Can ghosts be scientifically proved to exist?

As opposed to punctuated masturbatory ambushes?

If you’re going to attempt to hurl veiled insults in this forum, hurl them precisely: I am an unregenerate normative epsitemic relativist.

Oh, well, that changes everything.

Well, there you are. Try to keep your wits about you in the future.

Supremely lame…

Anyhoo, moving right along, any progress on coming up with a non-trivial-yet-empirically-falsifiable definition of a ghost, anybody?

Up next, a non-trivial-yet-Biblically-verifiable definition of a red blood cell having no hemoglobin.

Fish, I have to reject the idea that fictional account of ghosts mean anything more than fictional accounts of spaceships. Despite your lenghty, time-consuming posts, I think we have to stick to actual observance on this one, and even that will be fraught with observations that people only thought were ghosts, and would have to be carefully sifted.

Nice idea, though!

Cite?

This is a pretty weak argument considering that Randi had a spare million dollars to put in trust in case a real psychic ever came along.

Or was that his last million?

Randi’s best talent, remember, is deceiving people.

Wow! Talk about a sucker punch!

If one can only think of a simple answer then one must assume the workings of a simple mind…

There’s hundreds of people who have had, and believe in their psychic experiences. Some don’t have enough control for testing. Others can’t perform with the accuracy required for the test, and know that. Some just aren’t replicable.

But no, you have to imply that every psychic is lying.

So much for simple answers.

Got a simple answer for nuclear physics, too?

A ghost? You mean there’s only one type of ghost?

And how did you come to this amazing conclusion?

Supremely lame…

That money is the operating fund of the JREF. It works off the interest of that fund (plus donations). When you do the economics, it ain’t that much.

Oooh. Thought that up all by yourself did ya?

http://66.221.71.68/nature.htm

The editorial the Nature ran prefacing the paper by T&P. T&P have since avoided mention of this damning editorial.

In addition, two of Randi’s books have damning criticisms of their methodology (Truth about URi Geller and Flim-Flam), as have several of Martin Gardener’s books.

Now don’t get me wrong, when T&P were working in their respective fields of training (physics) they probably did fine. However they have only done goofy woowoo stuff since Geller, look up their efforts with Inigo Swann, and Zero point energy. Not marks of effectiveness.

No. I got it off his website.

Snake, the Uri Geller thing should have been settled ten years ago, if not a decade earlier. The major difference between Randi and Geller is Randi admits his act is an illusion meant to entertain. Geller is a bona fide crook, and I wonder if your name shouldn’t be Snakeoil if you still take that moonshine seriously. I mean, wasn’t the whole CSICOP debacle enough of an embarassment? Must we really keep dredging up this sort of twaddle as if it had any further use or applicability to anything beyond illustrating the escapades of frauds and conterfeits. The evidence against Geller was always overwhelming, and if all you can do to enhance the discussion is offer repetitious smear tactics (“He’s a magician! Pants on fire!”), I have to ask, what’s the point? Really, what on Earth can you possibly get out it?

Really, yet it persists, why? Why won’t it go away like the cynics wish?

Well, let’s look at the cite mentioned:

Emphasis mine. :slight_smile:

ibid.

And this is the cite by which Mr. M declared:

Uh…
I don’t think so…

It might have been more useful to reference Targ & Puthoff’s original report site. In which the scientists dis various configurations of the same experiment, and achieved positive results when UG was not isolated with a faraday cage, but negative results when he was. Possible evidenct for the electrical nature of non-physical information transfer.

From these sites, sorry, neither T&P or UG have been disproven or discrecited, in fact they poin to the need for further investigation.

Unless you have some other insights relevent???

I worked with Ingo (not Inigio) Swann and Ed Mitchell during the 1970’s on several investigative projects. These projects did not support the presence of PSI, nor did they support Ingo Swann’s claims of psychic sensitivity. To toss the baby out with the bathwater, though, is akin to dismissing Babe Ruth’s claim to fame when he has a bad season. One exercise is not enough to prove or disprove anything. – that is unless one knows all the variables, and no one has made that claim yet.

In short: So what? You ain’t showed me nuthin’ of substance.

And what does this have to do with the OP anyway?

SnakeS forever

I didn’t want to freight my statement with baggage of “right” or “wrong,” Aeschines, much less with “sane” or “crazy” as you appear to have added. Can we agree upon a bias-neutral phrasing? I only wanted to suggest that eyes, ears and minds do not all process input and get the same result.

If we were attempting to detect the motion of a distant star, we would obtain the finest telescope available and calibrate it and re-calibrate it until we could be certain it had no internal optical faults. If we wished to detect a tiny earthquake we could produce a seismograph worthy of the task and equip it with the best sensors we could obtain.

I believe if we are serious about detecting or investigating ghosts, we must investigate our available recording devices: our own eyes and ears and minds. Unfortunately, it has been demonstrated in the most basic classroom tests that eyewitness accounts, especially those under stress, are amazingly inconsistent, even among people who were all present and paying attention. In the afterglow of a bright light our eyes see things which are no longer there; in the right light we even see our own blood vessels.

This suggests to me that our human, organic ghost-detecting equipment is not very consistent. Two avenues of exploration become available: first, some kind of battery of visual perceptive tests which can check subjects for their ability to see and/or appreciate abstract imagery, optical illusions, and composition, and other visual tests (speed of pattern recognition, perhaps… inkblots?) designed to see if there is any correlation among the visual abilities of Those Who See Ghosts, and test again for Those Who Can’t.

Second, we must find a more reliable way to detect ghost phenomena than what is currently available. Photo evidence abounds; sadly, it is so easily cheated in these days that it would take years to wade through it all.

Regarding the citations I posted from different periods of fiction, SnakeSpirit, yes, I know they were from fiction. I said so. I said so explicitly and I said that authors may not have been writing with the intent of exactly reproducing a ghost they themselves had seen; yes, I said that. Thank you for reminding me. I was responding to Aeschines’s unsupported generalization that ghost sightings throughout history and across cultures demonstrated remarkable consistency. I wanted to see for myself if that statement could be proved by an examination of some famous ghosts in literature, but no dice.

I still would like to see that general statement backed up before I will accept this remarkable consistency at face value. That Person’s Ghost looks like Person’s Dead Body does not seem like such a great leap of imagination, and I am not sure how much weight to give it.

If ghost sightings throughout history and across cultures all depicted the person as they were at the age of twenty, then perhaps that might be significant enough to sit up and take notice. I would certainly credit the sightings with consistency if every culture in history showed a ghost with Spam on his head and a cucumber up his nose. But dead bodies are, unfortunately, everywhere. A culture needn’t cast about far for a suitable description. In the same way, I am not amazed that cultures independently invented the idea of walls, doors, and roofs: caves are everywhere and easy enough to copy.

“Can ghosts be scientifically proved to exist?”

Probably not at this time.

  1. As so many have already said, we need a mutually acceptable definition of “ghosts.”

  2. That being said, we need some mechanism to be able to detect ghosts that will be accepted by the various branches of science tht are interested in the detection and identification of those various phenomenon labeled as “ghosts.”

Now, that being said:

“Can mind be scientifically proved to exist?”

Probably not at this time…

SnakeSp

:wink:

Definitely not, I’d say. It’s terribly tricky to prove the existence of something that probably doesn’t exist.

Your choice.

A little piece from the American Psychology Association Monitor

Even astronaut Edgar Mitchell, who actually believes in Geller’s abilities said of the SRi experiments:

Not exactly a shining recommendation.

Before I waste my time any more, what evidence will convince you? I don’t like chasing after moving goalposts.

So why dis T&P present their lame ‘chat about Saturn & Jupiter with Ingo’ as some kind of breakthough?

You’re being perfectly polite and I appreciate that.

I think your first post about the Randi test was inaccurate, and I just wanted to give the full reference and correct a few things.

Dowsers do claim a very high rate of success; they do believe passionately in their ability; and they remain convinced even when they fail every time they are tested.
None of this proves dowsing doesn’t work (proving a negative is often incredibly hard). But there is no evidence at all for it.