Thursday, October 31, 2024

Skeptics of the Paranormal Masquerade as Serious Scholars of the Spooky

Tonight, October 31, is Halloween, a night for masquerades.  Little girls are dressing up as princesses and little boys are dressing up as superheroes. We also see the masquerade of skeptics that always appears around Halloween, when we see a bunch of stories online with titles such as "Why Your Brain Causes You to Believe in Ghosts" and "How Your Brain Causes You to Hallucinate a Ghost."  When they author such stories, denialist skeptics masquerade as serious scholars of the paranormal, and they masquerade as people who understand some neural basis for belief or some neural basis for hallucinations in normal people. 

scientist pretending to know things he does not

In general, our skeptics are not apparition scholars, and are not scholars of human observations of the paranormal or human reports of the anomalous. The literature on human reports of the paranormal is a vast body of literature consisting of so many books and publications you would need a large public library to hold all the books and publications.  In general our skeptics show no sign of having read any such books, other than a few books written by fellow skeptics. They do not busy themselves reading the classic observational reports of apparition sightings. They do not study the countless volumes of the Journal of the Society for Psychical Research or the Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, even though such volumes can be very conveniently obtained online at sites such as www.archive.org or this site.  They show no signs of having read any of the fifty main works on the paranormal that a serious scholar should read before writing about it (such as books listed here). 

But in their articles appearing around Halloween in which they attempt to debunk apparition sightings, our skeptics try to masquerade as scholars of the paranormal.  We can tell they are no such thing by their lack of references to the relevant scholarly and observational literature. We can also tell their lack of scholarship on such topics by their incorrect generalizations about apparition sightings. 

A skeptic describing an apparition sighting will tell us all kinds of imaginative narratives that do not match the observational characteristics of apparition sightings.  He may say that you went to some spooky house and got scared, and that fear caused you to hallucinate seeing a ghost. Or he may say that you were filled with grief, so your brain caused you to see the ghost of some person you wanted to believe has survived.  He will not typically provide narrative examples of such cases, because there are so few of them. 

What our skeptic will not tell you about is a type of apparition sighting far more common, that he cannot explain.  In this type of apparition sighting, a person who is in a completely normal state of mind will suddenly be surprised to see an apparition of someone he did not know was dead or even close to death; and will then soon learn that the same person died about the same time the apparition was seen.  There are hundreds of cases of such apparitions, which you can read about in my posts below.

n Apparition Was Their Death Notice

25 Who Were "Ghost-Told" of a Death

25 More Who Were "Ghost-Told" of a Death






Our skeptic will typically not know about such cases, because he is not actually a scholar of human reports of the paranormal, but merely masquerades as such a thing. Another very common type of apparition sighting is when the same apparition is seen by multiple observers.  Examples can be found in the posts below:

Because he has not actually made a scholarly study of apparition reports, our skeptic will continue to advance his lame "fear or grief causes hallucinations" theory, even though such a theory totally fails to explain any of the more interesting reports of apparition sightings,  which occur to people when they are not afraid or grieving, and often involves more than one observer seeing the same apparition, which could never happen from brain hallucinations.  Our skeptic will not cite any scientific experiments supporting his theory, because it is a fantasy without experimental support. 

If there was some tendency for people to hallucinate when they were afraid or grieving, it would be very easy to prove such a thing with experiments. For example, you could test 100 subjects with an experiment in which you told them something terrifying, such as that a tornado or earthquake will soon strike the building they are in.  Then ask such people to describe what they saw, to see how many of them hallucinated. Or you could tell 100 subjects a lie that some beloved figure or one of their relatives had died.  Then ask about their observations, to see how many of them hallucinated from grief. Of course, there are no experiments supporting the fanciful notion that fear or grief causes hallucinations of apparitions. And there are almost no reports of apparitions seen at funerals, the meetings where you have the greatest concentration of grieving people. 

Besides masquerading as scholars of the paranormal, our skeptical writers of Halloween stories about apparitions will engage in other types of masquerades.  They will masquerade as people who understand some neural basis why normal people would hallucinate seeing human forms. No one understands any neural basis of why a normal person would report seeing a human form in front of him that was not there.  Or, our skeptic may masquerade as someone who understands some neural basis for belief.  No one has any real understanding of how a brain could create an idea or form a belief or store a belief.  Just as no one can give a credible explanation of how a brain or neurons could either store a memory or remember something for decades or instantly retrieve a memory,  no one can give a credible explanation of how a brain or neurons could derive or deduce a belief or preserve a belief or store a belief.  So when skeptics write articles with titles such as "Why Your Brain Causes You to Believe in the Paranormal," they are masquerading as people who know something they do not know.  No one can explain why your neurons or your brain could ever handle any such thing as forming a belief or having a neural representation of a belief or preserving a belief; but we do know a little about why some people may think they understand things that are a hundred miles over their heads.  It has to do with the fact that the mind can take pleasure from such intoxicating but groundless conceits.

When someone imagines that there are memory traces in your brain of the sensations you had years ago, he is at least suggesting an idea based a tiny bit on reality (the reality of you having such sensations long ago); but it is an idea ignoring the neural reality of short protein lifetimes that should prevent any such traces from surviving for more than a few months (the brain replaces its proteins at a rate of about 3% per day).  But the idea of beliefs stored in brains is not based on any neural reality. If I one day think to myself, "If there came to our planet lizard men from outer space, they would be evil," and then that thought becomes a belief in my mind, this is nothing based on any neural reality, since I have never even had a sensation of lizard men. If there were any neuroscience understanding of how a belief could be stored in a brain, we would sometimes read very concerned writers talking about the grave danger of some government or neurologist changing your beliefs or political views or religion by doing something to your brain or giving you some pill.  We read no such stories.  

The complete lack of any understanding of how a brain could store a belief is shown by the fact that there is not even a word for the concept of a place where a brain stores a belief. There is a word ("engram") for the dubious claim of a neural storage place of a memory, but there is not even a word in neuroscience literature for an alleged neural storage place for a belief.  The lack of such a word is Exhibit A that there is no real scientific basis for the claim that brains store beliefs. 

Almost inevitably when we read the Halloween season articles of skeptics, we get the most glaring evidence of people who never did their homework and never made a decent study of the evidence for paranormal phenomena. Misstatements and extremely false opposite-of-the-truth generalizations are extremely common in such articles. Such people keep telling the same lies over and over again.  Any serious scholar of the paranormal will very quickly recognize that the writers of such Halloween-season articles have never seriously studied what they are writing about. But for such writers of these "preaching to the congregation" articles that doesn't matter, because their target audience is other people who won't complain, because their knowledge of such matters is equally poor. 

scientist ignoring evidence

Tending to present themselves as Kings of Knowledge, the experts quoted in these Halloween articles about the paranormal are typically neither serious and thorough students of human minds and human mental phenomena nor serious and thorough students of the human brain and its physical shortfalls that discredit all claims that it is the source of the human mind. Were they to do a better job of studying human brains, they would not make some of the statements they make. 

We can use the term materialism fundamentalist to refer to the type of professors and skeptics who are interviewed around Halloween on the topic of the paranormal, and the type of professors and skeptics who write articles on the paranormal around Halloween.  The materialism  fundamentalist will keep telling us that there is no evidence for the paranormal, despite the existence of a vast mountain of two hundred years of convincing written evidence for the reality of paranormal phenomena, very much of it written by doctors and scientists. By showing such total denialism, the materialist fundamentalist is very much like a Bible fundamentalist who claims that there is no evidence that our planet is older than about 6000 years. The materialist fundamentalist will often make use of the worst type of gaslighting and character assassination to try to shame, blame and defame credible honest witnesses. Materialism fundamentalists are among the most evidence-oblivious of denialists, and no amount of evidence that could ever appear (nor any testimony of their own senses) would ever shake their dogmatic convictions.  

oath of a skeptic

For some insight into the attitudes and tendencies of such skeptics, you may read my 2022 science fiction story "Planet of the Blind" here. It's an interesting tale about a man on a planet in which almost everyone is blind. The man is asked to investigate controversial reports that a small number of people have what the man thinks is something utterly impossible: an ability to perceive things by some "fifth sense" that is different from smell, taste, hearing or touch. 

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