|
Extract from a paper by Aristide Esser et al, describing an
experiment in telepathy between identical twins. International
Journal of Parapsychology, 9 (1) 53-56, 1967): In a physically
isolated subject, we have observed physiological reactions at the
precise moment at which another person, the agent, was actively
stimulated. We show the complete record of Experiment No.7 to
demonstrate how obvious the plethysmographic reactions are. That
sounds fairly clear to me, but evidently not to everybody.
Extract from a paper by Susan Blackmore et al. Journal of the
Society for Psychical Research 59 (831) 89-96, 1993): Similar
studies...(Esser, Etter and Chamberlain, 1967) did not provide
evidence of simultaneous responses in twins.
This is an early example of what has now become a worrying trend
inspired, it seems, by Humpty Dumpty ("When I use a word it means
just what I choose it to mean") and by Orwell's Newspeak, the
purpose of which was "not so much to express meanings as to
destroy them". Thus if Esser and colleagues announce that they
have obtained instrumentally recorded evidence for telepathy, in
what Orwell might have called Skepspeak this becomes "[Esser and
co] did not provide..." etc.
The Enfield poltergeist case of 1977-8 which Maurice Grosse and I
investigated for more than a year has come in for some splendid
Skepspeak lately. In a book you may have missed called The Ghost
That Haunted Itself, author Jan-Andrew Henderson reveals that
Both [the Amityville and Enfield poltergeist cases] turned
out to be fakes. The witnesses were misrepresented or had something to gain. 'Evidence' turned out to be manufactured. It's hard to argue with that.
It is indeed, as hard as would have been to argue with Humpty
Dumpty or Big Brother...
And here is the science magazine Focus wasting three pages of its
June 2003 issue on "an A to Z of world mysteries". E is for the
Enfield case, for which Caroline Green informs us "there was no
concrete evidence and [the children's mother] was accused of
making it up."
For the record: Yes there was and no she wasn't and didn't. The
magazine did at least print Maurice Grosse's robust record-
straightening letter in its August 2003 issue.
The Times should know better than to sink to this level of
Orwellian revisionism, but it seems it doesn't. In its Public
Agenda section for November 2nd, 2004 its readers were told that
the girls involved in the Enfield case "now grown up, admitted
that it was all a hoax." They are indeed now grown up but neither
of them has ever admitted anything other than Janet H's statement
on ITV's News At Six (June 12th, 1980) to interviewer Rita
Carter, on being asked if she or her sister had ever played any
tricks. Her immediate and truthful reply was:
Oh, yeah, once or twice, just to see if Mr Grosse and Mr
Playfair would catch us. And they always did.
She made an almost identical statement on Radio France-Inter
(June 17th, 1982) to interviewer Lynne Plummer, while in a more
recent TV interview with presenter Jane Goldman, her first for
more than twenty years, (Living TV, October 19th, 2004) she said
it all again at greater length as did Janet's sister in a signed
statement written in 1987. Time for that particular coin to drop,
I think.
Now for a real gem of Skepspeak deconstruction from David Myers
in his review of a book on intuition in the Daily Telegraph
(January 11th, 2003): The book ends with a swift glance at the
evidence for the reality of psychic phenomena such as telepathy -
necessarily swift, since there isn't any.
Finally, the latest from the irrepressible Susan Blackmore,
writing in New Scientist (November 13th, 2004). Here is the
letter I wrote to the editor of that magazine, who did not
publish it:
"Throughout history many people have believed in a soul
or spirit. Yet science has long known that
this cannot be so, Susan Blackmore opines.
Really? Who is "science" in this context? Could we have a
reference?"
Remember the meteorites, powered flight, continental drift
and of course space travel, all once claimed to be impossible or nonexistent."
To learn Skepspeak, all you have to do is forget all that
outdated stuff about arguing logically on the basis of evidence,
research and experience. Ignore all that Platonic rubbish about
seeking the truth through rational debate. Just state your
particular prejudice as if it has already been engraved in stone
and is not open to discussion.. Big Brother (and Humpty Dumpty).
will be proud of you.
Skeptical Observer Home Page
If you have any comments or suggestions on this website please email editor@skepticalinvestigations.org
Copyright © The Association for Skeptical Investigations
|
|