Thursday, March 31, 2011

Interview with philosopher and mathematician Elliot Benjamin about cults, psi and afterlife research, mathematics, Ron Hubbard and Ken Wilber

This is a long interview with independent philosopher, psychologist, mathematician and researcher Elliot Benjamin. Here, we discuss about Ken Wilber, Ron Hubbard, afterlife research, mathematics and other topics of interest. I thank Elliot for accepting the interview.

1-Elliot, tells us something about your background.

Well my background is twofold. Academically I majored in both psychology and mathematics in college, soon afterwards I got Masters degrees in both mathematics and counseling, and in 1977 I entered a Ph.D. psychology program at the Humanistic Psychology Institute. After five months in the program I decided it was not working for me and I started my long career as a mathematics instructor and professor, in the course of which I got my Ph.D. in mathematics.

A few years ago I semi-retired from my mathematics teaching career and embarked once again on a Ph.D. program in psychology, which I am currently at the finishing stages of--at the same school by a different name (now Saybrook University) which I began my Ph.D. psychology studies nearly 34 years ago. I guess I always wanted to get a Ph.D. in psychology--better late than never!

But the non-academic side to me I think is more interesting.

I always pondered the deep questions of life ever since I was a kid-- what was the meaning of life, if there is a God, do we have souls that live on after our bodies die, etc. After being immersed in various modern religious and spiritual groups off and on for 35 years, I still ponder these questions, which is at the core of my current Ph.D. psychology dissertation that I am working on.

But I'll save details about all this for some of the subsequent questions.

2-Why did you get interested in psi and afterlife research?

I'm glad I decided to save some of the details for your subsequent questions. I got interested in psi and afterlife research as a way to gain understanding of what I always wanted to know about, as I mentioned above. It seemed to me that psi and the possibility of an afterlife might go together. I can remember soon after my mother died when I was 24, I went to a large audience lecture by a psychic and she singled me out in the audience and conveyed something that resonated with me deeply, related to how I found out about my mother's death. This always had felt spooky to me, but I did not do anything to study it. Then about five and half years ago my brother died, who I was very close to, and I found myself reading books by mediums and I started thinking about seeing a medium. I wanted to know if there was any chance that my brother was somehow still out there. When I subsequently decided to once again try to get my Ph.D. in psychology and I needed to come up with a preliminary idea for my eventual dissertation, the natural choice for me was to see if I could stud the possibility of life after death as my psychology dissertation.

I knew this would be challenging to do in a Ph.D. program but I figured if there was anywhere I could do it, it would be at Saybrook and I was hoping that I could study with Stanley Krippner, who is a renowned expert on parapsychology, who I believe you have also interviewed on your site (Stanley has been a mentor to me at Saybrook and is presently on my dissertation committee).

3-Have you had any personal experience with mediums or some kind of phenomenon suggestive of afterlife and psi?

Yes, in the past three years I have done research with mediums, mostly at Temple Heights Spiritualist Camp in Northport, Maine. I experienced various groups with mediums, inclusive of seances, message circles, church services, workshops, and individual readings. I have an article published in The Ground of Faith Journal in January, 2009 describing much of my experiences, and an article published on the Integral World website (www.integralworld.net) entitled "Metaphysical Reflections" about some of my individual sessions with mediums as well as my Soul Surivial workshop at Omega retreat center with Raymond Moody, the originator of near-death experience study, and Brian Weiss--prominent in past-life regression therapy.

4-Do you think the overall evidence favors the idea that consciousness survives death?

That's a good question--and a very difficult one to answer. I have an agnostic perspective about this, which is one reason I think I am in a good position to do this kind of research. There are a number of interpretations one can make about people's experiences of an afterlife, ranging from there being a bona-fide afterlife to some kind of psi interpretation, generally referrred to as "super-psi," to a kind of non-personal surviving remnants of "information" in the context of morphogenetic resonance, to even the possibliity of some kind of parallel universes (as in Stephen Hawking--and for which I think is the most far-fetched of any interpretation). And this is all assuming that there really is "something" going on, as of course the skeptics will not buy any of this and will insist upon factors such as sensory leakage, subjective validation, or fraud to expalin psychic and/or afterlife phonomena. But I will say that I think there is "something" going on in at least some of this phenomena, and I am still open to the possibility of there being some kind of bona-fide afterlife, but I go back and forth about this and I really don't know.

5-Do you think the evidence for reincarnation is good?

I think there is interesting evidence to support some kind of interpretation of the reincarnation phenomena. But I don't think that the most likely interpretation of this is reincarnation per se. What appears to me much more likely is that there is some kind of psychic linkage going on, through mechanisms such as telepathy or clairvoyance or morphogenetic resonance, where for some reason a child is able to pick up sensitivities of people who have died. This is all quite complicated and controversial and there are many factors that can come into this that needs to be carefully monitored, such as communications from family members, previous influences, social expectations, etc. But I am open to the possibility that in some cases there is a genuine connection being made, though I don't see why it makes more sense to think it is the same person or spirit reincarnated rather than to think that there is some kind of psychic connection that is going on, which to me is the simpler and more basic possible explanation.

6-What do you think of the super-ESP hypothesis as a competing hypothesis to the survivalistic one?

The super-ESP (also called super-psi) hypothesis has been discussed in wonderful detail and logical analysis by a number of open-minded philosophers, including Steven Braude, Alan Gauld, and Robert Almeder. They all came to the conclusion that the bona-fide life after death interpretation made more sense than the super-psi interpretation, though they concluded this in varying degrees of confidence. I tend to agree with them, as there really are staggering assumptions that would need to be made to explain accurate communications of mediums (assuming these communications are indeed accurate) in terms of nothing more than psychic sensitivities of living individuals. Actually I think an interpretation of the "information" remnants of morphogenetic resonance is a more viable interpretation than super-psi as well.

7-You have studied the so-called "cults" for years. Can you give us your definition and common characteristics of a "cult"?

Sure--first of all I always emphasize that a cult is not an all or nothing kind of thing, but rather a gradient of factors, such that a group may possess more or less cult characteristics. But if we think in terms of a group having serious cult dangers, what I would focus upon are factors such as control of the lives of members by the group leader, dogma and wisdom attributed to the group leader, manipulation of group members with deception and under false pretenses, front groups without designating what the group is, claimed supreme authority of the group leader, very expensive or exorbitant fees to to take part in the group, extreme social coercion to think like everyone else (which has been referred to as "brainwashing"), being coerced or socially influenced to break away from family and friends who are not favorable to the group, and in the worst and most dangerous of these groups there can be violence, sexual violations, and inflicted trauma.

I describe my own experiences in various groups with different degrees of cult dangers in my Modern Religions book, which I expect to be available on Amazon in a month or two.

8-You have published many articles in the IntegralWorld website (which addresses mainly the ideas of philosopher Ken Wilber). What do you think of Wilber's overall philosophy?

Generally speaking I think that Ken Wilber is a monumental figure in philosophy who deserves to be recognized for his immense accomplishments in this realm. What initially attracted me to Wilber's philosophy was his inclusion of spirituality in the realm of philosophy, and his endeavors to make this into a coherent, logical, and scientific worldview. When he became immersed in his integral philosophy I found this to be stimulating and interesting and in many ways brilliantly and extensively formulated. However, I gradually started to have some concerns and disagreements about various aspects of Wilber's philosophy, such as the added complications and details of his eight "perspectives" inside of his four quadrants, and I always felt uncomfortable about his assumptions of the descending view of spirit and his apparent certainty of all his esoteric high level forms of consciousness in the hierarchy of subtle, causal, non-dual, etc. as well as his assumptions about the bardo in-between lives realm.

This is all aside from the controversial personality aspects of Wilber that many have written about on the Integral World site, including myself, as right now we are just talking about Wilber's philosophy. But I will also take this opportunity to say that I will always be indebted to Wilber for personally supporting me back in 2003 when I got an invitation to visit him in his Denver apartment and he spent two hours private time with me, as this is what gave me the impetus to embark on my lifelong goal of becoming a philosopher, very late in life--but once again, better late than never.

9-Which is your opinion about Wilber as a person and scholar, and what anecdotes can you share with us about your personal meetings with him?

Ah--I believe I have answered the bulk of this question above. But I will say that the two hours I spent with Ken Wilber alone in his Denver apartment was probably the most stimulating two hours I have spent in my life. Wilber was genuinely friendly and hospitable to me, and at that time I was just a mathematician who had never published anything in psychology or philosophy.

But I'll relay one little anecdote. I left Wilber's apartment in quite the daze and as soon as I got outside I realized that I had forgotten a little personal memento that was special to me. Wilber's
girlfriend had just come in to the apartment right before I left, and I felt very awkward and embarassed to be knocking on his door again, as the last thing I wanted to do in the world was to interrupt Ken Wilber and his girlriend in the middle of what they might be doing, after he had been so wonderfully nice to me for the past two hours. But I knocked on the door and no-one answered so I opened the door and loudly said I was coming in as I left my memento behind, and I can remember Ken and his girlfriend sitting on the couch, Ken smiling and winking at me and all was well.

I'll mention one other memory I have during my private session with Wilber. I asked Ken if he thought there was a danger of him becoming a "guru" as many people looked up to him with a workshiping kind of mentality.

His reply was that there was no danger in this, as he has a number of good friends who constantly tell him how "fucked up" he is.

And I felt quite reassured that Wilber was not going to become a dangerous guru, which I subsequently kept as my theme in my Integral World article on Integral Institute and Ken Wilber.

10-Some have claimed that there are cult dangers in Wilber's Integral Institute and followers. As an expert in cults, which is your opinion about such common criticism?

Well as I have written about in my Integral Institute article that I have mentioned above, I concluded that there are not any kind of serious cult dangers in Wilber's Integral Institute. I devised an experiential rating scale based upon three different schemes to evaluate the cult dangers of groups, which I had used for nearly 20 groups in my Modern Religions book. Based upon these experiential rating scales, I conluded that Integral Institute was in Neutral territory, in-between Mild cult dangers and Favorable characteristics.

My article came out in 2006, and this was my first article on the Integral World website, and I immediately found myself caught in an intensive anti-Wilber public debate with a vehement Wilber critic.

This led to my writing more articles on Integral World, but it is now nearly five years later and I can say that what I wrote in my first article is still my basic beliefs. I have had some dealings with Wilber and Integral Institute since then, as my Integral Mathematics article was published
in Wilber's AQAL (All Quadrants All Levels) journal, which included a phone conversation with Wilber. I have never received any negative correspondence from anyone in Integral Institute, and I have made a number of criticisms of Wilber in some of my Integral World essays.

All my cult articles are based upon my own experiences, and

I must say that based upon my own experiences I still do not think there are any kind of serious cult dangers in Integral Institute to be concerned about.

11-You have written a book entitled "Modern Religions" which examines contemporary religious or quasi-religious/spiritual movements like Scientology, Conversations with God, Avatar, among others. What did motive you to write this book?

Well this is a book I have actually been working on for nearly 35 years. It all goes back to what I described in the first quesion, about my lifelong preoccupation with wanting to understand what life is all about, if there is a God, and if there is some kind of an afterlife. I was brought up in the Jewish faith and after I rejected religion in college and became an atheist, I fell in love and had what I consider to be some kind of transpersonal experience and I became an agnostic. A few years later I encountered Scientology at a vulnerable time in my life, and after being in Scientology on and off for two years I found myself writing about Scientology in a stream of consciousness which helped me assimilate my experiences and finally leave the group.

Within the next few years I became fascinated to explore different religious, spiritual, and philosohical organizations, which included Werner Erhard's est training, a bit of the Unification church, Divine Light Mission, and a Gurdjieff group. Around 1979 I decided to put all this together and I formulated my Modern Religions book and used my essays to teach my Psychology, Religion, and Human Values course for a number of sessions at the Berkeley Adult School in California. This was also around the time I was trying out my Ph.D. psychology program at the original Saybrook (The Humanistiic Psychology Institute) with the intention of writing my dissertation on the relationship of psychology to my experiential study of modern religions. So my Modern Religions book has quite the long history!

But my book was always just an informal bound manuscript that I would sell to people from time to time, and that I would gradually add on to as I would accumulate more experiences in the 1990s and 2000s. But now I am finally serious about making my book available to people, and it will soon be available on Amazon.

12-What do you think of Ron Hubbard (as a thinker) and Scientology (as a religion)? Have you found something of philosophical, psychological or practical value in Hubbard's ideas?

Oh boy--this is quite the question. Well Scientology and L. Ron Hubbard are exceeingly dangerous--make no mistake about it. I rated Scientology as having high cult dangers in my Modern Religions book, and I have an article describing some of my personal experiences in Scientology in Rick Ross' internet cult blog. There is so much to be concerned about in regard to Scientology and Hubbard that I would not even know where to begin in this interview. But once again I am writing from my own experiences and this is primarily from the 1970s, though in 2002 my son and I did do a bit of "Scientololgy Hunting" (as my son called it) in Los Angeles and I got a bit more current on Scientology.

But the authoritarian guru dangers, control of members' lives, dogma, indoctrination, front groups, exorbitant fees, manipulations, social pressures to think what the leader says, etc., all of this was in Scientology to alarming degrees from what I experienced in the 1970s, plus an extremely bizarre world of artificial constructs of L. Ron Hubbard that felt like one of his science fiction novels. I wrote a semi-autobiographical novel around 1980 and I included Scientology excerpts of my novel in my Modern Religions book, but I called Scientology "The Church of Spiritual Mechanics" which I think is a rather good name for Scientology. In terms of any kind of value that I have gotten from Scientology, I will say that I do think Hubbard had some interesting and potentially valuable psychological, philosophical, and educational ideas, that I describe in detail in my Modern Religions book. Much of his ideas is taken from other sources, but like any creative applied thinker he has put together his unique blend of various threads of innovative thoughts and ideas into practice. This was actually my initial motivation to write my book, as I wanted to decipher the valuable ideas of Scientology from its dangerous practices. But I've taken a peak at your next question, so let me continue with that answer.

13-Remote Viewer and psychic Ingo Swann was a scientologist (getting one of the higher spiritual levels in Scientology known as OT) who said that his paranormal or psychic abilities came from and were developed by Scientology. According to your research, have you found any scientific or anecdotal evidence that the so-called OTs (Operating Thetans) in Scientology have some kind of paranormal or psi abilities like having voluntary out of the body experiences (or "exteriorizations")? Which is your experience with Scientology's OTs and clears supposedly extraordinary skills?

This is an interesting question to me, as I have read some about Ingo Swann and his involvement in remote viewing, but I did not know that he was a Scientologist. I received some "auditing" (Scientology's spiritual therapy to achieve the states of "Clear" and OT (Operating Thetan) but nothing close to what it would have taken to go "Clear" or OT.

My associations with Scientologists on these levels were primarily through my training courses and I cannot speak from experience about their possible paranormal or psi abilities. However, I will say that the aspect of experiencing deep Scientology auditing, which involves intensive self-scrutiny going back to earlier and earlier incidents of your life to find beginning traumatic experiences known as "engrams" and eventually going back to your birth and pre-natal experiences and then eventually to what is believed to be your "past lives," may very well have the effect of stimulating one's potential psychic abilities, as it may further one's conscious awareness if the process goes well for someone. However, I would be very concerned about the lack of genuine caring, empathy, and humanistic values of Scientologists who are offering these kinds of spiritual therapy and I would not recommend this to anyone. But yes I can see how one's potential paranormal abilities could possibly be stimulated by Scientology intensive auditing.

14-Which are your main criticisms against Scientology?

O.K. l think this is one question I have already answered--it's the enslavement of the individual to the doctrines of Scientology and the rigid formulations of L. Ron Hubbard, and the exorbitant financial demands made upon individuals and the forced alientation of anyone the individual associates with who is unfavorable to Scientology, and everything else I said above!

15-You have written about A Course in Miracles too. Which are the positive and negative aspects that you have found about it?

I found A Course In Miracles to be essentially similar to Ken Wilber's Integral Institute in regard to being in Neutral territory regarding cult dangers. I read the 1,000+ page Course in Miracles text and attended a number of Course in Miracles group meetings. Personally It is not something I was able to get much value of, and this is largely due to my initial Jewish upbringing and the fact that the course makes continual references to Christian patriarchal kind of language, in particular to the Holy Ghost and the trinity and it is assumed that the spiritual communicator
to the "scribe" Helen Schucman (who was Jewish by the way) was Jesus Christ. But I did like the spiritual focus upon "forgiveness" and the authentic spiritual nature of the whole "course." The "realness" of how much this course focuses upon spiritual experience appealed to me, but the form in which this was presented was not something I was able to pursue. But in regard to cult dangers or undue influence or social pressures, I did not experience anything at all that felt of concern to me.

16-Regarding Conversations with God, which are your conclusions about it? Do you think that Neale Donald Walsh had a true paranormal experience which inspired to write his books?

I have a few essays about Conversations with God in my Modern Religions book, and a Conversations with God essay on the ICSA (International Cultic Studies Association) E-Newsletter. I placed Conversations with God once again in Neutral territory regarding cult dangers, as I did Integral Institute and A Course in Miracles. But I was able to relate to the CWG (Conversaiions with God) philosophy and Walsch's style of writing much better than I was able to relate to A Course in Miracles. I liked most of what Walsch presented in his CWG books, though I had serious problems with some of his pronouncements, which I described in my ICSA article after spending 4 or 5 days with Walsch in a large group seminar in 2003. I had serious problems with Walsch's doctrine of there being no good or evil, even though I understood his philosophcal transcendental focus about this. But when he made his point in dramatic very insulting language to Jewish people, as in "Hitler went to heaven" I responded as a Jew, feeling disgust and personal insult and offense. However, what impressed me greatly is that I was able to express my disagreement to Walsch, at the microphone in front of 130 people at this conference, and Walsch responded with amazing openness to me, all of which I described in my article. It was at his point that I decided that Walsh was not a dangerous guru--just a
very egotistical and extremely skilled theatrical personality.

And I feel the same way about Walsch at this time. I get frequent e-mail notices from the CWG subsidiary organization Humanity's Team but I have never received any kind of coercive pressures from CWG for attending workshops or anything else. There is too much adoration of Walsch for my own comfort level, but I do not think he is a dangerous guru. Much of the philosophy of CWG is something I can relate well to, such as true tolerance for various religious perspecvies, and I interpret Walsch's "conversation with God" as getting in touch with one's highest and deepest level self, and yes I am also open to the possibility that Walsch had a true paranormal experience which inspired him to write his books.

17-As a philosopher, do you think there are good scientific and philosophical arguments supporting God's existence?

I'm an experiential philosopher, which means that the way that I gain my knowledge is primarily based upon my own experiences.

When people learn that I am a mathematician they are often initially suprirsed at hearing about my experiential philosophy, but this is who I am. I love mathematics and logical thinking, and I still am engaged in mathematical research--pure mathematics, by the way-- algebraic number theory is my dominant field. My mind is virtually always going, and doing mathematics is a meditative calming activity for me, just as playing the piano is. And I love to philosophize and psychologize and write about my ideas. But when it comes to understanding about God and the possiblity of an afterlife and all that, the logic can go just so far for me.

I enjoy reading about all the scientific and philosophical thinking about all this, but for me the only way I can make headway into gaining more real understanding is through my own personal
experiences in this realm. This is why I have engaged in dong an experiential dissertaion in psychology to get my Ph.D., as I am once again working with mediums, now in an intersubjective context that inolves interviewing them to learn about their experiences of receiving ostensible communications from deceased persons, and then having my own experiences with them doing readings on me.

So for me the logical and philosophical arguments about the existence of God do not hold much interest--I need to experience it.

18-As a mathematician, do you think numbers and sets have an ontologically objective existence (e.g. in some sort of a Platonic realm )? Or do they just exist subjectively in our minds?

Hmm--this is a different kind of question. Numbers of course can be thought of as representing concrete objects, as they were historically originated. For me, mathematics is pure thought, and it is all very abstract--which is how I like it. I don't think too much about the philosophical meaning of numbers being subjective or objective, but if I were to guess I would say that numbers and mathematics in general is essentially based upon subjective thought, and for me its usefulness in the objective world is very secondary to their essential subjective abstract context.
But once again I am coming from the place of being a pure mathematician . Mathematics for me is an art form, and I have described this in my book "Art and Mental Disturbance" which I plan on also eventually making available on Amazon, as well as in my article "My Conception of Integral" on Integral World.

19-Let's suppose that numbers and sets exist objectively (in the ontological sense), do you think it would give us some sort of evidence for God's existence (e.g. broadly, for some kind of intelligent creator of the universe)?

Well if it were the case that numbers and mathematics did exist in some kind of objective/ontological sense, then perhaps this would give us some evidence for some kind of intelligent being who designed the universe--I suppose you can call it God. For the astounding logic involved in higher mathematics is staggering virtually beyond comprehension, with a phenomenal level of mental acrobatics involved in the highest mathematical realms. But once again this is not an area that I can speak very knowledgably about, as I am both a pure mathematician and experiential philosoher (both very subjective worlds).

20-Mathematicians argue that infinites can be basically of two kinds: actual infinites and potential infinites. In the mathematical (abstract) realm, they're largely non-controversial. However, many philosophers have argued that actual infinites cannot exist in the actual physical or material world, because they're metaphysically impossible and lead to absurdities. As a mathematician, which is your opinion of the actual infinites and their existence (or non-existence) in the physical world)?

Once again this is territory that I do not think much about. I have not come across the difference between "actual" and "potential" infinities, but as a mathematician I constantly deal with infinity and I'm comfortable with various levels of infinity, such as the real numbers (including square root of 2, etc.) is a greater level of infinity than the counting numbers or fractions.

But if I think in terms of infinite quantities, at first glance it might appear to me that actual infinities do not exist in the physical world, but the galaxies are so beyond comprehension that who knows?

Not my area of knowledge to say much more of, I'm afraid.

21-Some philosophers constantly argue that propositions like 2+2=4 or 12+1=13 are necessarily true (i.e. they're true in every possible world and cannot possibly be false). However, it's known that in alternative or special systems of aritmethics, such propositions are not necessarily true. For example, in clock aritmethics (in the countries which use a 12 hours system, am and pm) the proposition 12+1=1 is true (not 12+1=13). And in the countries which use a 24 hours system, the proposition 24+1=1 is true (not 24+1=25). So it seems to be false that such propositions like 12+1=13 are necessarily true in every possible world. They're true only if we assume certain (arbitrary) axioms and rules of inferences. If it's correct, it seems to undermine mathematical Platonism. What do you think of this argument? Are mathematical truths necessarily and absolutely true?

I think the kind of thing you're talking about here is just a matter of how number systems are defined. Clock arithmetic is an example of modular systems in general, and in this context our ordinary way of thinking of arithmetic is different.

But the logic upon which these systems is based is what is fundamental here. If you start with basic mathematical premises then the logic that is used to prove statements is what I think is at the essence of mathematical truth. Now one can bring in Godel's Incompleteness Theorem and
worry about the consistency of mathematical systems to begin with, but this is a differnet kind of problem. When I am doing mathematics, I am working within a given mathematical system, and within this system I would say that there is indeed mathematical truth.

22-What do you think of ufology? Do you think there is good evidence for the existence of UFOs from an extraterrestial origin?

Oh--I'm glad we're getting back to philosophy here. I try to be open to anything in philosohy but I must admit that I have a hard time with UFOs. There has been much research which has described the high levels of fantasy and creative thinking of people who report UFOs, and various personality characteristics that make it seem quite understandable how they could
be visualizing having an UFO experience which is completely in their imagination. What I feel more open to is the possible spiritual nature and context of what they are experiencing, as opposed to actual spaceships and surgical operations, etc. But this is just my honest bent on things, and I am open to hearing about UFO experiences that could have an effect on my
changing what my inclinations are about this.

23-What do you think of Intelligent Design?

I recently wrote an artilce on Integral World about evolution, consciousness, and purpose that relates to Intelligent Design. This also relates to my articles on synchronicity that spurred on quite the Integral World debate with one of my critics--a total of 7 articles between us.

I understand the Darwinian or neo-Darwinian model of how the universe came into being through chance and mutation and survival of the fittest without the need for any kind of God or Intelligent Design, and I have a . multitude of books about all this that I plan on eventually
reading (after I make some headway on my dissertation).

From what I am able to understand, the mathematical odds of the beyond comprehension complexity of the universe and the human organism, all happening without any kind of purpose or intelligent design, are what I would say is essentially infinitesimally small. In other words, my intellectual "gut" just does not buy the materialist argument.

Now quantum physics, at least in the classical interpretation based upon the original von Neumann formulation as currently promoted by quantum physicist Henry Stapp, logically concludes that this contemporary physics theory naturally leads to some kind of God consciousness, or perhaps archaic consicousness that started off the whole evolution process. They arrive at this conclusion completely by science and applied mathematics, which I find intriguing and in fact one of my books to eventually read is on the mathematical theory of quantum physics, by von Neumann. But once again for me, this all boils down to "experience." Something deep inside of me is telling me that there we are not just random purposeless forms of life that happened to arise on this planet from evolution which happened to originate life from matter eons ago after some kind of unexplained big bang. But what is the alternative? God--religion--etc.? In this context, I actually think that Intelligent Design is a reasonable way to proceed, as it leaves open the details but it affirms the idea that there is some kind of purpose and plan for all of this to have happened. And my gut level feeling goes along with this. And since I am an experiential philosopher, this works for me, though I have learned the hard way that if I decide to write about this on the Integral World website then I had better be prepared for some nasty public debates.

24-Do you think the existence of psi and the afterlife (specially reincarnation) is compatible with the Darwinian theory of evolution?

Another good question. These are the kind of things I am presently quite taken up with, and this was the essence of my last Integral World essay, on evolution, consciousness, and purpose. I originally thought that Darwinian evolution was essentially incompatible with psi and the afterlife. However, I recently came across a little known book by the man who was considered the co-founder of evolution along with Darwin--Alfred Russell Wallace. The book is entitled "Miracles and Modern Spiritualism" and I was astounded upon reading this book. Wallace was a bona-fide Spiritualist who wholeheartedly believed in everything from hauntings to the afterlife to reincarantion, and he continuously argued for this reality back in the 1870s through the 1890s. But at the same time Wallace was Darwin's close colleague and worked with him on the theory of evolution and natural selection, and wrote at least one book on the subject on his own.

Wallace briefly discussed how this is not contradictory for him in his book, as apparently he was under attack by his scientific contemporaries for his Spiritualism views. And one can also go back to the ideas of classical quantum physics, in regard to an archaic consicousness that started the whole process of evolution. For Wallace, spiritual evolution coincides with physical evolution, and one does not negate the other. And I suppose that this is as good a take on the whole thing as anything else I have come across. So I would say that I have learned that perhaps evolution and Darwinian theory are not necessarily contradictory to psi and a possible afterlife.

But it does take poweful belief in the spiritual realm to to allow this realm to go along with physical evolution, and it certainly makes the whole thing quite challenging to put together.

25-What books on psi, afterlife or consciousness would you like to recommend to the readers of this interview?

For psi, I would recommend Introduction to Parapsychology by Irwin & Watt, and Irreducible Mind by Kelly et al. For consiousness studies I would recommend Alterations in Consciousness by Baruss, and Consciousenss Studies: Cross-Cultural Perspectives by Rao. For afterlife studies I would recommend The Afterlife Experiments and The Truth about Medium by Gary Schwartz (though realize there is much controvery about Schwartz's work), Immortal Remains by Braude, and Is There an Afterlife? by Fontana. And I would recommend "The End of Materialism" by Charles Tart for all three areas.

26-Would you like to add something else to end the interview?

I think these have been great questions and have certainly stimulated me to think about what I think! Thank you very much.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

William Lane Craig vs Jesus Seminar scholar and bishop John Shelby Spong: The Great Debate on the Resurrection of Jesus

William Lane Craig

John Shelby Spong



Edward Feser, Thomism and Intelligent Design (ID): An outsider's opinion

In his blog, philosopher Edward Feser has argued what he considers are the main reasons why Thomists are critic of intelligent design (or ID), and why Aquinas' Fifth way is incompatible with Paley's style design arguments.

This is a philosophical question of interest. This post assumes (for the argument's sake) the existence of God as understood in classical theism.

I'm an "outsider" in regards to Thomism and ID, so I'll summarize the point of disagreement as far I understand it:

Aquinas' fifth way assumes an immanent teleology which is radically at variance with ID's mechanistic conception of nature.

This implies that if Aquinas' metaphysics is right, ID's metaphysics is false and hence a non-starter (for the same reason, the reverse also would be true; if ID is true, Aquinas' metaphysics is false and the fifth way would be a non-starter).

The theological implication is this: Aquinas' fifth way leads to the God of the classical theism, while the "designer" of ID doesn't lead to such God. Therefore, Christians shouldn't use the design argument as an argument for the Christian God's existence.

This is as I understand the essential of the Thomism vs. ID debate.

Now, I have a question: Is essential to ID a mechanistic conception of nature? (Note that I'm not asking whether Paley or most contemporary ID's defenders assume a mechanistic conception of nature; what I'm asking is whether such mechanistic view is ESSENTIAL to ID).

Why couldn't the God of classical theism to create a teleological world as Thomists think AND additionally, in specific domains and for specific purposes (like the fine tuning of the universe or in biology in order to favour certain structures which favours the creation of humans) also to impose "from outside" a form of specified complexity which conforms to an independently given patter (which is Demski's criteria for ID)?

I see no reason to think that God (being omnipotent) cannot do that.

Particularly, assuming immanent teleology, I see no reason to think that God (which is a spiritual and wholly free onmipotent being) cannot decide to act in certain cases like an external designer or architect (e.g. in the case of the Universe's fine tuning) imposing such design wholly from "outside".

Granted, Thomists will reply that in such case, the design argument doesn't prove the full divine attributes of the designer. But this is besides the point, since most arguments of contemporary natural theology, individually considered, don't pretend to prove all of God's attributes as understood by classical theism. Most of such arguments prove some of God's attributes. (This is why most natural theologians present arguments for God's existence as a cumulative case). So, this objection is not fatal to design arguments.

Thomists will reply that the problem for ID is even worst: such design argument is not only incomplete to prove God's existence, but that it leads to a God or designer wholly different than the God of classical theism. But this objection assumes that the God of classical theism is incapable of acting like an external designer (which imposes from outside certain forms of specified complexity for specific divine purposes like the creation of human beings) IN ADDITION to acting as a creator of nature with immanent teleology (which is the basic premise of Aquinas' fifth way).

In other words, the objection seems to assume that the God of classical theism is caught in a dilemma: either he creates nature with the property of immanent teleology; or he creates through the external imposition of intelligence over a purely mechanistic and non-teleological nature.

I don't see any reson to think this dilemma is a true one, specially for God. In my opinion, God could:

1-Create nature with essentially teleological properties (in the full Aristotelian-Thomistic conception of teleology) and;

2-Create, from "outside" and for specific divine purposes (e.g. the creation of human beings on the planet Earth) certain designs (like the fine tuning of the Universe, or certain biological structures) which satisfies Demski' criteria of specified complexity which conforms to an independently given pattern.

In conclusion, I think intelligent design is not per se incompatible with Thomism; which is incompatible with Thomism are the metaphysical premises that as a matter of contigent (historical) fact, most ID's defeders (like Paley) have taken for granted; but such premises are not essential to ID; and therefore ID is not essentially incompatible with Aquinas' immanent teleology essential to the Fifth way.

Just an outsider's opinion.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Julian Biaggini and the moral poverty of metaphysical naturalism, secular humanism and materialistic atheism


Julian Biaggini, a British atheist philosopher, founder and editor of The Philosopher's Magazine, wrote a book entitled Atheism: A Very Short Introduction, which is a very accesible and easy to read (but seriously flawed) defense of contemporary naturalistic atheism and the core beliefs implied in such worldview.

It's well known that metaphysical naturalism and atheism don't have the intellectual resources to give an objective basis for morality and, therefore, to give a rational defense of moral values and moral responsability.

Regarding the objectivity of moral values, Biaggini concedes that if naturalism is true, then there is not objective moral values (in the sense discussed in moral ontology): "If there is no single moral authority. . . we have to in some sense “create” values for ourselves. . . that means that moral claims are not true or false in the same way as factual claims are... moral claims are judgments it is always possible to someone to disagree with... without saying something that is factually false... you may disagree with me but you cannot say I have made a factual error" (Atheism: A Very Short Introduction, pp. 41-51. Emphasis in blue added)

I fully agree with Biaggini: if atheistic naturalism is true, then there are no objective moral values. They're purely and exclusively our own "creations" (in a similar way than we "create" other fantasies in our minds like unicorns... perhaps with the difference that such moral inventions are pragmatically useful).

Biaggini's concession is testimony of his intellectual honesty and his deep understanding of the implications of naturalistic atheism.

However, let's examine in more detail such implications:

1-Biagini concedes that if there is not a single moral authority (or God, which by definition would be the ultimate and supreme cosmic authority), then moral values are not objective; they're inventions or creations of our minds. (Note that this implies that, if moral values do exist objectively, then atheism is false. So, if you for example believe that discriminating atheists for fun or raping pseudoskeptics for pure pleasure is objectively, absolutely and intrinsically bad and wrong, you're rationally forced to conclude that atheism is false, since that atheism is incompatible with the objectivity of such moral rules and values).

2-A consequence of the above point is that moral claims are NOT objectively true or false (because they don't refer to anything objective at all). In Biaggini's words: "that means that moral claims are not true or false"

In other words, the moral claim "Social discrimination and bigoted attacks against atheists and pseudoskeptics is wrong" is not true nor false. You could agree with it, or your could disagree with it, but (if atheism is true) you cannot say that someone who disagrees with you is factually (objectively) wrong about any moral claim. In Biaggini's own words: "moral claims are judgments it is always possible to someone to disagree with... without saying something that is factually false... you may disagree with me but you cannot say I have made a factual error"

Examine carefully the following moral claims:

1-The terrorist attacks against NYC and the Twin Towers were morally wrong.

2-The murder of John Lennon was morally wrong

3-Raping atheists is wrong

4-Torturing little babies for fun is bad

5-Destroying science and defending obscurantism is wrong

6-Social discrimination and active persecution against secular humanists/atheists (just because they're unbelievers in God) is wrong

7-Killing secular humanists, atheists and naturalists (just because they disagree about God's existence) is morally wrong

8-Teaching flat earth creationism is schools is wrong

9-Child prostitution is bad

10-Terrorism and violence exclusively based on religious fundamentalism and bigotry is always bad

11-Hitler's extermination of Jews is morally wrong

According to Biaggini's consistent naturalistic atheism, moral claims are not true nor false. Therefore, all the above moral claims are not true nor false either.

More specifically: If metaphysical naturalism/atheism is true, then all the above moral claims are not true nor false (This implies that, if you believe that a moral claim like "The terrorist attacks against the twin towers were (morally) wrong" is true, then you have to reject atheism). If atheism is true, whatever be someone's opinion about moral claims, you cannot say that such person is factually wrong (because moral claims don't refer to any objectively existing fact at all). It becomes a matter of PERSONAL (SUBJECTIVE) TASTE. From an intellectual point of view, there is not difference at all in your moral beliefs (perhaps you could judge moral beliefs in pragmatic terms: some beliefs "work" for certain ends and others don't; but from an intellectual, cognitive, truth-oriented perspective, all the moral beliefs are equivalent because they're not true nor false).

This is strong evidence of the monumental moral poverty of metaphysical naturalism, secular humanism and materialistic atheism. This worldview cannot give any ontological nor rational justification for moral values, moral behaviour and moral responsability, except on purely subjectivistic, relativistic, egoistic and pragmatic terms.

This is why it's monumentally hypocrital for atheists to condemm religion, spirituality, parapsychology, etc. on the grounds that believing in such things is "bad". Atheists who argue like that are demostrably charlatans, intellectually dishonest sophists unworthy of any kind of intellectual respect. They don't deserve attention nor any kind of intellectual recognition. They're also irrational and stupid.

It's important to realize that the (improbable) victory of metaphysical naturalism and secular humanism in society would imply the destruction of morality and cause social chaos. It means the destruction of society.

Fortunately, the overwhelming majority of people on Earth is not so naive nor irrational as to buy so obviously destructive and insane beliefs. And this is, in part, the reason why they strongly reject atheism.

Friday, March 18, 2011

On the tragic events in Japan: A brief comment about the 2011 Tsunami in Japan





I've been asked for a lot of friends and other people through e-mails about the recent tragic events in Japan. I had decided not posting anything about it, in part because it is not the purpose of this blog, and in part because I think I don't have anything substantial to add to this situation.

For concerned people (and I thank the many mails received), I want to clarify that in this moment I'm not in Japan but in Europe. But I've been affected by the situation in a personal way, since I've received information that at least one friend died as consequence of these tragic events. And I suspect that other persons who I love could be seriously affected too. Unfortunately, for several reasons, communication with some of them have been almost impossible during the past few days.

I'm a man consistent with my beliefs. Given that I think an afterlife is likely to exist and a kind of trascendent and objective purpose do exist, I try to evaluate any tragic event in my life in the light of this perspective (otherwise, I'd be simply inconsistent). This mindset helps me to overcome, or at least to face, hard situations.

In other words, spirituality and a reasonable belief in the afterlife give me a sense of moral strengh, even in the hardest times.

It is not to say that it's "normal" to see my country and the people there suffering a lot. It's a emotionally painful and hard moment for me. But like anything else, we have to be spiritually strong and keep going.

To the Christians readers of this blog, your praying in favor of my people will be welcome. To the non-Christians who accept the efficacy of praying on empirical grounds, your praying also will be of help. To the atheistic materialists, it would be ridiculous to ask them for praying, but I think that asking them for sympathetic and positive thoughts toward the japanese people would be appreciated.

Thanks to all of you for your concern.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Tom Clark and the moral poverty and irrationality of metaphysical naturalism, secular humanism and materialistic atheism


Atheist Tom Clark, who's the Director of the Center for Naturalism, wrote an online article entitled "Maximizing Liberty", where you can read:

"In a deterministic universe, we understand that a criminal's career is not a matter of an unconditioned personal choice, but fully a function of a complex set of conditions, genetic and enviromental, that interact to produce the offender and his proclivities. Had we been in his shows in all respects, we too would have followed the same path, since there is no freely willing self that could have done otherwise as causality unfolds. There is no kernel of independent moral agency -- we are not, as philosopher Daniel Dennett puts it, "moral levitators" that rise above circunstances in our choices, including choices to rob, rape, or kill"

I think that if metaphysical naturalism is true, then Clark's point is fully correct.

We can use a deductive argument in order to see Clark's insights:

1-If naturalism is true, then determinism is true

2-Naturalism is true

3-Therefore, determinism is true

4-If determinism is true, then there is not free will

5-Therefore (given 3 and 4), there are not free will.

6-If there are no free will, then human beings cannot decide freely their choices (including choices to rob naturalists, stigmatize atheists, rape pseudosketics, be ethical, destroy science or respect rationality)

7-Therefore (given 5 and 6), human beings cannot decide freely their choices (including choices to rob naturalists, stigmatize atheists, rape pseudosketics, destroy science or respect rationality).

Note the actual implications of metaphysical naturalism. If naturalism is true, then moral decisions cannot be justified in any normative sense, since such actions (moral decisions) are so fully determined by physical causes as any other physical phenomenon. Moral responsability is therefore destroyed.

If an insane individual decided to rape an atheist, such individual was fully determined to do that as the individual which decided to respect the same atheist. From a deterministic and physical point of view, they're wholly equivalent (in the sense that both decisions were physically fully determined). Arguing that the former was "moral" and the latter "inmoral" is misleading, because there is not point in talking about morality regarding agents that are not free moral agents at all, since (as Clark says) "There is no kernel of independent moral agency... "moral levitators" that rise above circunstances in our choices" In other words, physical circunstances DETERMINE you (and your choices); hence, you cannot escape from them. You're a slave of the circunstances (including the circunstances that determine "morality" or "inmorality").

Note that in this view atheists are atheists, not because atheism is true (which is a epistemological, semantical, factual and normative matter), but because as a matter of fact (in a deterministic universe) atheists couldn't freely decide otherwise. By their personal circunstances, they're inescapably determined to be atheists. The same would apply to theists, agnostics, pantheists, etc.

The obvious question is: If my beliefs are a matter determined entirely by the particular circunstances of my life, how the hell am I justified to think that such beliefs are true? If naturalism is true, the CAUSE of such beliefs is not their truth, but the purely physical circunstances (in my brain and enviroment) which fully determined on me such beliefs.

If circunstance X determined my belief Y, then the cause of belief Y wasn't necessarily Y being true, but rather the fact that X determined it (regardless of the truth value of Y).

Note that it doesn't mean that, if naturalism is true, my beliefs are false. Perhaps they're false, perhaps they're true; but the point is that the cause of such beliefs is not a matter of respecting rationality (which is normative) or any epistemological duty, but a matter of physical determinism. It clearly leads us into skepticism regarding the truth and rationality of our beliefs.

The above implies the following:

1-If you have independent reasons to think that beliefs are not only a matter of physical determinism, but a matter ruled in part by normative considerations and duties (e.g. respect for logic norms and empirical evidence, etc.), then you're justified to think that determinism (and therefore, naturalism) is false.

2-If you think that free will exist and that moral agency is not exclusively determined by your circunstances, then you have to think that naturalism is false.

Reflection hard about this questions and ask yourself: In my life, do I believe and act as whether determinism (and hence naturalism) is false? If true, then you're for all the practical purposes an anti-naturalist.

Secondly, think about the foundations of your beliefs. Do your beliefs are rationally justified? If true, then you're rationally justified to conclude that naturalism is false.

Naturalism (when consistently followed in its implications) is, ultimately, self-defeating. Hence, it's irrational to believe it.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Dean Radin and The Enduring Enigma of the UFO: A first-rate noetic scientist and parapsychologist comments about ufology

As a rule, parapsychologists, psi researchers and noetic scientists don't typically address the field known as ufology. And ufologists, as a rule, don't seem to have any deep knowledge of psi research.

In an interesting article entitled "The Enduring Enigma of the UFO", first-rate scientific researcher of psi phenomena, Dean Radin, shares some ideas and reflections about the ufo phenomenon.

Personally, and after being initially skeptical of ufo phenomena, I've became convinced (after studying some literature on ufology and discussing the topic with many very well informed people) that the so-called ufo phenomenon deserves a carefully and scholarly study.

A preliminary conclusion about it is that any simplistic answer to the phenomenon is wrong. It seems the phenomenon is highly complex, and it involves not only possibly the existence of extraterrestial intelligence (as many people think), but deep aspects of consciousness and even of spiritual realities or phenomena.

In any case, read Radin's article and think hard about it.

Religion and UFOs:

For unknown reasons, I've been asked frequently if in my opinion Christianity conflicts with UFOs or the existence of aliens. Not being myself properly a Christian (nor a "Christian scholar"), I don't consider myself competent to answer this question in any authoritative way. However, in my humble opinion, I don't see any reason to think that the existence of aliens (if they actually exist) conflicts with Christianity.

In any case, a prominent Christian scholar (William Lane Craig) has given some ideas about Christianity and aliens in this podcast.

I agree with Craig that the existence of aliens would be improbable given metaphysical naturalism, since in such worldview the phenomenon of life and specially consciousness are a kind of monumentally improbable cosmic accidents. And, even assuming that life were common in the universe, in the naturalistic-materialistic worldview, there is not reason to think that such life will evolve to produce intelligent, conscious and rational beings "out of brute matter".

Consciousness, normative properties and values and rationality are phenomena at variance with naturalism and ontological materialism. Therefore, if naturalism is false (as I think it is), we'd expect precisely that life, consciousness and spiritual-rational beings in general (in several degrees of evolution) exist in other parts of this universe, and hence that intelligent aliens will exist too (if they're actually visiting us or not is separate question).

The point is that spiritually evolved and intelligent aliens are more probable to exist given the falsehood of naturalism than in case of naturalism being true. And given that we have strong philosophical, ethical and scientific reasons to think that naturalism is false, we're rationally forced to conclude that it is likely that spiritually evolved beings in other planets (i.e. aliens) actually exist.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Interview with physicist Marco Biagini about materialism, consciousness and quantum physics

This is an interview with italian physicist, scientist and scholar, Dr.Marco Biagini, about consciousness, dualism, materialism and science. Marco is also the author of two online articles against materialism (see this link and this one). I thank Marco for accepting this interview. Enjoy.

1-Marco, tell us something about your background

I've got a Ph.D. in Solid State Physics in 1996 and I am author of several scientific papers in the most important international journals of Physics.

2-What did motive the creation of the Center of the Scientific Divulgation about Consciousness (CSDC)?

Basically the purpose was to expose many wrong ideas and beliefs about the relation between consciousness and the brain, and to propose a rational analysis of our scientific knowledges which allowes to draw important conclusions about the nature of consciousness.

3-How would you define consciousness? Is it the same than the soul?

I consider consciousness as a synonymous of psychical life, consisting of sensations, emotions and thoughts. On the other hand, I define the soul as an unphysical element strictly connected to the individual identity. So consciousness is defined as a set of many different psychical experiences while the soul represents a unique element for each person.

4-What do quantum physics and quantum electrodynamics tell us about consciousness?

Quantum physics tells us nothing about consciousness, and this fact tells us much about the nature of consciousness: it tells us that consciousness is not a physical process. Before the advent of quantum mechanics, no explanation of chemical and biological processes could be given in terms of fundamental natural laws; quantum physics has instead provided a consistent mechanicistic explanation of all molecular and biological processes; since consciousness transcends the laws of physics, the cause of the existence of consciousness can no longer be identified with the brain and the materialistic view is then unteanable. I think quantum mechanics is involved in the problem of consciousness in another respect: during history, the existence of a strict relation between mathematics and natural laws has become more and more evident. With quantum mechanics such a relation has become even stronger since it is no more possible to describe matter through concrete images coming from our sensorial experiences (such as particles moving along definite trajectories), and the non-local character of quantum physics destroys also our intuitive concept of space. The laws of quantum physics consist of a system of mathematical equations in abstract matematical spaces and therefore consciousness becomes a preliminary necessary condition for the existence of such laws; the intrinsic conceptual nature of the laws of physics is in my opinion the most direct rational argument supporting the existence of a conscious intelligent God, since a concept cannot exist independently from a conscious intelligent mind conceiving it.

5-A very common and standard materialistic objection to dualism is the so-called "problem of interaction", namely, the problem of explaining how a non-physical entity (the soul) can interact with a purely physical brain. What do you think of this objection?

I have never found any valid arguments proving that two entities with different nature (physical and unphysical) cannot interact. So I do not think that the “problem of interaction” is a valid argument against dualism since it is based on the arbitrary unproven assumption that two entities with different nature cannot interact. However I would like to point out that dualism can be avoided through Berkeley's approach. The irish philosopher Berkeley denies at all the existence of the physical reality, and he consideres God as the direct cause of our perceptions: in a dream we can perceive material objects, but these perceptions are generated by our mind and not by real physical objects. The hypothesis that there must be a physical reality as a cause of our perceptions is then not necessary, and Berkeley believes that it is God who creates our perceptions in our souls. In this view, all the physical reality, including our brain, is only the representation of a conceptual universe existing in the mind of God, and projected into our minds through our sensorial images. This interpretation accounts also for the intrinsic conceptual nature of the laws of physics.

6-Some physicists have posed another scientific objection to dualism: They argue that dualism is incompatible with physics, specially with the physical law known as the principle of energy conservation. For example, energy would be actually created if a decision to take a walk or read a book or write an e-mail were an event in the nonmaterial soul with effects in the physical world, and the principle of energy conservation precludes such creation of energy. What do you think of this scientific objection?

There is no valid arguments proving that energy should be created to make a decision; consider that energy has a well defined mathematical expression in physics and it applies only to physical systems; the error is to apply physical properties such as energy to unphysical entities such as consciousness.

Besides, in quantum physics we can have systems which do not have a definite value of energy, and therefore for these systems the energy conservation principle cannot be applied.

7-Materialists have argued that the existence of the soul and non-physical consciousness is a hypothesis experimentally irrefutable (and hence unscientific) since one cannot manipulate a nonmaterial thing, as the soul or consciousness is assumed to be by dualists, with material implements, such as lancets and pills. Which is your opinion about this objection?

Since consciousness is unphysical, there is of course no way to prove experimentally its unphysical nature; we can however prove the unphysical nature of consciousness through a rational analysis of our scientific knowledges. Such a proof is indirectly scientific, since it is based on scientific elements.

8-A common objection to your scientific arguments for dualism is that you have an unjustified extreme reductionistic view of physics (assuming that everything what is physical is explainable in terms of physics alone), as evidenced by your explicit rejection of the existence of emergent properties (like temperature and entropy) and laws governing macro-physical objects and systems. Critics say that quantum physics and electrodynamics applies only micro-physical entities (e.g. atoms, sub-atomic particles and molecules), not to macro-physical objects like biological brains, animals, towers or planets, so your extreme reductionism is scientifically unjustified and tends to undermine the macro-physical or holistic properties and laws studied by other sciences like biology, economics or psychology. How do you respond the these critics?

All macro-physical properties are a consequence of quantum mechanics, and this can be easily proved. I do not think these critiques can be considered as valid arguments; they are simply false statements proving a fundamental misunderstanding of the laws of quantum mechanics.

It is easy to prove that all the examples of the so-called emergent properties are not objective properties of the physical reality, but only concepts used to describe or classify, according to arbitrary criteria, a given succession of microscopic processes. So, there is no real emergent properties in biology; of course since economics and psychology depend on the human psychical life, which is un unphysical event, neither economics nor psychology can be considered emergent properties of physical systems.

9-You have said that physical laws are intrinsically mathematical-abstract objects. However, critics say that you're conflating physical laws with their conceptual and abstract representations. In other words, they argue, you're conflating the objective pattern or regularity existing in nature (patterns or regularities wholly independent of our minds) with the human conceptual and theoretical reconstruction of such patterns (abstract concepts that only exist in the human mind). You're conflating the map with the territory. How do you answer to this critique?

First of all the map is a geometrical representation of a geometrical entity(the territory).

It is not possible to draw a map of a smell because the smell has no geometrical features. The representation (the map) must be of the same nature of the represented object. Therefore the fact that the natural physics are representable as mathematical equations implies that they have an intrinsic mathematical nature. Besides, the example of the map is inadequate; in fact the map simply describes a static entity and it cannot predict the future evolution of the territory; on the contrary the laws of physics allowes to predict the evolution in time of the physical systems, and therefore they cannot be considered as a mere description of the reality. I think that the most serious problem for materialists is to explain the mathematical representability of the natural laws; the fact that through a system of mathematical equations it is possible to predict sistematically the results of all mechanical, chemical, electromagnetic, optical and thermal processes makes it unreasonable to suppose that nature hasn't an intrinsic mathematical structure. There is in fact no reason to expect that a non-mathematically structured universe could be sistematically described by a system of mathematical equations. I would like to point out that the first scientists (Galileo and Newton) who began to use mathematical equations to express the natural laws, were christians and they justified their choice because they believed that the universe was a creation of an intelligent God. Their intuition has certainly revealed one of the most fruitful intuitions in history and all scientists now accept the idea that the natural laws can be expressed through matemathical equations, even if some of them (atheists and agnostics) seem not to understand the theological implications of this fact.

Besides I think that the term "pattern or regularities" (or equivalent expressions) are vague and indefinite concepts: they are not true concepts, but only empty rethoric figures, without any real meaning. The point is that it is not possible to describe the laws of quantum physics through well-defined concrete terms, and this is a direct consequence of the intrinsic abstract and conceptual nature of the natural laws.

10-You have argued that observation causes the so-called "collapse of the wave function". However, critics have posed at least 5 scientific objections to this view: 1-The mathematical axiomatization of the quantum theory shows that it doesn't contain any variables denoting mental/psychological properties or entities (like consciousness, thoughts or experiences) 2-The collapse of the wave function is nowadays conceived by some physicists as the decoherence resulting from the interaction between a quantum particles and its macrophysical environment, which need no be manned by any observation: So the state-function collapse would be a purely physical process independent of any observation at all. 3-Your view doesn't explain what collapses the wave function in places occurring far beyond any laboratories (and hence beyond the reach of any empirical observation), such as the nuclear reactions ocurring inside the stars or in remote galaxies where there is not observer at all. 4-Your view assume uncritically the Copenhagen (or subjectivist) interpretation of QM, which is only one of at least 10 different interpretations of QM. 5-If the collapse of the wave function is caused by observation, how are you going to explain the collapse of the wave function which existed previous to the relatively recent emergence of human observers?

First of all, I disagree with those physicists who claim that the decoherence results from the interaction between a quantum particles and its macrophysical environment; I think that such interpretation does not follow from the formalism of quantum mechanics, since the collapse of the wave function represents a violation of the time dependent Schrodinger equation. Besides, I do not follow the Copenhagen interpretation, but I am closer to Berkeley's view: I do not consider the universe as an objectively existing entity, but as an abstract matemathical theory, existing as a concept in the mind of God, and projected into our minds through the sensorial images we perceive. So both the wave function and its collapse represent the way God conceive the universe; the collapse of the wave function is then neither caused by the mind of the observer nor by nature itself, but it is only a part of the mathematical theory of the universe. Also space and time, in my view, are not objectivelly existing, but they are only another part of the mathematical theory of the universe, which makes the non-local character of quantum mechanics completely understandable

11-Do you think that the existence of a non-physical soul conflicts with contemporary evolutionary theory?

No, because evolutionary theory deals only with biological elements; no fossils of psyche can be found, and therefore no claims about consciousness can be made in any evolutionary theories.

12-Some contemporary atheists have argued that God is an unnecesary hypothesis to explain the origin of the universe, because quantum physics have demostrated the existence of "virtual particles" which come from the quantum vacuum and therefore "out of nothing". So the universe is actually uncaused from nothing. What do you think of this scientific objection to God's existence? Do quantum virtual particles provide evidence against God?

Virtual particles are a consequence of the laws of physics; so they do not come out of nothing, but they come out of the laws of physics. The laws of physics are a necessary condition for the existence of the universe, and their intrinsic conceptual nature implies the existence of an intelligent God.

13-Other physicists and cosmologists don't appeal to virtual particles but to the Universe's "self-creation" based on natural laws. For example, in his lastest book The Grand Design, Stephen Hawking has argued "Because there is a law like gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing". In other words, something (natural laws) created the Universe, therefore the Universe created itself from nothing. Do you think it is a good logical and scientific argument for the self-creation of the Universe?

As I said above, the laws of physics are the necessary condition for the existence of the universe, and the laws of physics are not “nothing”. The problem for atheists is to explain the existence of the laws of physics and of their intrinsic conceptual and mathematical nature.

14-Do you think there is scientific or at least rational arguments for God's existence? Can you share with us the best ones?

As I have said, I think that the strongest rational argument for God's existence is the mathematical representability of the natural laws. I think that also the unphysical nature of consciousness is a strong rational argument for God's existence; unless you believe that your soul has always existed (in this case you would consider yourself a kind of god), you can define God as the necessary cause of the existence of your own soul.

15-Do you think that there is good historical and rational evidence supporting Jesus' Resurrection as an historical fact?

I think that Jesus' resurrection is first of all a matter of faith.

Jesus 'resurrection cannot be proved because He appeared only to some people, and of course unbelievers would question their accounts. On the other hand, the miracle of sun of Fatima has been witnessed by a crowd of 70000 people, and nevertheless unbelievers do not accept such evidence.

Personally I think that the most convincing argument for christianity is Jesus' message: through christianity, an absolutely new concept of divine love has come into history: the concept of a God who loves us so much that He makes himself man and accepts an atrocious suffering and death in order to save us from our sinful and unhappy existence and lead us to the true and eternal happiness. Of course many unbelievers rejects this concept of divine love and claim that God could have saved man without any sufferings. I believe instead that, in order to trust God, every man need know that God is willing to accept such a terrible suffering. Every man need that proof of love, and God, who knows this, has accepted to give man what he consciously or unconsciously asked to Him. Jesus had to suffer and die that way to convince us about God's goodness and God's love towards us. By His death on the cross, Jesus destroys our distrust and our doubts, and He gives us the strength to believe in Him and trust Him.

16-Do you think that intelligent extraterrestial life in other planets and UFOs (from extraterrestial origin), if proved to exist, would conflict with Christianity?

No, I see no conflicts between christianity and the existence of aliens, but personally I do not think any intelligent aliens exist. I have never found any convincing evidences and I am not interested at all in the problem of the existence of aliens. Even if some intelligent aliens existed somewhere in the universe, this would imply no changes either in my life or in my philosophy.

17-Do you think that if reincarnation were empirically proved to exist, it would prove that Christianity is false?

Reincarnation is absolutely incompatible with christian theology. By the way I think that the concept of reincarnation is totally equivalent to the one of eternal death of materialists and atheists; in fact, if a person loses his self-awareness when he is born again in a new body, then that person has definitively died and somebody else is alive in his place. At most you can define this new person as a twin brother, but he is not yourself.

Link of interest:

-Marco's website.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Philosopher Stephen E. Braude Lecture on Ted Serios






Stephen E. Braude is Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Department at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. He is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Scientific Exploration.

Virtually You: The Dangerous Powers of the E-Personality by Standford University psychiatrist Elias Aboujaoude. A New York Times editor's choice


This book is not directly related to the main topics discussed in my blog (materialism, spiritualism, religion, pseudoskepticism, psi research, philosophy, etc.), but I think it's a very important scientific book.

We're in a time in which virtual means of communication, mainly the internet, are very important (perhaps, even essential) for all of us. The existence of technical devices that enable us to talk, write, learn, interact and in general communicate to each other very easily has produced a change in the way that we see and understand personal relationships, specially in children who have grown wholly in this "virtual" context of internet, facebook, twitter, myspace, blackberries, etc. and know of almost no other social reality.

This phenomenon deserves close attention and scholarly study, specially from the point of view of the effects that such social phenomenon produces in the personality, psychology and behaviour of the people who are part of it (i.e. almost every one of us).

And this is what this book is all about. The author, Elias Aboujaoude, is a scientist, researcher and psychiatrist from the Standford University, who has focused his studies and investigations on disoders like obsessive compulsive disorder and behavioral addictions, including the addictions related to Internet use.

Scientists and philosophers interested in the social phenomenon of internet, and curious general readers interested in the social and psychological effects and consequences should read and study this book.

Highly recommended.

Visit Dr.Aboujaoude's website.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Henry Stapp and his paper entitled Compatibility of contemporary physical theory with personal survival


Stapp (left) and Jeffrey Schwartz (right)

Professional quantum physicist and researcher Henry Stapp wrote an interesting paper entitled Compatibility of contemporary physical theory with personal survival, in which he discusses if quantum mechanics is compatible or not with the possibility of an afterlife.

Stapp concludes (contrary to the propaganda of materialistic ideologues) that nothing in contemporary physics precludes the possibility of an afterlife. In other words, the best and more foundamental of our scientific theories, namely quantum mechanics, is compatible with the existence of survival of consciousness.

For Stapp (who's an open mind skeptic of survival of consciousness), if an afterlife exists or not, is a matter of scientific research and evidence. But there is not an a priori scientific reason to exclude the physical possibility of an afterlife.

Links of interest:

-My comments on Stapp's book Mindful Universe.

-Other papers by Stapp here.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Interview with journalist and author Robert MacLuhan about his book Randi's Prize, pseudoskepticism and other topics

This is an interview with Robert McLuhan, journalist, blogger and author of the book Randi's Prize. I thank Robert for kindly accepting this interview. Enjoy.

1-Robert, tells us something about your background.

My first proper job was working as a foreign correspondent in Spain and Portugal, mainly for the Guardian newspaper. I then did a ten-year stint in the music business, running a recording studio and dance music label. For the last ten years or so I’ve been writing again, mainly for news and business magazines, while pursuing my interest in parapsychology.

2-In the United Kingdom, the current materialistic version of secularism seems to be very widespread and influential among citizens there (at least more than in other countries) and books promoting atheism and materialism (like Dawkins' The God Delusion or Lewis Wolpert's Six Impossible Things Before the Breakfast) have been in general sympathetically received by the public and the media. As a journalist and a citizen of England, which is your impression about this sociological phenomenon and why is UK more prone to it than other countries?

Thanks for raising this – it’s something I have been thinking a lot about. There’s a paradox here. Lots of people who I meet are actually quite open to the idea of psychic phenomena, and will readily tell me their experiences. Yet opinion-makers in the serious media – the “commentariat” as it’s sometimes called – will hardly ever mention it. Some journalists, particularly the younger ones, are very snooty and dismissive, and are probably genuinely sceptical. I think it’s possible that many others won’t touch it for fear of what other people might think.

There has been a lot of discussion of religion in recent years, in a political and social context. But it’s always in terms of traditional religion (mainly Christianity and Islam) versus atheism. There’s a lot of complaint about Dawkins-type reductionism. But where you’d often expect the debate to turn to spirituality, and the way this is reinforced by widespread psychic and mystical experience, there’s silence.

An example. A writer called Bel Mooney did a radio series a few years back, talking to agnostics in the media – famous writers, artists, etc - about their views about religion, belief, spirituality and so on. She subsequently wrote some of them up in a book, and it struck me that not a single one of them mentioned the near-death experience, even though they must have been aware of it as a widely-reported phenomenon, and also it was directly central to the subject under discussion. Why?

So far my book Randi’s Prize has been read mainly by people who share its assumptions. That’s fine, but my main aim has been to try to engage people with my sort of background, British writers and intellectuals, and get them to look at psychic reports, not as an outdated superstition but as an aspect of consciousness and of human experience. I think a public conversation about this is long overdue.

It’s hard, though I do sense it might be possible. It just needs one or two brave souls out there to pick it up and say, yes, there is something interesting here, something that merits a closer look. Let’s not be squeamish about it.

3-How did you get interested in parapsychology and the afterlife research?

Near where I once worked was a New Age/occult bookshop, where I used to browse in spare moments. It’s not what I would have chosen, but it was the only one within walking distance. I read about all kinds of crazy things – materialising mediums, spirit possession, etc - and it struck me that people seemed to be describing actual experience. They didn’t seem to be making it up. That surprised me because at the same time I was reading a lot of science books, which I also really enjoyed. On some level I’d always assumed that science tolerates ideas like telepathy and so on, and kept an open mind. But I realised nothing could be further from the truth. Science absolutely forbids such things, insists they can’t and don’t happen. So I was mightily puzzled.

Then my business went bust and my days were suddenly free. So I decided to spend a bit of time checking it all out. I spent the best part of three years in libraries and putting together the first draft of Randi’s Prize.

4-Have you had any personal, first hand encounter with some phenomenon suggestive of psi and the afterlife?

Nothing that compares with what other people have reported. But I did have a couple of encounters with fortune tellers, who seemed to know exactly what was going on in my life at the time, and in a way that is hardly explained by “cold-reading”. The first, when I was about 22, had to do with my love life. Someone just came up to me in the street and started haranguing me about it. This was in a small village in a foreign country, so there was no way she could have known about the details. The other was in a fun-fair, a classic gypsy fortune-teller. I had big problems at the time with my business, and was going through rather stressful litigation. She rattled this all off as if she knew about it, but of course she couldn’t possibly.

I’d vaguely supposed that these things could be explained in terms of ‘cold-reading’, and when I started reading about psychic research found that this is indeed what sceptics argue. But however hard I tried I couldn’t make that fit in either of these cases. For one thing, I was completely mute. Didn’t say a word. So there was no verbal feedback to work with. Of course they could have picked up quite a lot from my age, appearance and gender. But the information was quite detailed – in both cases it was a particular individual, and my relationship with that person, which was causing me problems – and in both cases they identified and described this individual with stunning accuracy. Also it just came pouring out – there wasn’t any of the hesitancy and mental effort that you see going on when, for instance, Derren Brown demonstrates cold reading.

I wouldn’t say that these experiences were why I got interested – it was more of a general philosophical thing. But they gave me something personal to work with when I was trying to make a judgement about the sceptics’ arguments.

5-Which is the best scientific evidence for the existence of psi phenomena?

I suppose that depends how one qualifies “scientific”. Is it just psi-research in controlled conditions? Or could it also include field research of spontaneous phenomena like poltergeists, ghosts and apparitions. We might consider some of the NDE research to be “scientific”, but considering the nature of the phenomenon sceptics might disagree. The same with children’s memories of a past life.

If one makes a narrow definition, then I suppose we would be looking at the best evidence from the ganzfeld and remote viewing experiments. But I don’t think a mere statistical anomaly would carry much weight without the very considerable amount of evidence from other fields.

Personally I find the investigations of poltergeists and mediums to be quite persuasive, for instance William Roll’s investigation of the Miami poltergeist, and the Sorbonne and Feilding reports on Eusapia Palladino. There are other investigations of mediums that one might mention, for instance Rudi Schneider, who in two separate studies was shown to be able to deflect an infra-red beam in conditions where fraud could not apply. I discussed this recently on my blog. The papers on Leonora Piper and Gladys Leonard also impacted my thinking. Pim van Lommel’s study of NDEs has been quite influential, as has also Ian Stevenson’s voluminous studies of past life memories.

Sceptics quite often say they would be convinced if there was one, just one unambiguous piece of scientific evidence. Actually I think that people, sceptics included, become convinced when they personally experience something they can’t explain away. But that’s not about science – it’s not going to carry conviction with anyone else. That’s the nature of this subject.

For me it’s not about a handful of convincing experiments, it’s about making a judgement on the entirety of the research. Is this a real phenomenon, or ultimately can it be explained away? That’s why I focused on the sceptics’ arguments so closely in Randi’s Prize. For me the alternative “explanations” don’t explain it.

6-Which is the best scientific evidence for the existence of an afterlife?

Again, I have slight problems with the word “scientific” in this context. It’s not something you can prove in a laboratory. But certainly the investigations of Leonora Piper and Gladys Leonard had an impact on my thinking in this regard, and there’s a lot of data that one can extract from other areas of investigation – apparitions, poltergeists, past life memories, NDEs and past life memories – which would be used to build the argument. It’s not that there are a few particular things that clinch it. It’s making a judgement about the source of all these different kinds of experience. If it’s not what it seems (evidence of survival of consciousness, that is), then what is it really? How are we going to explain it?

7-Is there good evidence for the existence of reincarnation?

I think the work by Stevenson and other researchers on memories of a past life in very young children has revealed a genuine phenomenon. I can’t see any easy way to explain it away. If one reads the detail of these episodes the quite fine detail of the past lives that these children often remember – the friends the personality had, the preoccupations, possessions, living environment, often in quite a lot of detail – and which is found to correspond to actual lives of recently deceased individuals, it just seems beyond anything that can be explained away in terms of fraud or misunderstandings, or by faulting the investigators’ methods and biases.

One of the biggest arguments against the research has been its preponderance in cultures that believe in reincarnation. But there is evidence of it also in places where it isn’t believed, such as Europe and America. The difference is that the previous personality can’t often be traced, as happens more frequently in Asia. But if individual consciousness survives death, one could speculate that human culture survives also – in fact it would be surprising if it didn’t. In that case, one could further speculate that it influences the way in which individuals are reborn into this world, and the speed of the process. A quick rebirth might be natural for an Asian person who has always believed in the process than it would be for a Westerner for whom the idea is alien and probably repugnant. That would explain why Western past lives can’t be traced.

The problem with this sort of speculation is that it appears to defy Occam’s razor, multiplying entities without need. I just think that if survival of consciousness is true, then we have to start thinking in terms of these sorts of possibilities. It’s a fascinating area.

8-Do you think the evidence for psi phenomena and the afterlife conflicts with contemporary science, specially neuroscience and evolutionary biology?

That’s something else I’ve been thinking about. I remember the physicist Steven Weinberg in a television interview years ago complaining rather petulantly that if telepathy is true, then “science will unravel all the way back to Galileo”. This rather grand statement is a bit of a cliché now. Not being a scientist I felt at the time obliged to take it at face value. But I’ve become rather sceptical about it. Psi phenomena indicate the potential involvement of consciousness in material processes, which is certainly a huge challenge. But even it was proved, it surely wouldn’t invalidate existing understanding of physical laws.

But as you say, neuroscience and evolutionary biology face the biggest challenge from psi phenomena. If minds are interconnected at a distance then where does that leave Dennett and Dawkins?

9-Do you think that quantum mechanics is relavant for parapsychology and the afterlife studies?

Not really my area, I’m afraid. But Chris Carter has written interestingly about this. If the brain is merely mediating mind (eg William James’s “transmission” hypothesis) then one is bound to imagine that quantum processes are involved. But quite how is obviously problematic.

10-Do you think the evidence for psi and the afterlife provides some kind of evidence for the existence of God (widely conceived as an spiritual intelligent creator of the universe)?

I’m aware that some psi proponents are also atheists. But this doesn’t seem terribly coherent to me. I take an either-or view on this. If psi phenomena are imaginary – explicable in the sceptics’ terms, that is – then the brain is the mind and there’s no God. If it’s real, I see no reason to go on resisting the claim of a divine reality described by the great mystics of East and West. But I realize that other people will disagree.

And that’s good. I talked about this a bit at the end of Randi’s Prize. It means that we can debate the existence of psychic phenomena without having necessarily to include divinity in the equation. If sceptics understand this, then hopefully some of them at least will feel less squeamish about accepting the genuineness of psi.

11-Even though not directly related with parapsychology and the afterlife, have you studied the evidence from ufology? Do you think is there any good evidence for the presence of extraterrestial intelligence on Earth and, more precisely, for the extraterrestial origin of some UFOs?

I did look into this, but quite a while ago. I was interested in the overlap between alien intelligences and spiritual entities, as described by Kenneth Ring, for instance. But it’s not something I’ve really followed through.

I was very interested in the findings of Rick Strassman, a doctor who carried out investigations into the halluinogen DMT. This produces quite short, intense trips, a bit like acid but it’s all over quite quickly. He commented on how often subjects reported having been contact with alien visitors, similar to those described in alien abduction scenarios. It has always made more sense to me to think of aliens in a multi-dimensional context, rather than as inhabitants of our own physical cosmos. I suspect the human imagination provides the actual forms.

12-Regarding alternative medicine, do you think the scientific evidence for the efficacy of praying, healing at distance and homeopathy is a good one?

I’m aware that there is some evidence, but I haven’t reached a judgement about how good it is. Homeopathy is a big puzzle, and I admit to being somewhat seduced by the placebo idea. Again, I do think we will find the human imagination to be implicated in things that some people take to be objective. What I mean is, we may be creating genuine effects and clothing them in imaginary forms. But this is just my speculation.

13-You're the author of an excellent book entitled "Randi's Prize". What did motive you to write this book?

Thanks for the compliment. When I set out, I had in mind a study that would make sense of the arguments, a sort of guide through the marshes of psychic research. It took me much longer than I expected, and there was a lot of rewriting to boil it down. In fact there are some quite obvious omissions – some significant laboratory research that I would have liked to dwell on a bit more, also the phenomenon of precognitive dreams, which sceptical psychologist Richard Wiseman discussed in his book Paranormality, and which two British newspapers ran an extract on recently. But I sort of feel I got there in the end. It’s the book that would have answered a lot of my questions, had it been around when I first got interested.

As I mentioned, though, I also have another objective, which is to try to draw the attention of thinking people to psychic research and its implications. I think it’s a pity if they fall in too easily with the glib and dismissive pseudo-explanations of debunking sceptics, which, as I say, seems to be the case with the serious media in Britain. I have to admit, getting serious people, agnostics, to think about ghosts and mediums is an uphill struggle. But worth trying, I think!

14-In your opinion, what influence has Randi's challenge had in the world of psi/afterlife research?

Good question. It’s certainly had a major influence in sceptic thinking, perhaps not so much conceptually, but in hardening attitudes. It’s the perfect comeback for a sceptic. If you say you’re psychic, why haven’t you won Randi’s prize?

My impression is that professional sceptics generally have been successful since the 1980s in discouraging serious interest in the field, which may have a lot to do with its apparently rather weakened state.

I know some would disagree with that characterisation of psi research. In Britain there are said to be quite a number of university psychology departments where it is active. But with notable exceptions such as Rupert Sheldrake and Dean Radin the discipline seems to suffer from a lack of confidence compared to earlier periods.

15-In your book, you suggest that the convinced skeptic seems to be simply unable to see and hence understand the problems posed by evidence for psi and the afterlife. What causes this skeptical inability to see what other people can see and understand easily?

I’ve no idea what causes it. Why are some people religious and others atheists? Or Republicans or Democrats. I think temperament comes into it a lot. Of course, sceptics say exactly the same thing about us in reverse: we see something that isn’t there. They tend to think they are unbiased and neutral, but of course they are as subjective as the rest of us.

Psychology is a huge element in our attitudes to the idea of the paranormal. That’s why I’m a bit ambivalent about your earlier question: what constitutes good scientific evidence. The evidence will only be as good as you want it to be.

16-As Chris Carter and others have demostrated, as a rule, convinced skeptics are secular humanists, metaphysical naturalists and militant atheists. Do you think these ideological and philosophical beliefs provide the proper mindset and conceptual framework to enable an objective and fair examination of the best evidence for psi and the afterlife?

If you put it like that, then obviously no! But again, one can also reverse it. Sceptics argue that people with religious leanings (or superstitious longings, as they sometimes put it) can’t be objective either.

If there is an answer to this, and that’s something I’ve only just started to explore, it’s to recognise the potential biases on each side and focus hard on the research findings. Perhaps that way we can discover each other’s weaknesses and find common ground. That seems to me to be a better way forward than putting on armour and going out to fight on an ideological battlefield.

17-Some people argue that being a vocal skeptic is easy and very profitable. First, the skeptic rarely if ever need to do any serious empirical research, he needs simply debunk other people's empirical researches. Secondly, with little effort, the professional skeptic appears on TV, on radio, can give paid conferences in Universities about many topics and in addition he is sympathetically received and supported by the scientific and academic community. Do you think the desire for getting personal prestige and money, with relatively little effort, play some role in organized skepticism and the motivation to be a professional "skeptic"?

Undoubtedly it does. I don’t necessarily think sceptics have it easier than psi-researchers or psychics, though. It depends on the individual. Rupert Sheldrake gets quite a lot of respectful attention. If Richard Wiseman does too it’s because he’s a brilliant operator. He knows how to engage people’s attention and put his views forward.

At the end of the day it’s the quality of our arguments that counts, and our ability to make our point heard. We shouldn’t complain that the opposition has an unfair advantage!

18-In addition to your book, what books would you like to recommend about psi, afterlife and related topics?

Chris Carter’s books are good, and the volume of essays Debating Psychic Experience, in which he has a couple of essays, is an excellent update. I’d particularly recommend the Kellys’ Irreducible Mind, which provides a powerful case for a dualist view of mind and brain, not just from psi evidence. The books by Rupert Sheldrake and Dean Radin are essential reading, obviously. There’s a lot of good stuff out there.

19-Would you like to add something else to end the interview?

Thanks for the opportunity to muse in public! You had some interesting questions. I write about these things on my blog Paranormalia, and am always glad when readers leave comments or get in touch.

Links of interest:

-Robert's website.
 
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