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Quantitative analysis of research mediums' consious experiences during a discarnate reading versus a control task : a pilot study

journal contribution
posted on 2008-12-01, 00:00 authored by Adam Rock, J Beischel
Mediums claim to be able to report accurate and specific information about the deceased loved ones (termed discarnates) of living people (termed sitters) even without any prior knowledge about the sitters or the discarnates and in the complete absence of any sensory feedback. Despite recent proof-focused experimental research investigating this phenomenon (e.g., Beischel & Schwartz, 2007), no published studies have attempted to quantify the phenomenological effects of discarnate readings. The aim of the present study was, thus, to investigate experimentally the phenomenological differences that arose psychologically in accordance with the demands of a discarnate reading task versus a control task. Seven mediums were administered counter-balanced sequences of a discarnate reading and control condition. The discarnate reading condition consisted of a phone reading including questions about a discarnate where only a blinded medium and a blinded experimenter were on the phone. The control condition consisted of a phone conversation between the medium and the same experimenter in which the medium was asked similar questions regarding a living person s/he (i.e., the medium) knew. Mediums’ phenomenology during each condition was retrospectively assessed using the Phenomenology of Consciousness Inventory (PCI). Phenomenology associated with the discarnate reading condition appeared to be significantly different from phenomenology associated with the control condition. Future research might use the PCI to address whether the phenomenology reported by mediums during discarnate readings is quantitatively different from their experiences during psychic telepathy readings for the living.

History

Journal

Australian journal of parapsychology

Volume

8

Issue

2

Pagination

157 - 179

Publisher

Australian Institute of Parapsychological Research Inc.

Location

Gladesville, N.S.W

ISSN

1445-2308

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, AIPR

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