PSYCHIC

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79-00999A000200010072-6
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 9, 2014
Sequence Number: 
72
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 11, 1974
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79-00999A000200010072-6.pdf132.18 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2014/01/09 DIA-RDP79-00999A000200010072-6 11141MOW114r41.1111rW) sunday, August 11, 1974 PSYCHIC Continued From Page G-2 legitimate discipline, and a number of other factors have added to its credibility. ? The same ecological anxiety, the same disaffection with materialistic world views that thrust Edgar Mitchell into psy- chic research occultized millions of Ameri- cans throughout the 1960s ? in a sense, ' something happened to all of us on the way back from the moon. ? The dematerialization of contempo- rary physics, a science filled with such bi- zarre components as advance potential (waves of electrons perceived before they are generated), tunneling effects (elec- trons penetrating barriers diagnosed as impenetrable by laws of probability) and tachyons (particles traveling faster than light, which would imply the possibility of a backward flow of time), has meant that this branch of science no longer offers a se- cure rationale for the denial of any para- normal event. ? The focus of contemporary anthropol- ogy has had an equally important impact. It has emphasized cultural relativity, bearing the message that our Western concepts of space, time, causality, and mind-body rela- tionships are cultural constructs of the most diaphanous transiency. ? Finally, the vast new interest in alter- ed states of consciousness ? bred on the drug experience and the Orientalization of the West ? and a new generation of young scientists whose awaWtess of consciousness-altering ha eated a friendly environment for psyciffriesearch. "Altered states" is a concept absolutely crucial to parapsychology, one in which modern research converges with folklore and religious tradition. Telepathy and clairvoyance are more readiansmitted in the twilight states of rei!"?), trance, hypnosis, dream and meditatlet. The re- duction of sensory input in Ach conditions would create the same effect as the decline of daylight with setting of the sun?only ' then is the fainter light of stars visible. The tools that have provided parapsy- chology with methods of measuring alter- ed states have also offered an interface be- tween technology and mysticism that is very relevant to psychic research. In re- peated experiments at the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., and at the Langley Porter Institute in San Francisco, Zen monks and yogis have been wired up for measurement of brain waves, blood pres- sure and other vital functions while in deep meditation. When Swami Rama, a yogi being studied at the Menninger Clinic, suspended his heartbeat for 17 minutes under the full monitoring of Western hardware, some an- cient barrier between science and the paranormal broke down. 70 REBUT THE CONTENTION that contemporary scientific thought is com- plete and absolute, parapsychologists argue that there are many well-establish- ed "facts" that remain as anomalous to our present paradigma as extrasensory perception. After decades of research, there is still no satisfactory neurophysio- logical explanation of memory. Nor do we yet have an appropriate model for the most elemental fact of life: the-transfor- mation of raw data impinging upon our senses into conscious experience. The causal functions of these totally accepted phenomena remain as mysterious as those of acupuncture, which, although defying all known scientific laws, has gained much vaster acceptance in the past three years than parapsychology has in a decade of laboratory work. Dr. Charles Tart of the University of California at Davis, whose work on altered states of consciousness has been of great influence, speaks for a majority of Ameri- can parapsychologists when he says, "We won't be able to understand the physics of the paranormal until we understand infi- nitely more than we do now about the psy- chology of -So some of the most es- teemed work in the field has been contrib- uted by psychologists like Tart and Dr. Rex Stanford of St. John's University, Queens, who has studied the complex relationship between ESP and the brain's alpha wave patterns; and by Dr. Gertrude Schmeidler of the City Usiversity of New York, who has done the most extensive study to date on the personality traits of persons with greater-than-average psychic talents. She describes them as impulsive, yet sensitive to internal processes, warmly open to adventure and change, and gifted with very good dream recall. AFTER A DECADE of impressive re- search on the subjective conditions of ESP, parapsychologists' conjectures on its physical characteristics have not de- veloped beyond the theories of that promi- nent rationalist Sigmund Freud, whose fascination with the paranormal was much suppressed by his biograp Ernest Jones. (Freud once wrote, ilVitletter to Hereward Carrington, that if had anoth- er life to live he would dedicate it to psy- chic research.) He saw psychic phenomena s remain- ders of an archaic conununic, s system that had been gradually dis d in the course of evolution by the more precise, hence efficacious, communication of lan- guage, and which can recur again in times of need and crisis ? a theory that fits in well with a large corpus of work currently documenting the psychic faculties of lower mammals. THE ASPECT OF CURRENT parapsy- chology that strikes me as the most fasci- nating is this The wonders of technology, traditionally thought antithetical to all spiritualism, are now enabling psychic re- search to substantiate the conditions of paranormal events. Similarly, a yogi's suspended heartbeat, when monitored at the Menninger Clinic by the sophisticated hardware of modern physiology, created some symbolic recon- ciliation between science and mysticism; and Edgar Mitchell, enabled by his space- ship to knock at the reaches of the expect- ed void, was led to see it as a divine plenum. The world of 1974 is full of equally rich and strange conjunctions between ancient opposites ? mind and matter, East and West, science and mysticism ? which our culture is desperately hungry to synthesize. And the brave new world of parapsychology, if it attracts many harder-headed intellects into its ranks, may make a contribution to that synthesis. If so, it could help the rest of science by checking one of the most unfortunate trends of our times ? the growing schism between dehumanized technology and the cheap black magic of pop occultism. Declassified and Approved For Release 2014/01/09 CIA-RDP79-00999A000200010072-6