Over the last few months I
had the unique opportunity of speaking about ghosts to two disparate groups.
One was a local MENSA group and the other was a group called Society for
Rational Thought, nicknamed The Skeptics.
Honestly, I was nervous about speaking before the MENSA
group. After all, these were people whose I.Q.s were off the chart. What
questions would they have for me? How thoroughly would they destroy my presentation
and pick apart its bones afterward? Where could I hide?
To my grateful surprise, the group was engaged and interested
in my talk. In fact, some of them had encountered ghosts, or had true ghost
stories to tell.
I felt some of that same uneasiness before speaking to
The Skeptics, but my talk with the MENSA group made me a little less
apprehensive. But The Skeptics earned their name. With challenging questions
leveled at me throughout the presentation, it took me an hour and a half to
reach an endpoint in my talk, which normally runs about forty minutes. In fact,
I didn’t even finish my talk in its entirety but edited it for the sake of
time.
I didn’t mind challenging questions—that’s part of the
give and take I’ve become accustomed to in such talks. But what I did mind was
the close-mindedness of people that consider themselves rational and scientific
thinkers.
This is the great divide in paranormal inquiry. On one
hand are the believers, on the other, the skeptics, with a whole lot of us
stuck in the middle. Honest and open paranormal research is hindered by both extremes.
The believers are often too quick to ascribe any unexplainable sounds, sights,
or events to a ghostly presence without a thorough investigation into other
possible causes. The skeptics immediately dismiss a ghostly claim even if they cannot
find alternative explanations for the phenomena (not that a lack of such
explanations automatically means they
must be ghostly).
What would be of great benefit to paranormal research
would be if some of the skeptics—especially those that are scientists—took a
truly scientific approach to the paranormal. That is, if they decided it was a
field worthy of serious inquiry. Scientists are not as intellectually open or
curious as they would sometimes like us to believe. I remember one of the men
at The Skeptics talk said that ghosts do not exist because ghostly phenomena
cannot be reproduced at will in controlled situations. I asked him how he knew that they could not be reproduced. Suppose
the phenomena in question was reproducible, I asked, but repeated only with long
intervals of time in between, perhaps years. Would that not fulfill his
scientific requirements?
But it is difficult to get a scientist to even consider
studying paranormal events. The paranormal is “nonsense,” dismissed out of
hand. But think of all the other “nonsense” that eventually proved to be true: earth
as a round planet rather than a flat one; an earth that orbited the sun rather
than the other way around; the ability of man to fly; voices and music
conducted through the air over long distances; the possibility of man walking
on the moon; cavemen riding dinosaurs—okay, sorry, delete that last one!
If scientists and the skeptics would come to assist in
researching the paranormal instead of stubbornly digging in their heels in
protest, we might all come to discover the answers to some of the most important
questions ever asked.
Any bets on whether that will ever happen?
I hear you on this one... so many of the so-called skeptics are so afraid of being considered silly & superstitious that that, ha, is exactly what they end up being. The evidence can be dancing right in front of their face and they refuse to see it which is not... um... very scientific. Interestingly very few of the self-described "skeptics" I've talked to have more than the most superficial acquaintance (if that) with recent advances in quantum physics. Oh well!
ReplyDeleteSome people just need to be whacked with a two-by-four, CM!
ReplyDelete