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To: CharlieChina who wrote (2495)9/24/2004 3:28:02 PM
From: Tom Swift  Respond to of 3432
 
Chills but nothing paranormal at seance

2 hours, 44 minutes ago

By Patricia Reaney

LONDON (Reuters) - Suddenly the darkened room seemed intensely cold, some people felt a sense of presence and others were so terrified they had to leave.



But then, nothing.

Four reconstructions of Victorian era seances, with people sitting around a table holding hands in the dark, at the Dana Centre of the Science Museum failed to produce a single paranormal experience, a leading psychologist said on Friday.

"I think we are looking at stuff which is more to do with suggestion and psychology than the paranormal," Professor Richard Wiseman, of the University of Hertfordshire, told Reuters.

"A lot of it is due to the psychology of suggestion, a little bit to trickery, but we are filming in infrared to see if anything genuine occurs."

Wiseman tried to produce the same conditions which made seances, in which participants tried to get spirits to produce physical phenomena, so popular in 19th century Britain.

Some of the 80 people who participated in the 30-minute seances thought an object did move across the table, a popular feat in Victorian seances and taken as a sure sign of a connection with the "other" side.

But Wiseman said the objects had luminous markers on them. In a dark room there is no frame of reference, so the suggestion that an object moved could be enough for people to think it did.

"For some people, that is a very convincing experience. It can also be a very terrifying experience. We had some people drop out yesterday because it was getting too scary for them. It is quite edgy," said Wiseman.

Thursday's seances at the Dana Centre, an adults-only cafe at the museum where visitors debate and discuss contemporary science, are part of an on-going experiment Wiseman is conducting into unusual experiences and the power of suggestion.

"We have all this testimony from Victorian times saying these amazing things happened. The question is, can we give people those sorts of experiences nowadays," he said.

He plans to conduct more seances in London and other areas of the country in his search for paranormal experiences.

"I think it is possible to get people, very quickly, into some strange states of mind, some of which might be akin to a light form of hypnosis, where they see and experience and feel things which are not actually happening. But they are actually convinced that they are," he said.

The overwhelming reaction of most participants was disappointment that each seance lasted only a half hour.

"People love doing this stuff. It was a complete blast. I can see why it was very popular before television," Wiseman said. "From watching television at the moment, it may become popular again."



To: CharlieChina who wrote (2495)9/24/2004 3:28:40 PM
From: Trumptown  Respond to of 3432
 
you know far less than you think...



To: CharlieChina who wrote (2495)9/24/2004 3:29:14 PM
From: mimur  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3432
 
Nic your identification sleuthing skills are only surpassed by your market calls...why would one person use two names to tease you?
Are you really that self important?