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As an Agnostic I am always interested when the sciemce takes a serious look at a spiritual topic. Their methodology always intrigues me. This article is interesting. What do you guys think of the work mentioned in this article?

[blogs.scientificamerican.com]

Norman347 5 Oct 31
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0

Ian Stevenson is about as credible as Arnall Bloxham (the Erich von Daniken of the Parapsycology world), if this article is to roll him out as their best evidence in the head line for the article I'm not going to waste my time reading it.
You may as well refer to Ed and Lorraine Warren or Dixie Yeterian as a credible source for proof of the afterlife.

The fact that we can create and alter quantum entanglement means that there exists some physical component to the tie that we are yet to comprehend. Same for the double slit experiment. With our free will and conscious decisions we alter reality on a quantum level. That's just a fact. So to continue to deny it as "woo" and all these other myopic slams is just pure ignorance and rather delusional. Einstein, Sagan, Hawking ... they all make reference to and contemplate quantum existence apart from classical newtonian physics. Just denying it is stupid.

@JeffMesser Quantum physics is often used to explain magic and woo woo. Sure quantum physics is real. But until we fully understand quantum physics and understand the causation, things like reincarnation are still woo woo.

@dare2dream yeah and I'm pretty sure those are the same remarks they told Galileo and Copernicus.

@dare2dream Best to do a bit study first I suggest. You clearly haven’t or you would not be making such remarks to defend your position!

@JeffMesser Let me see if I have this right, you are proposing that quantum entanglement maybe the cause of reincarnation and or reincarnation?
You are proposing that reincarnation is an ethereal form of quantum entanglement where by two minds/or souls separated across time and space are yet entangled and privy to memories and reactionary effect from the other?
And somehow you are equating that with the double slit experiment?
Because what?
You perhaps mean the data package collapses on the "spiritual/ parapsychological level" and sends both waves and particles between the two "entangled minds" via some kind of psychic mobius strip, providing itself with both energy (waves) and substance (particles) in order to bring about the very entanglement effect by reversing cause and effect?
If so are suggesting the human "soul" for want of a better word is made up of quarks or a quark or some other subatomic phenomena? Or that Twin souls are made up of the same quanta existing at different points in their individual span of existence?
If I have this right it is a fascinating hypothesis but a completely untestable one as things stand and not one that any serious physicist is going to propose as a research project, for which they require funding.
It is likely such an idea my only be proven or falsified as a byproduct of more serious study.
Could make the basis of a good time travel story though.
I still personally feel reincarnation experience is usually the result of cryptomnesia.

EDIT by the way you seriously think you can be compared with Galileo and Copernicus for original thinking?

@LenHazell53 no, I am proposing that the reason quantum entanglement happens across the universe is because the "connector" between the particles is consciousness. The entanglement experiment if nothing else shows that the tie between the particles is part of the physical world that we can affect. And do affect. The hindus refer to this as the "causal body". I believe it has an actual, physical essence of some type that alters quantum reality and we have just yet to discover its' origin. The world you think you see around you is not how reality actually appears. That is just the quantum narrative our mind creates.

And don't try to minimize me. thats rude. I was merely making the point that new discoveries are often ridiculed before understood. These theories aren't merely myth. They have form.

@JeffMesser Hindu swami do not identify the "causal body" in any such way, however theosophists such as Besant and Leadbeater do.
Are you sure you are not confusing you esoteric?

@LenHazell53 don't tell me what hindus do ... I'm hindu. You need to read more advaita vedanta. swami Paramarthananda in particular as he describes the 3 bodies of man in hindu dharma: gross body, subtle body, and causal body.

In fact, I even have a link for you. CHap. 9 I believe.

[shiningworld.com]

@JeffMesser I am not telling you what Hindus do I am telling you what Swami Sivananda (among others) teaches, it would seem from your reaction that Christians are not the only religious people who don't know their own religion as well as they should.
The effects you describe on and by the causal body is comparable to that which is contained in the books and manuals of theosophy compiled by A. E. Powell, a prominent theosophist and scribe to Madame Helena Blavatsky and not at all similar to the Karana sarira of Hindu doctrine.

@JeffMesser I just read chapter nine as you kindly provided and am pleased to see Swami Paramarthananda agrees completely with Swami Sivananda and so with me, thank you for proving me right.

@LenHazell53 if you're speaking of their physical explanation then yes I will be deviating from that. but the idea of a causal body was most certainly within vedic provenance. no, I don't subscribe to all of the physical explanation so my apologies there. I thought you were saying they made no reference at all. It's just like when I reference Einstein's mention of spooky action. A lot of the actual physical science in vedic beliefs becomes subsumed by western education. But not all of it. Some ideas such as gunas I don't agree with - but often I've found that they package up things differently than we are accustomed to and you can decipher some of the terminology and cross it west western views. I've been doing that for psychology and the mind. But when you get so deep you have to start learning sanskrit which I have grudgingly started. So I keep seeking as a sannyasin.

7

The problem with such research is bias. When you interview a mother who's child said something of the sort you mention, and then the family repeats that tale over time, it is a game of telephone. Its the one that got away, and your bias in favor of reincarnation (geographically where most of his research focuses) amplifies every coincidence.

Here is an example of what looks like a bias in favor in play to me.

"A Turkish boy whose face was congenitally underdeveloped on the right side said he remembered the life of a man who died from a shotgun blast at point-blank range. A Burmese girl born without her lower right leg had talked about the life of a girl run over by a train. On the back of the head of a little boy in Thailand was a small, round puckered birthmark, and at the front was a larger, irregular birthmark, resembling the entry and exit wounds of a bullet; Stevenson had already confirmed the details of the boy’s statements about the life of a man who’d been shot in the head from behind with a rifle, so that seemed to fit."

Too me a far simpler explanation is the imaginations of the children involved. Would you, as a child, not have imagined the many ways in which your face could have been damaged, if you too were in a culture of reincarnative beliefs?
Then, how hard is it for a researcher to simply find what he wants (subconsciously) to find?

"Stevenson had already confirmed the details of the boy’s statements about the life of a man who’d been shot in the head from behind with a rifle, so that seemed to fit"
Sadly a lot of people get shot like that, so by what method did he detemine it was the right victim?

Occam's razor
Which is more likely that your (mind)software can run without a hard drive(brain)
OR
That a society which believes in reincarnation will produce children who rationalize their birth defects as Karma from a past life?

It sounds like you're the one with the bias.
The article says they did exhaustive debunking and eliminated all cases possible, leaving only those bulletproof to denial.
Why don't you read his material before you prop up your own straw dogs to shoot down? You simply quote snippets from the article and make up your own supporting 'facts.'
I suggest you read some case studies about reincarnation on your own, and you'll see there are some of interest.
Or are you afraid your cherished atheism may take a hit?
By the way, it IS possible to not believe in "god" and still have an open mind about paranormal activity.

@Storm1752 I quoted the article above. See how he leaps to the notion that since the child thiks he was shot, an idea which is then encouraged and supported by the culture he lives in, AND some one was shot, that istantly makes that shot person the person which in no way would be provable)

"Stevenson had already confirmed the details of the boy’s statements about the life of a man who’d been shot in the head from behind with a rifle, so that seemed to fit"

and thats good enough, it seemed to fit . . .
That is indicative of a poor methodology.

As far as bias is concerned I suppose that is true. I have a TBI from my time in service. I clearly recall waking one spring morning and going outside to find it spring, an impossible spring as it was not yet Thanksgiving.

See I fell down and got myself a mild edema, which in the early 80's was "wait and see", during which time I was up, walking and talking, suffering mood swings, none of which I recall at all. For three months or so I was like that, So where was "I" then?

I do not see how software exists and operates without the requisite hardware. Documenting the anecdotal evidence of children does not make for credable scientific evidence. It makes for interesting annecdotes, some of which might not be easily explained.

The interpretation of that it as evidence of reincarnation requires a prerequisite belief reincarnation is possible, that conciousness can survive absent a brain. We have no evidence to indicate that aside from anecdotal tales mostly from cultures drenched in that notion.

Since we can create new conciousness by splitting a brain, and TBI's alter brain and personality, I find it hard to fathom how a person can consider such a notion without some supernatual idea of conciousness or a soul.

@Storm1752 "Or are you afraid your cherished atheism may take a hit?"
Atheism is not a thing, it is not my worldview, nor does it require any belief. It is not possible for a non thing to "take a hit".

Besides, I'm Ignostic

@Storm1752 Hmm, I can't find in the article where it actually says what you claim, only that he used his " own exhaustive efforts to disconfirm the paranormal account" without even mentioning the methodology he used. That is not the same thing, at all, or indicates that a scientific approach was employed. Coming to a conclusion that "seemed to fit" is far from debunking all other explanations. And if he did "debunk" all other explanations, how did he debunk them? What was his criteria?
Seems like you are the one with the bias in favor of reincarnation that fails to employ objective analysis and questioning. If you want to believe in reincarnation, fine, but do not attack others simply because they are being scientific and objective. Science is supposed to question the methodology and testing that is used, not simply take things at face value.

@Heraclitus, @Storm1752 Its from another article about him, in another parapsychology magazine.

Look at his Bio, he grew up as a Theosophist (who believe in reincarnation) and his entire life was an attempt to prove with science, that humans were souls.

The very best evidence he got in 45 years of work was a large collection of annecdotal tales, mostly from children (which pissed off the theosophists) but none of which is evidential at all. They have an appearance of similarity.

This is a common thing with humans, in 45 years he collects all the hits (stories which seemed to make sense) and discarded all the Millions of children the globe over which have no such imaginative memories. Not exactly a ringing endorsement for reincarnation.

MOST pointedly, why would anyone investigate the notion of reincarnation AT ALL, without an already underlying belief that it is possible (when there is no scientific reason to think so)?

If you go looking for chickens your likely to find chickens. If he had been coming at the problem like this "Gee, I have heard these kids with these stories, let me investigate" that would be one thing, but it is not like all kids have such stories and by his own admission he discarded the non hits(the negative evidence)
and kept ONLY the hits, over 45 years, which made sense to him.

Without a soul in a jar, or some kind of proof for a non biological conciousness, the entire avenue of research is an attempt to prove the soul, which was his stated goal in the 1950's.

This was his livlelyhood, and the Mulder Foxes of the world WANT to believe, so he sold a lot of books. Most ignored his research because of his flawed criteria. When he died others wrote three more books off his name.

Ian Pretyman Stevenson (October 31, 1918 – February 8, 2007)

"As founder and director of the university's Division of Perceptual Studies, which investigates the paranormal, Stevenson became known internationally for his research into reincarnation, the idea that emotions, memories, and even physical bodily features can be transferred from one life to another.[2] He traveled extensively over a period of forty years, investigating three thousand cases of children around the world who claimed to remember past lives.[3] His position was that certain phobias, philias, unusual abilities and illnesses could not be fully explained by heredity or the environment. He believed that reincarnation provided a third type of explanation.[4][5]

Stevenson helped to found the Society for Scientific Exploration in 1982 and was the author of around three hundred papers and fourteen books on reincarnation, including Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation (1966) and European Cases of the Reincarnation Type (2003). His major work was the 2,268-page, two-volume Reincarnation and Biology: A Contribution to the Etiology of Birthmarks and Birth Defects (1997). This reported two hundred cases of birthmarks and birth defects that seemed to correspond in some way to a wound on the deceased person whose life the child recalled. He wrote a shorter version of the same research for the general reader, Where Reincarnation and Biology Intersect (1997).[6]

Reaction to his work was mixed. In his New York Times obituary, Margalit Fox wrote that Stevenson's supporters saw him as a misunderstood genius, but that most scientists had simply ignored his research and that his detractors regarded him as earnest but gullible"

Stevenson was born in Montreal and raised in Ottawa, one of three children.[7] His father, John Stevenson, was a Scottish lawyer who was working in Ottawa as the Canadian correspondent for The Times of London or The New York Times.[9] His mother, Ruth, had an interest in theosophy and an extensive library on the subject, to which Stevenson attributed his own early interest in the paranormal. As a child he was often bedridden with bronchitis, a condition that continued into adulthood and engendered in him a lifelong love of books.[10] According to Emily Williams Kelly, a colleague of his at the University of Virginia, he maintained a list of the books he had read, which numbered 3,535 between 1935 and 2003.[1]"

Look at your source. I find it all unbelieveable and lacking any evidence, a collection of ghost stories.

@Storm1752 wow, how do you think your blatant hostility to a well-reasoned response will play out in your reincarnation? Just sayin'.......

5
  1. Always, these anecdotes come from far, far, away, and involve children who, as we know, can be easily entangled with leading questions.......
  2. What difference would it actually make? Nothing to do with an (unbelievably boring!!) "Heaven" where we can sing praises 24/365/forever.
  3. How would you change your life if you actually believed in reincarnation? Me, not at all, so, see #2, above
5

This is a very old article, at least 5 to 6 years old, I have no problem being called a cynic until real evidence is shown. Real evidence, not circumstantial.

4

Several thoughts here:
1.Houdini, leaving a "secret message" he would transmit after death. Never happened.
2. The Amazing Randy, leaving a million dollars to anyone who could show proof...I believe the offer was recently
retracted about 40 (?) years of no results.
3. And again, what actual difference would it make to anyone's life Now?

4

"I cannot believe in the immortality of the soul.... No, all this talk of an existence for us, as individuals, beyond the grave is wrong. It is born of our tenacity of life – our desire to go on living … our dread of coming to an end." -- Edison

4

It could be in the realm of my religious friend's belief. He told me recently that his elderly dog had cancer. The vet operated and then they prayed for the dog later. She is doing OK now. I almost asked him if his god would do anything for the children at St. Jude.

4

My main problem with such studies is that they usually don't turn out to be very scientific in spite of the claims. Who says that a child who "remembers" a past life isn't just imagining a past life? Children imagine all sorts of thing including imaginary friends. These are children who are raised in a culture that believes in reincarnation. It is only natural that they interpret their imaginings or dreams within the context of reincarnation. Other studies have shown, for example, that near-death visions are experienced within the context of a person's cultural belief system, such as whether or not they see angels, or see God as they imagine God to look like. Christians do not have near-death experiences in which they see Krishna, but Hindus do. If reincarnation is real why don't all children of all societies and cultures, all religions and non-religions, and all up-bringings have the same past life "rememberings"?

3

Give someone a million dollars to fund a study which interests you and.....guess what their research will show? The idea of some child born with a ''pucker'' resembling a bullet hole is just wayyyy too woo-woo for me!

Reincarnation mandates some kind of supernatural ''plan'' for ''souls'' and, since I don't believe in either of those, I"m a tad cynical here.

3

Thanks. Great article.
Vast circumstantial evidence reincarnation is a real possibility.
Not QUITE definite proof, but based on my readings, it is exceedingly hard to just shoo it away like an annoying gnat.

3

This article is evidence that even a professor of psychiatry can do pseudo science. His opinion is in contrast to the consensus of scientific community.

What consensus please? Would you cite the contrarian position?

@Storm1752 That reincarnation experience in the vast number of cases can with the minimum of research be proven to be Cryptomnesia, and or subconscious wish fulfilment.

3

It's true, just ask Big Foot.

We are talking here about a very exacting scientist who spent his career meticulously gathering data. I don’t see how you can so flippantly dismiss all those volumes without even looking at them.

@WilliamFleming Atheists ARE very flippant, Bill, as you must know. After all, they have "faith" in their own half-baked positions, just like their theist cousins.

@WilliamFleming Methodology, and I am not dismissive. It is the criteria used for such documentation and the nature of human psychology and culture.

@Storm1752 That's very close to insulting....just saying. Blatant insults won't win you any friends here.

@LucyLoohoo, @WilliamFleming Just so I know, Who did I insult?

@WilliamFleming Give me a break. The author may have been a scientist but he was not doing science when he wrote that dribble. There is no scientific theory of reincarnation It can not be falsified. It is no more a science than astrology. I take exception to your "flippant" remark. I was being silly. Just like you.

@Casey07 There is not yet a scientific theory that would account for reincarnation, but that is no reason to be close-minded and not look at the evidence. Individual claims of reincarnation can be falsified.

Anyone can repeat the experiment: Interview a young child who is talking about a previous life. Take carefully witnessed notes about the details of their story. Attempt to find friends and relatives of the previous embodiment, now dead. Compare details of the child’s report with testimony from existing people who knew the deceased.

In thousands of cases there is corroboration with the children’s stories. These cases are meticulously recorded and can be verified.

Sometimes I am also silly. Sorry if I offended you.

@WilliamFleming It's ok no offence taken. My only issue with you is whether or not this is science. Anecdotal stories no matter how detailed or corroborated prove nothing. If they did then UFO abductions, ghosts, the one god, all the other gods and yes evan Big Foot.should be taught in Science Class. That is why I am so adamant about what is or is not science....Ben Franklin PREDICTED that he could pull electricity out of the sky.. To prove it he performed an EXPERIMENT by flying a kite in a thunder storm. That is science. My description of the event may be lacking but the point is made. .

3

Some fits in with quantum mechanics

bobwjr Level 10 Oct 31, 2019
3

I think that some scientists want to believe in something so much that they bias their research. I have not done a critical analysis of this research, but his wikipedia article and this one: [skepdic.com] would indicate that is probably the case.

I read most of one of Stevenson’s books. His methods were very exacting and his records are impeccable. After I had read about a hundred cases, it seemed like a waste of time to continue.

Some people want to disbelieve so much that they bias their perspectives, and they frantically grab onto any article that bolsters their materialistic world views. I would say that in this case, if the evidence conflicts with your world view, that the problem is not with the evidence.

@WilliamFleming Are you a trained research scientist? Are you qualified to judge the veracity of this guys research methods?

@Stephanie99 I am not so trained, however Stevenson himself was a medical doctor and a psychiatrist. When you looked at the Wikipedia article you must have read only the negative criticism. There’s also a lot of support from qualified people:

[In an article published on Scientific American's website in 2013, favorably reviewing Stevenson's work, Jesse Bering, a professor of science communication, wrote, "Towards the end of her own storied life, the physicist Doris Kuhlmann-Wilsdorfβ€”whose groundbreaking theories on surface physics earned her the prestigious Heyn Medal from the German Society for Material Sciences, surmised that Stevenson’s work had established that 'the statistical probability that reincarnation does in fact occur is so overwhelming … that cumulatively the evidence is not inferior to that for most if not all branches of science.' "[48]]

@MichaelSpinler I am not a Christian.

@MichaelSpinler It's the "I'm rubber and you're glue" arguement technique.

2

"Science" is never anecdotal....that is the antithesis of science!

2

Interesting but suspicious. These kids could have been well indoctrinated by adults with motives, or simply put various pieces of memory together from talk and/or TV that happened to look similar to some previous story. One thing is for sure, if it is actually valid this implies that the Hindus are on the right track and the Christians and Muslims, worshiping the wrong god, will be lost in hell with us atheists. LOL

2

I know that there’s at least one person on this site who believes that they are reincarnated and have memories that have come from what they believe is their former life.
They’ll probably not comment on this thread as they get too much flack.
I’ve seen documentaries on being born again and remain open minded on the subject. I think our main focus scientifically is to maintain a stable sustainable environment. If we achieve that I look forwards to us looking into these more entertaining studies again πŸ˜‰

2

Pretty unscientific.

2

I do not find it convincing.

2

How could you even test this?

Yes! Exactly my point from my post above. It's all woo until it's put to test to falsify it or prove it to the exclusion of any other possibilities.

So far, people have either waved their hands saying "quantum mechanics" or poo-poo'd for dismissing the anecdotes.

Well, quantum mechanics suggests perpetual motion too, but it would be motion without energy which is why we don't see physicists climbing over each other to build a quantum perpetual motion engine.

And for the poo-poo's - if you are saying that reincarnation is possible, it is up to you to provide the experimental framework and publish the methodology so that the experiment can be replicated by independent sources - anecdotal stories don't count, only repeatable results. This Cattus can live with the null hypothesis until you do; which, by the way, when you can't even set up the experiment - that's a pretty good indicator that it's a non-starter...

"Arguments from authority are meaningless." - Dr. Carl Sagan

"That which is presented without evidence can be equally dismissed without evidence." - Christopher Hitchens.

"If you can't show it, then you don't know it..." - Aron-Ra

2

Looks like some interesting work. It’s churlish to say β€˜not so’ when an eminent scientist has undertaken the study with a pretty huge sample.

Regardless of our pontificating, we don’t know how the mind works other than the neurochemistry and neurophysiology of the brain.

More going on than a bunch of chemicals getting together I would suggest on this research.

Unless of course anyone knows differently.

Ian Stevenson gave up any claims to eminence after the fiasco that was the Bridey Murphy/Morey Bernstein case, which though the most famous reincarnation investigation he was involved in was certainly not the only time he made a total fool of himself, being taken in by fraudsters, charlatans and publicity hunters.

@LenHazell53 okay thanks Len, I will have to revisit it.

2

I read one of Stevenson’s books, and I am persuaded at this point.

These reincarnation phenomena are not β€œsupernatural”. Nothing is supernatural. An understanding of reincarnation is currently outside the realm of established science, but at some point, brilliant and eager minds will learn more and science will advance.

If these carefully conducted studies don’t fit into your world view, the problem is likely not with the studies

1

Nope, Nada, Nu uh, Didn't happen.

1

Science may be catching up

1

It seems a lot of people are preoccupied with this idea, I believe the Grassroots had it right, let's live for today. πŸ˜‰

For those too young to get that ref πŸ™‚

@Davesnothere thanks, oh nevermind you're not here. πŸ˜‰

@oldFloyd Hey, you made midnight confessions start i my damn head, can't recall what I ate for luch, but lyrics 50 years gone, NP lol

1

There must be some other explanation. When the brain dies and decays all memories are lost or are they transferred to some sort of spiritual memory stick before death ?.

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