PARAPSYCHOLOGY A Directory & Glossary of Parapsychology Terms
PARAPSYCHOLOGY
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"Memories" of all experiences
since the beginning of time, believed by some mystical doctrines to be stored
permanently in a spiritual substance (Akasha). Index
Reported experiences
of being abducted by alien creatures, often into spacecraft. Abductees often
experience lost time and suffer loss of memory. When memories are recovered,
often using hypnoticregression, abductees may report that surgical
operations were performed on them. See also temporal lobe activity.
A term used to refer
to any state of consciousness that is different from "normal" states of waking
or sleeping. ASCs include hypnosis, trance, ecstasy, psychedelic and meditative experience. ASCs do not necessarily
have paranormal features.
A term coined by F.A.
Mesmer to refer to a putative force or fluid capable of being transmitted
from one person to another, producing healing effects. See also Mesmerism.
Refers to cases in which
animal corpses (often cattle) have been found with bizarre injuries that do
not seem to have a normal explanation in terms of illness, accident or action
of predators. Cuts and injuries often appear to have been carried out with
surgical precision. Typically the corpse is drained of blood. Certain body
parts may be absent (e.g., genitals).
A theory and practice
which attempts to identify the ways in which astronomical events are correlated
with events on earth (e.g., with an individual's personality and biography,
or with social and political trends). See
also Astrology Directory
A field of energy believed
by some to surround living creatures. Certain clairvoyants claim to be able to see the aura
(generally as a luminous, coloured halo). See also Kirlian photography.
Physical activites (e.g.,
arm movements, writing, drawing, musical performance) that occur without the
automatist's conscious control or knowledge. Also known as motor automatism.
See also automatic writing, dissociation.
Procedure in which a
question is secretly written on a piece of paper which is folded or sealed
in an envelope, and handed to the psychic who attempts to answer the question.
Various trickery can be employed by fraudulent psychics and mentalists.
A general term for techniques
that involve giving a person information about their current physiological
state (e.g., heart rate, EEG). Biofeedback is used to enable people to
control consciously their physiological processes.
An experimental control in which subjects are not informed of certain key features
of the experiment. Also used to refer to a procedure where a judge is asked to compare targets and responses without knowing which responses were
made to which targets. See also double blind.
A box or curtained enclosure
in which a physical medium is secured and from which various
phenomena may manifest (e.g., lights, objects moving, instruments played).
Certain stage magicians can simulate this procedure with great
effect.
An archaic term that
refers to the paranormal obtaining of information using faculties other than
vision or hearing. Cf. clairaudience, clairvoyance, empathy, intuition.
Or clairvoyant. A person
who obtains information paranormally (often by spirit communication) without the need to enter into
a trance state. Cf. trance
medium.
A set of cards used in
a card-guessing test where each card appears a
fixed number of times. Statistical analysis of research data using a
closed deck differs from statistical analysis of data using an open deck.
The occurrence, within
a short space of time, of two or more meaningfully related events and without
any apparent causal connection between them. Coincidences are sometimes bizarre
and extraordinarily improbable. See also synchronicity.
A reading given with no prior knowledge of the
sitter. Often a mixture of very general statements
which could apply to anyone, together with inferences made from cues presented
by the sitter (e.g., physical appearance, clothes, tone of voice, statements
made). Cf. hot reading.
A technique simulating
telepathy, in which the "mind reader" (who generally
holds a hand or arm) responds to slight muscle movements produced unconsciously
by the person whose mind is apparently being read. Also known as muscle reading,
Cumberlandism or Hellstromism.
(a) In experimental parapsychology a procedure undertaken
in order to ensure that the experiment is conducted in a standard fashion
and so that results are not unduly influenced by extraneous factors. See also
control group, artefact.
Circular (or more elaborate)
formations found in growing crops, most commonly in Southern Britain. Sometimes
they are associated with UFO sightings. Many formations appear to have
been intelligently created and to have some symbolic meaning. Despite several
"confessions" made by various individuals and groups, the crop circle mystery
remains unsolved.
(a) Separate items of
information, received independently by two or more mediums, which make sense only when pieced together.
(b) THE cross-correspondences
is a classic case of highly complex cross-correspondences which continued
from 1901 to 1932 among a group of automatists associated with the Society for Psychical
Research.
Knowledge (acquired in
normal ways) that may be revealed without the person remembering its source.
Such memories may falsely appear to be paranormal revelations. Sometimes cryptomnesia
is used as an explanation for apparently paranormal experiences such as xenoglossy or past-life memories.
Staring into a reflecting
surface (e.g., mirror, glass, crystal, liquid) in order to obtain paranormal
information. Also known as scrying. See also divination.
A voice heard in a seance which does not seem to emanate from any
person. The voice may seem to come out of thin air, or from a trumpet used specifically for this purpose. Cf.
indirect voice.
Practices involving the
interpretation of signs or symbols that seek to obtain oracular knowledge of events. Examples of divinatory
practices are geomancy, tarot, I Ching,
sortilege, and reading tea leaves.
An experimental test
for clairvoyance in which the person guesses the
order of a stacked series of target symbols (e.g., cards) from top to bottom.
Cf. up through
technique.
The ability to understand
the experience or emotional state of another person or animal. Often used
to refer to an apparently psychic ability to experience another person's
sensations, pain or emotions. Cf. clairsentience, intuition.
A term, coined in 1947,
to refer to unknown disk-like aerial objects, often believed to be extraterrestrial spacecraft. The term has now
been largely superseded by "UFO".
Strange phenomena, especially
those which challenge conventional scientific knowledge. Named after the American
researcher and writer Charles Fort. Fortean phenomena include those generally
considered paranormal, but also bizarre non-paranormal events
such as monsters and prodigies, extraordinary coincidences, and unusual rains.
The deliberate faking
of paranormal phenomenena, generally for the purpose of financial gain, psychological
manipulation, or notoriety. Faking for the purpose of entertainment (e.g.,
by stage magicians and mentalists) is not normally classed as fraud.
An ESP test in which the subject responds freely (does not choose from
a fixed list of targets). For example, the subject may write
down or draw their impressions, or may talk freely into
a tape recorder. In order to assess the accuracy of the responses, they are
compared with various targets (including the actual target) by a judge. See also preferential matching.
A technique for investigating
ESP in which the person experiences an absence
of patterned stimulation. This generally involves the subject wearing halved
table-tennis balls over the eyes while listening to hiss (white noise) through headphones.
Paranormal phenomena
such as apparitions, unexplained sounds, smells or other
sensations that are associated over a lengthy period of time with a specific
location. Cf. poltergeist.
Ancient Chinese "Book
of Changes". It describes 64 hexagrams (patterns of 6 broken and unbroken
lines) which are used in a divinatory practice involving the throwing of
yarrow stalks or coins.
Mediumistic phenomenon in which the discarnate entity appears to speak using the
vocal apparatus of the medium. Often the voice will sound very different from
the medium's normal voice. Cf. direct voice.
The non-paranormal ability
to grasp the elements of a situation or to draw conclusions about complex
events in ways that go beyond a purely rational or intellectual analysis.
Cf. clairsentience, empathy.
A photographic method
involving high frequency electric current, discovered by S.D. & V. Kirlian
in the Soviet Union. Kirlian photographs often show coloured halos or "auras" surrounding objects.
In Yogic belief, a source of tremendous vital energy
that may be stimulated by various practices. Kundalini, or the "Serpent Power",
is believed to provide energy for paranormal phenomena.
Dreaming in which the
person is aware that the experience is a dream. Often associated with feelings
of aliveness and freedom, and with the ability to control dream events.
A system of healing developed by F.A. Mesmer, involving the
induction of trance states and the supposed transfer of animal magnetism. People in Mesmeric trance often
showed paranormal abilities such as clairvoyance.
A term coined by Rupert
Sheldrake to refer to the way in which the "morphogenetic field" (underlying
form) of an object or organism may influence distant fields.
Experiences of people
after they have been pronounced clinically dead, or been very close to death.
Typical features of the NDE are an OBE, life review,
a tunnel experience, light, coming to a boundary (marking death), seeing dead
friends and relatives, experiencing a loving or divine presence, and making
a choice (or being told) to return. Occasionally NDEs can be frightening and
distressing. NDEs often have profound effects on the person's later life.
See also cerebral anoxia, survival.
In mentalism, a procedure for sequentially revealing
information where the revealing of one item gives the mentalist the next answer.
Also used by fraudulentclairvoyants.
A series of cards used
in a card guessing
test where each card is chosen randomly and independently. This enables each
target to be selected any number of times. Statistical analysis of research data using an
open deck differs from statistical analysis of data using a closed deck.
A card guessing
procedure in which key cards
are placed face up on the table. The subject then places the unseen target cards in piles in front of each key card,
according to their guesses. See also blind matching.
A board with letters
and numbers on which messages are spelled out by unconsciously moving (with
the fingers) a glass or planchette. See also automatism. See full definition for OUIJA BOARD
In conjuring and mentalism, a convincing explanation for an apparent
failure, or a convincing alternative ending to an effect that has not worked
as planned. Also used by fraudulentclairvoyants and mediums.
A fully conscious experience
in which the person's centre of awareness appears to be outside of the physical
body. See also autoscopy, near-death experience.
Term coined by J.B. Rhine
to refer to the experimental and quantitative study of paranormal phenomena.
Now generally used instead of "psychical research" to refer to all scientific
investigation of the paranormal. Cf. transpersonal psychology.
German word meaning "noisy
or troublesome spirit". Poltergeist activity may include unexplained noises,
movements of objects, outbreaks of fire, floods, pricks or scratches to a
person's body. Unlike hauntings, which are associated with specific
locations, poltergeists typically focus on a person (the focal person or poltergeist
agent) who is often a young child or adolescent. Many physical mediums experienced poltergeist activity
in their childhood.
Numbers generated by
an electronic calculator or computer using a complex mathematical algorithm
that simulates a random process. Although the numbers generated are essentially
unpredictable, they are not strictly random. See also random numbers,
random event
generator.
Significantly worse than chance performance on a psi test. Psi-missing is also evidence for psi,
because a target can only be missed consistently if the
person "knows" what it is.
A research method involving
the collection of non-quantitative data (e.g., observations, interviews, subjective
reports, case studies). Cf. quantitative method.
Theories based on the
assumption that living organisms emit some kind of radiation or emanation
that is capable of being detected using instruments or by dowsing. See also aura, radionics.
A printed table of random numbers, usually made up of several rows
and columns of computer-generated numbers. To use the table a starting value
is chosen by randomly selecting a row and column (e.g., by throwing a dice).
Successive numbers are then chosen by working through the table using any
previously chosen systematic rule. Suitable rules might be (1) moving horizontally
to the right, skipping alternate numbers, or (2) moving vertically down, selecting
every fifth number. The selected random numbers may then be used, for example,
to determine target sequences.
Intelligible voices recorded
on magnetic tape under conditions of silence or white noise which are heard only when the tape
is played. A phenomenon discovered by Konstantin Raudive.
In Buddhism, the belief
that there is some continuty of mind from one life to the next. Buddhism,
however, does not accept the existence of the individual soul and therefore does not view rebirth as the
soul's literal re-incarnation. Cf. reincarnation. See also bardo.
(a) a statistical technique that enables predictions
to be made from a set of data.
(b) a technique used
in hypnosis, involving suggesting to hypnotized
persons that they are returning to an earlier time. Sometimes the regression
occurs spontaneously, without suggestion. See also past-life regression.
The belief that some
aspect of a person's being (e.g., consciousness, personality, or soul) survives death and can be reborn in a new body at some
future date. Reincarnation is often seen as a repeating cycle of death and
rebirth in which future lives are influenced by past and present actions through
the law of karma. Cf. rebirth.
An ESP procedure in which a percipient attempts to become aware psychically
of the experience of an agent who is at a distant, unknown target location.
A person inclined to
discount the reality of the paranormal and to be critical of parapsychological research. Generally seeks rational
or scientific explanations for the phenomena studied by parapsychologists.
A card-guessing procedure in which the subject and experimenter sit on opposite sides of a screen
which has a small gap at the bottom. Key cards
are hung on the screen in front of the subject (the faces may be seen or unseen).
Underneath each key card is a blank card that can be seen by both subject
and experimenter. The experimenter holds the target cards and the subject indicates the guess
on each trial by pointing to the corresponding blank
card. The experimenter then places the card in a pile on his or her side of
the screen in a position corresponding to that of the indicated blank card.
See also blind matching,
open matching.
A witchdoctor or medicine
(wo)man who communicates with spirits while in trance and who has the power of healing. May also show other paranormal abilities.
Effect, discovered by
the parapsychologist Gertrude Schmeidler, in which "sheep" score higher than mean chance
expectation (MCE) on psi tests, while "goats" score lower than MCE.
Results of an experiment
are said to be statistically significant when they are very
unlikely to be due to chance (and hence, in a psi test, are more likely to be due to psi).
The chance probability is reported as the "significance level". To be considered
significant, the chance probability must generally be less than 1 in 20 (5%,
or 0.05).
Refers to cases in which
a badly burned human body has been discovered in circumstances suggesting
that the fire originated spontaneously in or on the body of the victim.
The suggestion that people
are capable of unlimited ESP. The super-ESP hypothesis is often presented
as an alternative to the survival hypothesis in explaining mediumistic phenomena (the medium is believed
to obtain information using super-ESP powers and not directly from the spirit of a deceased person).
Mysterious movements
of a table, usually occurring in a seance when a group of people place their hands
on the surface of the table. Often the movements are interpreted as spiritcommunications. Also known as table-turning or
table-tipping.
Paranormal awareness
of another person's experience (thoughts, feelings, etc.). In practice it
is difficult to distinguish between telepathy and clairvoyance. See also ESP.
Electrical activity in
the temporal lobes of the brain. Often associated with strange sensations,
time distortions and hallucinations. Sometimes used as an explanation for
seemingly paranormal experiences such as apparitions and alien abduction
experiences.
Quasi-religious and philosophical
system of the Theosophical Society, founded in 1875 by Madame Blavatsky. Its
paranormal claims were controversially and damningly reported upon by the
Society for Psychical Research in 1885.
Paranormal ability to
produce images on photographic film (e.g., by concentrating on a mental image).
Most famously demonstrated by Ted Serios. See also psychic photography.
The study of experiences,
beliefs and practices that suggest that the sense of self can extend beyond
our personal or individual reality. The subject matter of transpersonal psychology
overlaps to some extent with parapsychology, but the two disciplines tend
to have different approaches and emphases. Parapsychology is primarily concerned
to investigate evidence for and against the reality of paranormal phenomena. Transpersonal psychology,
on the other hand, is more interested in investigating the transpersonal significance
of such phenomena (i.e., the ways in which they may give people a sense of
connectedness with a larger, more universal or spiritual reality). See also
mysticism.
Religious philosophy
originating in India. It advocates the use of physical and psycho-spiritual
techniques to lead the person to higher consciousness. See also meditation, siddhis.
Set of 25 cards (5 each
of circle, square, Greek cross, five-pointed star, three wavy lines) designed
by the perceptual psychologist Karl Zener for use in card-guessing tests of ESP. Also known as ESP cards.