP tests
The ESP cards used have 5 possible
values. The expected chance result per session was only 5 correct
guesses. But the woman guessed an average of 18.24 cards correctly
per 25 cards, achieving a phenomenal 73% accuracy rate (instead of
the expected accuracy rate of 20%). This was the result in "Series A" of two series of tests with the young woman.
The chance of getting such a result
accidentally is far less than 1 in 1,000,000,000,000,000 (this link
estimates the probability of getting these results by chance as 1 in
10 to the 700th power, which is smaller than the chance of you correctly guessing all of the social security numbers of a set of 70 strangers). After the test the woman moved to the
midwestern US, and refused to participate in further tests. Riess had
to be prodded to publish the results, which were published in the
Journal of Parapsychology in 1937 (1, 270-273).
Attempts by skeptics to debunk this
test have been futile. Riess pointed out that while the tests were
done, his house was continually occupied by a housekeeper, meaning
the woman being tested could not have strolled into the house, and
altered Riess' response sheets to match her responses. Riess also
pointed out his response sheets were written in his own handwriting,
and showed no signs of being altered. So even the ridiculously
far-fetched idea of some conspiracy between the woman and the
housekeeper is not tenable.
The term “smoking gun evidence” is
used to describe a situation like you might have if you had a photo
of someone pointing a smoking gun at a dead body. But what would be
better evidence? Perhaps a video actually showing someone firing a
gun into the body of someone. The Riess experiment must be described as
that type of evidence, something better than “smoking gun”
evidence.
Yet outrageously our skeptics and
materialists repeatedly tell us there is no evidence for ESP. To the
contrary, a test such as the one discussed here is evidence almost
as strong as one could hope for. Our skeptics and
materialists are in denial about ESP, a phenomenon that has been
demonstrated very many times under very strict conditions, which is
strongly supported by ganzfeld sensory deprivation tests and recent tests with autistic children (described here), and which is also supported by
an immense wealth of anecdotal evidence, such as more than 14,000 cases recorded by Louisa Rhine. This case of reality denial can best be explained
as some strange cultural taboo that bears no resemblance to objective
thinking.
Postscript: Page 36 of Louisa Rhine's book ESP in Life and Lab tells us the story of the Riess remote ESP test described above, giving the interesting detail that there was a series of 25 guesses that were all correct, each guess having a chance likelihood of 1 in 5. The overall chance likelihood of such a series is 1 in 5 to the 25th power, less than 1 chance in 100 quadrillion. On pages 65-67 the book discusses a test with another subject (a nine-year-old female child named Lillian) in which there was the same series of 25 guesses all correct, a series with a chance likelihood of 1 in 5 to the 25th power, less than 1 chance in 100 quadrillion. In the first case (the Riess test) there were also several almost-as-good series of 24 out of 25 guesses correct, and in the second case (the Lillian case) there was also an almost-as-good series of 23 out of 25 guesses correct.
No comments:
Post a Comment