No psychic abilities found in Twitter study

Darn, I was hoping that my occasional Twittering had some cosmic significance.

But an article in New Scientist, "First Twitter experiment probes belief in the paranormal," describes a study that showed a lack of metaphysical ability among 7000 people who signed up for a scientific use of Twitter.

The formal part of the study, which took place over
four days, tested both whether the group as a whole was psychic and
whether believers outperformed disbelievers. On each day I travelled to
a randomly selected location and asked everyone to send tweets
describing their thoughts and impressions about the location.

In
the judging phase, participants were presented with five photographs,
one showing the location and four decoys, and asked to select the
target. The photograph that received the most votes was taken as the
group's decision. If the group were psychic, the majority would vote for the correct target.

They didn't. Which doesn't mean that no one in the group had a remote viewing ability, though I am deeply skeptical that such exists.

An interesting finding was that in a first trial, study participants who were believers in the paranormal claimed a high level of correspondence between their thoughts of a location before it was revealed to them, and a subsequently-seen photograph of the location.

Yet when this "correspondence" was put to a scientific test, there was no difference in remote viewing ability between believers and skeptics. The study leader, Richard Wiseman, says:

So what did we learn? Well, the study didn't support the existence of
remote viewing and suggests that those who believe in the paranormal
are simply good at finding illusory correspondences between their
thoughts and a target – which is, maybe, why they believe in the first
place.

This fits with something I read in Owen Flanagan's book "The Really Hard Problem" this morning. Intuitions are fine. But they aren't always true. So it's important to cast a critical eye on our own insights, whether they be about morality or anything else.

If nature has gifted us with a moral system that operates mostly intuitively and if intuitions are not always reliable, then we are positioned to propose another meta-norm that instructs us to check and double-check intuitions and gut reactions: Pay close attention to your intuitive moral responses and to the confidence you experience about the validity of your norms and values. Consider alternatives.

Discover more from Church of the Churchless

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

3 Comments

  1. tucson

    Generally I have not been overly impressed with psychics with a few exceptions.
    One psychic desribed in detail, several years in advance, a location where I would live that I had no idea of at the time. This property had several unique features which would not fall into any generic category, so this was an accurate clairvoyant perception in my opinion.
    Another psychic described ten years in advance my future family in detail down to hair color, age difference, sex and number of children, temperment, location, circumstances, and other aspects that could not be attributed to chance or lucky guess.
    I have personally had several visions that turned out to be accurate although I do not consider myself to be psychic or inclined to the paranormal at all.
    I think psychic/clairvoyant perception exists in the same way waves appear at the beach…not every day, or in a consistently predictable pattern or quality, but sooner or later the waves show up.

  2. I was going to say what Tucson said and it’s why going to a psychic, who charges, can be fun but not usually productive. They might have a gift but they cannot turn it on and off because someone paid; so if it doesn’t come, they have to say something and hope whatever came out will be helpful. Those kind of insights come when they come and some of my best ones have been casual from friends who had the gift or even myself and not when I requested it.

  3. Brian, you can be skeptical all you want, that’s just an opinion based on little more than personal bias, not science. BTW, speaking of bias, you failed to mention that this experiment was run by Richard Wiseman, a man who has publicly admitted to skewing research data in the past to favor his own skepticism of psi.
    Remote viewing is a skill correctly practiced by few. Getting 700 or so random people to attempt something that requires years of training to do is a bit disingenuous.
    It is a well-known fact that during Jimmy Carter’s presidency, the CIA used remote viewing to locate a down military spy plane as a last resort when no other method of recognizance was working. The remove viewer found the plane instantly. I think I still have an audio clip of Carter talking about the incident.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *