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{{short description|Influencing of objects without physical interaction}} | |||
{{redirect|Telekinesis}} | |||
{{Redirect|Psychokinesis|the film|Psychokinesis (film)|other uses|Telekinesis (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{Paranormal |state=collapsed |image=Medium-Eva-Carriere-1912.jpg |caption=The ] ] photographed in 1912 with a light appearing between her hands.}} | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2013}} | |||
'''Psychokinesis''' (from the ] ψυχή, "psyche", meaning ''mind, soul, spirit, heart, or breath''; and κίνησις, "kinesis", meaning ''motion, movement''; literally "mind-movement"),<ref> | |||
] | |||
{{cite book| author = Random House| title = Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary| url = http://books.google.com/?id=y6aOPgAACAAJ| date = 2005-07-12| publisher = Random House Reference| location = Boston, Massachusetts| isbn = 978-0-375-42599-8| oclc = 48010385| page = 1560| quote = psycho-, a combining form representing '']e'' in compound words. ... (Gk, comb. form of ''psyche'' breath, spirit, soul, mind; akin to ''psycheim'' to blow). }}</ref><ref> | |||
{{Paranormal|state=collapsed}} | |||
{{cite book| author = Erin McKean, .| title = The New Oxford American Dictionary| url = http://books.google.com/?id=opNWcgAACAAJ| date = 2005-04-08| publisher = Oxford University Press| location = New York City| isbn = 978-0-19-517077-1| oclc = 123434455| page = 1367| quote = psycho. comb. form relating to the mind or psychology: ...from Greek ''psukhe'' breath, soul, mind. }}</ref> also referred to as '''telekinesis'''<ref> | |||
'''Telekinesis''' ({{Etymology|grc|τηλε-|far off||-κίνησις|motion}}<ref>{{Cite OED|telekinesis|9521134478}}</ref>) is a purported ] allowing an individual to influence a ] without physical interaction.<ref name="Xiong">{{cite book|last=Xiong|first=Jesse Hong|title=The Outline of Parapsychology|year=2010|publisher=University Press of America|location=Lanham|isbn=978-0761849452|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uhzvq3NjWFcC&q=psychokinesis&pg=PA141|page=141|edition=Revised|access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref><ref name="introduction">{{cite book|last=Irwin|first=Harvey J.|title=An Introduction to Parapsychology|year=2007|publisher=McFarland|isbn=9780786451388|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E3EzxyOufbgC&q=psychokinesis&pg=PA94|pages=94–112|access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref> Experiments to prove the existence of telekinesis have historically been criticized for lack of proper ] and ].<ref name="skepdic1" /><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Girden|first1=Edward|title=A review of psychokinesis (PK).|journal=Psychological Bulletin|date=1962|volume=59|issue=5|pages=353–388|doi=10.1037/h0048209|pmid=13898904}}</ref><ref name="Girden">{{cite book|last1=Kurtz|first1=Paul|title=A Skeptic's Handbook of Parapsychology|date=1985|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=978-0879753009|pages=129–146}}</ref><ref name="Humphrey">{{cite book|last=Humphrey|first=Nicholas K.|title=Soul Searching: Human Nature and Supernatural Belief|pages=160–217|publisher=Chatto & Windus|year=1995|isbn=9780701159634}}</ref> There is no reliable evidence that telekinesis is a real phenomenon, and the topic is generally regarded as ].<ref name="skepdic1">{{cite web|url=http://www.skepdic.com/psychokinesis.html |title=Psychokinesis (PK) |publisher=The Skeptic's Dictionary |date=2014-01-15 |access-date=2014-02-02}}</ref><ref>] (1983). ''Treatise on Basic Philosophy: Volume 6: Epistemology & Methodology II: Understanding the World''. Springer. p. 226. "Despite being several thousand years old, and having attracted a large number of researchers over the past hundred years, we owe no single firm finding to parapsychology: no hard data on telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, or psychokinesis."</ref><ref name="Vyse">{{cite book|last1=Vyse|first1=Stuart|title=Believing in Magic: The Psychology of Superstition|date=2000|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=9780195136340|page=129|edition=1st|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QGysXzdTxo0C|access-date=11 December 2015|quote=ost scientists, both psychologists and physicists, agree that it has yet to be convincingly demonstrated.}}</ref><ref name="Hyman">{{cite book|last1=Sternberg|first1=Robert J.|last2=Roediger III|first2=Henry J.|last3=Halpern|first3=Diane F.|title=Critical Thinking in Psychology|date=2007|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|isbn=9780521608343|pages=216–231|edition=1st|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3mA9NPAgWR0C|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9061720 | |||
| title = Encyclopædia Britannica online: psychokinesis | |||
| accessdate=July 16, 2006 | |||
}}</ref> (] {{lang|grc|τῆλε}} + {{lang|grc|κίνησις}}, literally "distant-movement") with respect to strictly describing mental movement or motion of solid matter, abbreviated as PK and TK respectively, is a term coined by publisher ]<ref>Holt, Henry, ''On the Cosmic Relation'' - Book II- Part III, Psychokinesis, pp.216-217</ref> to refer to the direct influence of mind on a ] that cannot be entirely accounted for by the mediation of any known ].<ref name="parapsych_glossary">{{cite web | |||
| url = http://parapsych.org/glossary_l_r.html#p | |||
| title = Parapsychological Association, glossary of key words frequently used in parapsychology | |||
| accessdate=December 20, 2006}}</ref> | |||
Examples of psychokinesis could include distorting or moving an object,<ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?query=psychokinesis&action= Search+OMD | |||
| title = On-Line Medical Dictionary: psychokinesis | |||
| accessdate=July 16, 2006}}</ref> and influencing the output of a ].<ref name=parapsych_glossary/><ref> | |||
{{cite book | author = Jeffers, Stanley | |||
| date = May/June 2007, Vol. 31, Issue 3 | |||
| title = "PEAR Lab Closes, Ending Decades of Psychic Research," Skeptical Inquirer | |||
| publisher = Committee for Skeptical Inquiry | |||
| location = Amherst, New York, USA | |||
| quote = Much of the work of the PEAR group has employed 'random event generators' (REGs), which are essentially electronic random number generators whose ' operators' are invited by dint of their own intentionality, to bias in such a way, that the mean of the random number distribution would be either much higher or lower than it would be in the absence of their intentional efforts... | |||
| page = 16}}</ref><ref name="faqfile1">{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.parapsych.org/faq_file1.html | |||
| title = Parapsychological Association FAQ | |||
| accessdate = 2007-07-02 | |||
|year=1995 | |||
| publisher = Parapsychological Association| archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/617A8tOCM |archivedate = 2011-08-21| deadurl=no}}</ref> | |||
==Reception== | |||
The study of phenomena said to be psychokinetic is part of ]. Some psychokinesis researchers claim psychokinesis exists and deserves further study, although the focus of research has shifted away from large-scale phenomena to attempts to influence dice and then to random number generators.<ref>{{cite web | |||
===Evaluation=== | |||
| url = http://www.princeton.edu/~pear/ | |||
There is a broad scientific consensus that telekinetic research has not produced a reliable demonstration of the phenomenon.<ref name="Girden"/><ref name="Humphrey"/><ref name="Vyse"/><ref name="Frazier"/>{{rp|149–161}}<ref name="Gilovich">{{cite book|last1=Gilovich|first1=Thomas|author-link=Thomas Golivich|title=How We Know What Isn't So|date=1993|publisher=Free Press|location=New York|isbn=9780029117064|pages=160, 169, 174–175|edition=1st|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LURGkHCPAJEC|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref><ref name="Park">{{cite book|last1=Park|first1=Robert L.|author-link=Robert L. Park|title=Voodoo Science: The Road from Foolishness to Fraud|date=2000|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=9780198604433|pages=198–200|edition=Reprint|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xzCK6-Kqs6QC|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> | |||
| title = The Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research }} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://parapsych.org/faq_file2.html#12 | |||
| title = Parapsychological Association FAQs - discussion of random number generator experiments. | |||
| accessdate=August 13, 2007}}</ref><ref name="Bosch2006" /><ref name="Hyman2007">{{cite book| author = Robert J. Sternberg| last = Hyman| first = Ray| authorlink = Ray_Hyman| coauthors = Henry L. Roediger, Diane F. Halpern| editor = Robert J. Sternberg, Henry L. Roediger, Diane F. Halpern| title = Critical Thinking in Psychology| url = http://books.google.com/?id=3mA9NPAgWR0C| year = 2007| publisher = Cambridge University Press| isbn = 978-0-521-60834-3| page = 218| chapter = Evaluating Parapsychological Claims }}</ref> | |||
A panel commissioned in 1988 by the ] to study paranormal claims concluded that:<ref name="Gilovich"/><blockquote>despite a 130-year record of scientific research on such matters, our committee could find no scientific justification for the existence of phenomena such as extrasensory perception, mental telepathy or "mind over matter" exercises{{nbsp}}... Evaluation of a large body of the best available evidence simply does not support the contention that these phenomena exist.</blockquote>In 1984, the ], at the request of the US Army Research Institute, formed a scientific panel to assess the best evidence for telekinesis. Part of its purpose was to investigate military applications of telekinesis, for example to remotely jam or disrupt enemy weaponry. The panel heard from a variety of military staff who believed in telekinesis and made visits to the ] and two other laboratories that had claimed positive results from micro-telekinesis experiments. The panel criticized macro-telekinesis experiments for being open to deception by conjurors, and said that virtually all micro-telekinesis experiments "depart from good scientific practice in a variety of ways". Their conclusion, published in a 1987 report, was that there was no scientific evidence for the existence of telekinesis.<ref name="Frazier"/>{{rp|149–161}} | |||
Most scientists believe that the existence of psychokinesis has not been convincingly demonstrated.<ref name="Vyse1997">{{cite book| author = Stuart A. Vyse| last = Vyse| first = Stuart A.| title = Believing in Magic: The Psychology of Superstition| url = http://books.google.com/?id=QGysXzdTxo0C| date = 2000-03-01| publisher = Oxford University Press US| isbn = 978-0-19-513634-0| page = 129| quote = ost scientists, both psychologists and physicists, agree that it has yet to be convincingly demonstrated. }}</ref> | |||
A ] of 380 studies in 2006 found a "very small" effect which could possibly be explained by ].<ref name="Bosch2006">{{cite journal| title=Examining psychokinesis: The interaction of human intention with random number generators--A meta-analysis| | |||
last=Bösch |first= Holger| coauthors=Fiona Steinkamp, Emil Boller| | |||
journal=Psychological Bulletin| volume= 132|issue=4| date=July 2006|pages= 497–523 | |||
|doi=10.1037/0033-2909.132.4.497| pmid=16822162}}</ref> PK experiments have historically been | |||
criticised for lack of proper controls and ].<ref name="girden1962">{{cite journal|title=A review of psychokinesis (PK)|last=Girden|first=Edward|journal=Psychological Bulletin|volume=59|issue=5|date=September 1962|pages=353–388|doi=10.1037/h0048209}}</ref><ref name="Humphrey1995">{{cite book|last=Humphrey|first=Nicholas K.|title=Soul Searching: Human nature and supernatural belief|publisher=Chatto & Windus|year=1995|isbn=978-0-7011-5963-4}}</ref><ref name="Carroll">{{cite web | |||
| last = Carroll | |||
| first = Robert Todd | |||
| title = psychokinesis (PK) | |||
| work = Skepdic.com | |||
| publisher = The Skeptics Dictionary | |||
|year=2005 | |||
| url = http://skepdic.com/kinesis.html | |||
| accessdate = 2007-10-05}}</ref> However, some experiments have created illusions of PK where none exists, and these illusions depend to an extent on the subject's prior belief in PK.<ref name="Benassi1979" /><ref name="Wiseman1995">{{cite journal|last=Wiseman|first=Richard|coauthors=Robert Morris|year=1995|title=Recalling pseudo-psychic demonstrations| journal=British Journal of Psychology|volume=86|issue=1 |pages=113–125 |url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=9507101503&site=ehost-live|accessdate=2008-11-29|doi=10.1111/j.2044-8295.1995.tb02549.x}}</ref> | |||
] included telekinesis in a long list of "offerings of pseudoscience and superstition" which "it would be foolish to accept ... without solid scientific data".<ref>{{cite book|last1=Sagan|first1=Carl|title=The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark|date=1996|publisher=Headline|location=New York|isbn=9780747277453|pages=208–212|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CYo7PgAACAAJ|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> Nobel Prize laureate ] advocated a similar position.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Feynman|first1=Richard P.|author-link=Richard Feynman|title=The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist|date=1999|publisher=Penguin|location=London|isbn=9780140276350|pages=68–71|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AdGBQwAACAAJ|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> | |||
==Terminology== | |||
Felix Planer, a professor of ], has written that if telekinesis were real then it would be easy to demonstrate by getting subjects to depress a scale on a sensitive balance, raise the temperature of a waterbath which could be measured with an accuracy of a hundredth of a degree ], or affect an element in an electrical circuit such as a resistor, which could be monitored to better than a millionth of an ampere.<ref name="Planer">{{cite book|last=Planer|first=Felix E.|title=Superstition|date=1988|publisher=Cassell|location=London|isbn=978-0304306916|page=242}}</ref> Planer writes that such experiments are extremely sensitive and easy to monitor but are not utilized by parapsychologists as they "do not hold out the remotest hope of demonstrating even a minute trace of " because the alleged phenomenon is non-existent. Planer has written that parapsychologists have to fall back on studies that involve only statistics that are unrepeatable, owing their results to poor experimental methods, recording mistakes and faulty statistical mathematics.<ref name="Planer"/> | |||
===Early history=== | |||
[[File:Edouard-Isidore-Buguet-PK-spirit-photographer.jpg|thumb|right|Spirit photography hoaxer Édouard Isidore Buguet<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.azcentral.com/ent/arts/articles/1003occult.html | |||
| title = New exhibit looks at occult photography | |||
| author = Hajela, Deepti | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| date = October 3, 2005 | |||
| accessdate=January 19, 2008 | |||
| work = Associated Press story | |||
| pages = | |||
| quote = | |||
}}</ref> (1840-1901) of France fakes telekinesis in this 1875 ] photograph titled ''Fluidic Effect''.]] | |||
The term "Telekinesis" was coined in 1890 by Russian psychical researcher ] (also spelled Aksakov).<ref> | |||
{{cite book | author = Myers, Frederic William Henry | |||
| month = December | year = 1890 | |||
| title = Proceedings | |||
| publisher = Journal of the Society for Psychical Research | |||
| location = London, England | |||
| quote = For the alleged movements without contact... M. Aksakof's new word 'telekinetic' seems to me the best attainable.}} Note: this quote as a cited reference can also be seen on page 722 in the multivolume "The Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition", 1989, Clarendon Press, Oxford, England, ISBN 978-0-19-861229-2." The "M. Aksakof" is actually "A. Aksakof," as indicated in this 1896 quarterly journal </ref><ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=telekinesis | |||
| title = Online Etymology Dictionary | |||
| accessdate=January 20, 2007 | |||
| quote = Telekinesis. 1890, said to have been coined by Alexander N. Aksakof (1832-1903) Imperial Councilor to the Czar... Translates Ger. 'Fernwirkung.'| archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/61GUrRMj3 |archivedate = 2011-08-27| deadurl=no}}</ref> The term "Psychokinesis" was coined in 1914<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = ed. in chief Frederick C. Mish| title = Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition| url = http://books.google.com/?id=TAnheeIPcAEC| year = 2005| publisher = Merriam-Webster, Incorporated| location = Springfield, Massachusetts, USA| isbn = 978-0-87779-809-5| oclc = 146761465| page = 1004| quote = Psychokinesis (1914).... }}</ref> by American author-publisher Henry Holt in his book ''On the Cosmic Relations''<ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.parapsychology.org/dynamic/060100.html | |||
| title = Parapsychology Foundation "Basic terms in Parapsychology" | |||
| accessdate=December 22, 2006| archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/61GUruitx |archivedate = 2011-08-27| deadurl=no}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | |||
|last= Holt | |||
|first= Henry | |||
|authorlink= Henry Holt (publisher) | |||
|title=On the Cosmic Relations | |||
|url= http://books.google.com/?id=Kts0AAAAMAAJ | |||
|format= PDF | |||
|accessdate= 2007-12-13 | |||
|publisher= Houghton Mifflin | |||
|location= Cambridge | |||
|year= 1914}}</ref> and adopted by his friend, American parapsychologist ] in 1934 in connection with experiments to determine if a person could influence the outcome of falling dice.<ref name="Spence"> | |||
{{cite book| author = Spence, Lewis| title = Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology| url = http://books.google.com/?id=gq1LhcH48GQC| date = 2003-02-01| publisher = Kessinger Publishing (reprint publisher)| isbn = 978-0-7661-2817-0| pages = 752–753, 879, 912, 933 }}</ref><ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://parapsych.org/glossary_l_r.html#p | |||
| title = Parapsychological Association - Glossary: PK/Psychokinesis | |||
| accessdate=July 19, 2006}}</ref> Both concepts have been described by other terms, such as "remote influencing", "distant influencing"<ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.lfr.org/LFR/csl/library/Fsu1.pdf | |||
| title = Overview of Current Parapsychology Research in the Former Soviet Union, Introduction | |||
| coauthors = May, Edwin C., Ph.D and Vilenskaya, Larissa | |||
| year = 1992 | |||
| accessdate=July 3, 2007 | |||
| format = PDF | |||
| work = Subtle Energies Volume 3, Number 3 | |||
| page = 1 | |||
| quote = AMP research programs in the Soviet Union have primarily focused on experimental studies in 'distant influence' on animate an inanimate systems; i.e., psychokinesis (PK) and bio-PK.}}</ref> "remote mental influence", "distant mental influence",<ref name="Broughton"> | |||
{{cite book| author = Broughton, Richard S.| title = Parapsychology: The Controversial Science| url = http://books.google.com/?id=4GlRAAAAYAAJ| date = 1991-07-30| publisher = Ballantine Books| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-345-35638-3| pages = 35, 75–79, 149, 161–162, 329–330 }}</ref> "directed conscious intention", " anomalous perturbation",<ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.lfr.org/LFR/csl/library/Fsu1.pdf | |||
| title = Overview of Current Parapsychology Research in the Former Soviet Union, Abstract | |||
| coauthors = May, Edwin C., Ph.D and Vilenskaya, Larissa | |||
| year = 1992 | |||
| accessdate=July 3, 2007 | |||
| format = PDF | |||
| work = Subtle Energies Volume 3, Number 3 | |||
| page = 1 | |||
| quote = The authors primarily discuss experiments in anomalous perturbation (often referred to as psychokinesis—PK and bio- which have been the main focus of AMP research programs in the Soviet Union.}}</ref> and "]."<ref name="Berger"> | |||
{{cite book| author = Berger, Arthur S.| coauthors = Berger, Joyce| title = The Encyclopedia of Parapsychological and Psychical Research| url = http://books.google.com/?id=SmzGQgAACAAJ| date = 1991-02| publisher = Paragon House| location = New York| isbn = 978-1-55778-043-0| pages = 326, 341, 430 }}</ref> Originally telekinesis was coined to refer to the movement of objects thought to be caused by ]s of deceased persons, mischievous ]s, ], ]s, or other ] forces.<ref name=Berger/> Later, when speculation increased that humans might be the source of the witnessed phenomena not caused by fraudulent mediums<ref name="ManMythMagic"> | |||
{{cite book| author = editor in chief, Richard Cavendish ; editorial board, C.A. Burland ... ; new edition edited and compiled by Richard Cavendish and Brian Innes.| coauthors = Brian Innes| title = Man, Myth & Magic: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion, and the Unknown| url = http://books.google.com/?id=H-QaAQAAMAAJ| origyear = 1970| year = 1995| publisher = Marshall Cavendish Corporation| location = New York| isbn = 978-1-85435-731-1| oclc = 228665658| page = 2442| quote = Spiritualism aroused violent antagonism and criticism concentrating particularly on the physical phenomena occurring at seances, which opponents claimed were faked. }} Page 1626, v. 12: entry on Matthew Manning.</ref> and could possibly cause movement without any connection to a ] setting, such as in a darkened ] room, psychokinesis was added to the lexicon.<ref name=Berger/> Eventually, psychokinesis became the term preferred by the parapsychological community.<ref name=Spence/> Popular usage favours the word "telekinesis" to describe the paranormal movement of objects, perhaps due to the word's resemblance to other terms, such as telepathy and teleportation. Some early researchers who studied psychokinesis speculated that within the human body an unidentified ] termed the "psychode", "psychic force" or "]" existed and was capable of being released to influence matter.<ref>] ''Forty years of psychic research: a plain narrative of fact'' 1936, pp. 127-128</ref> This view was held by ]<ref>H. F. Prevost Battersby ''Psychic Certainties'' Kessinger Reprint Edition, 1988, pp. 125-126</ref> and ], however a later psychical researcher ] pointed out that the fluid was hypothetical and has never been discovered.<ref>] ''Eusapia Palladino and Her Phenomena'' Kessinger Reprint Edition, 2003, p. 267</ref> | |||
According to Planer, "All research in medicine and other sciences would become illusionary, if the existence of had to be taken seriously; for no experiment could be relied upon to furnish objective results, since all measurements would become falsified to a greater or lesser degree, according to his ability, by the experimenter's wishes." Planer concluded that the concept of telekinesis is absurd and has no scientific basis.<ref>{{cite book|last=Planer|first=Felix E.|title=Superstition|date=1988|publisher=Cassell|location=London|isbn=978-0304306916|page=254}}</ref> | |||
===Modern usage=== | |||
As research entered the modern era, it became clear that many different, but related, abilities could be attributed to the wider description of psychokinesis and these, along with telekinesis, are now regarded as the specialties of PK. In the 2004 U.S. Air Force-sponsored research report ''Teleportation Physics Study'', the physicist-author Eric Davis, Ph.D., described the distinction between PK and TK as "telekinesis is a form of PK."<ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.fas.org/sgp/eprint/teleport.pdf | |||
| title = ''Teleportation Physics Study'' | |||
| author = Davis, Eric; physicist, Ph.D, U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, 2004 | |||
| accessdate=July 19, 2006 | |||
| page = 55 | |||
| quote = Telekinesis is a form of PK, which describes the movement of stationary objects without the use of any known physical force. | |||
|format=PDF}}</ref> The ''Oxford Dictionary of Psychology'', 2009 edition, also defines psychokinesis in a wider sense as involving the "movement or change of physical objects," while its definition for telekinesis only describes "movement."<ref> | |||
{{cite book | |||
|author= Colman, Andrew M. | |||
|year= 2009 | |||
|title= A Dictionary of Psychology | |||
|publisher= ], Inc. | |||
|location= New York City | |||
|page= | |||
|isbn= 9780199534067}}</ref> Psychokinesis, then, is the general term that can be used to describe a variety of complex mental force phenomena (including object movement) and telekinesis is used to refer only to the movement of objects, however tiny (a grain of salt, or air molecules to create wind)<ref name="Guiley">{{cite book |author= Guiley, Rosemary Ellen |author-link= Rosemary Ellen Guiley |title= Encyclopedia of the Strange, Mystical & Unexplained |date= 2001-07-17 |publisher=] |location= New York|isbn= 978-0-517-16278-1 |pages= 454, 456, 478, 609}}</ref> or large (an automobile, building, or bridge). | |||
Telekinesis hypotheses have also been considered in a number of contexts outside parapsychological experiments. ] has written that a general objection against the claim for the existence of telekinesis is that, if it were a real process, its effects would be expected to manifest in situations in everyday life; but no such effects have been observed.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hansel|first=C.E.M.|title=ESP and Parapsychology: A Critical Reevaluation|url=https://archive.org/details/espparapsycholog00hans|url-access=registration|date=1980|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=978-0879751197|pages=|edition=1st}}</ref> | |||
==Measurement and observation== | |||
] | |||
] researchers describe two basic types of measurable and observable psychokinetic and telekinetic effects in experimental laboratory research and in case reports occurring outside of the ].<ref name=Broughton/><ref name=Berger/><ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://library.thinkquest.org/C0120993/glossaryfull.html | |||
| title = Library.ThinkQuest.org - Glossary: Macro PK and Micro PK | |||
| accessdate=October 14, 2006}}</ref> Micro-PK (also micro-TK) is a very small effect, such as the manipulation of molecules, atoms,<ref name=Broughton/> subatomic particles,<ref name=Broughton/> etc., that can only be observed with scientific equipment. The words are abbreviations for micro-psychokinesis, micropsychokinesis<ref name="Guiley"/> and micro-telekinesis, microtelekinesis. Macro-PK (also macro-TK) is a large-scale effect that can be seen with the unaided eye. The adjective phrases "microscopic-scale," "macroscopic- scale," "small-scale," and "large-scale" may also be used; for example, "a small-scale PK effect." | |||
Science writers ] and ] and the philosopher ] have written that if telekinesis were possible, one would expect casino incomes to be affected, but the earnings are exactly as the laws of chance predict.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hurley|first=Patrick J.|title=A Concise Introduction to Logic|date=2012|publisher=Wadsworth Cengage Learning|location=Boston, MA|isbn=978-0840034175|page=635|edition=11th}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Schick|first=Theodore Jr.|title=How to Think about Weird Things: Critical Thinking for a New Age|date=2010|publisher=McGraw-Hill|location=Dubuque, Iowa|isbn=978-0073535777|page=222|edition=6th}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Schaff |first1=Robert |title=The Las Vegas Experts' Gambling Guide |date=1968 |publisher=] |page=26}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Neher|first=Andrew|title=The Psychology of Transcendence|url=https://archive.org/details/psychologyoftran00nehe|url-access=registration|date=1990|publisher=Dover|location=New York|isbn=978-0486261676|page=|edition=2nd}}</ref><ref name="Gardner">{{cite book|last1=Gardner|first1=Martin|title=Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science|date=1986|publisher=Dover Publications|location=New York|isbn=9780486203942|edition=2nd|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TwP3SGAUsnkC|access-date=11 December 2015|language=en}}</ref>{{rp|309}} | |||
===Spontaneous effects=== | |||
Spontaneous movements of objects and other unexplained effects have been reported, and many parapsychologists believe these are possibly forms of psychokinesis/telekinesis.<ref name=Spence/><ref name=Berger/> Parapsychologist ] coined the term "recurrent spontaneous psychokinesis" (RSPK) in 1958.<ref> | |||
{{cite book | author = Roll, William G. | |||
| coauthors = Pratt, J. G. | |||
| year = 1958 | |||
| title = The Seaford Disturbances | |||
| publisher = Journal of Parapsychology, Vol. 2, | |||
| pages = 79–124 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | |||
| url = http://parapsych.org/glossary_l_r.html#r | |||
| title = Parapsychological Association - Glossary: "RSPK" | |||
| accessdate=January 5, 2007}}</ref> The sudden movement of objects without deliberate intention in the presence or vicinity of one or more witnesses is thought by some to be related to as-yet-unknown PK/TK processes of the subconscious mind.<ref name=Guiley/> Researchers use the term "PK agent," especially in spontaneous cases, to describe someone who is suspected of being the source of the PK action.<ref name=Guiley/><ref> | |||
{{cite book | author = Pratt, J. G. | |||
| coauthors = Stevenson, Ian | |||
| year = Vol. 70, January 1976 | |||
| title = An Instance of Possible Metal-Bending Indirectly Related to Uri Geller | |||
| publisher = The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research | |||
| quote = As far as I can say, no one in the apartment that night would take credit for being the responsible PK agent.}}</ref> Outbreaks of spontaneous movements or other effects, such as in a private home, and especially those involving violent or physiological effects, such as objects hitting people or scratches or other marks on the body, are sometimes investigated as ] cases.<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Reader's digest ; .| title = Mysteries of the Unexplained| url = http://books.google.com/?id=MjqcKUX9x74C| year = 1990| publisher = Readers Digest Association| isbn = 978-0-89577-146-9| oclc = 10605367| page = 181| quote = Attempting to understand the forces at work, researchers in parapsychology have hypothesized that the poltergeist's feats in moving objects (which are seen to fly in violation of the laws of gravity, gliding, rising, and turning corners) are examples of psychokinesis, or PK—the ability to influence inanimate objects by mind power. }}</ref> | |||
Psychologist ] argues that many experiments in ], ] or ] assume that the intentions of the subjects or experimenter do not physically distort the apparatus. Humphrey counts them as implicit replications of telekinesis experiments in which telekinesis fails to appear.<ref name="Humphrey"/> | |||
==Umbrella term== | |||
Psychokinesis is the ] for various related specialty abilities, which may include: | |||
* Telekinesis: movement of matter at the ] or ] (visible objects, life forms, etc.) levels; move, lift, agitate, vibrate, spin, bend, break, or impact. | |||
:* Speed up or slow down the naturally occurring ] in matter to alter temperature,<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Kakalios, James| title = The Physics of Superheores| url = http://books.google.com/?id=4Ne3QgAACAAJ| date = 2005-10-04| publisher = Gotham Books/Penguin Group, Inc.| location = New York| isbn = 978-1-59240-146-8| page = 133| quote = Knowing that all matter is composed of atoms, we now recognize that when an object is "hot," the ] of the constituent atoms is large, while when an object is 'cold,' the kinetic energy of the atoms is lower. }}</ref> possibly to the point of ignition if combustible (also known as ] when speeding up vibrations, and ] when slowing them down).<ref name="Genzmer"> | |||
{{cite book| author = Genzmer, Herbert| coauthors = Hellenbrand, Ulrich| title = Mysteries of the World: Unexplained Wonders and Mysterious Phenomena| url = http://books.google.com/?id=uHgAGQAACAAJ| date = 2007-03| publisher = Parragon Books Ltd| location = Bath, United Kingdom| isbn = 978-1-4054-9022-1| page = 194| chapter = Psychokinesis }}</ref> | |||
:* Self ] (rising in the air unsupported, flying).<ref name="MindOverMatter"> | |||
{{cite book| author = the editors of Time-Life Books.| title = Mind Over Matter (volume of Mysteries of the Unknown encyclopedia series)| url = http://books.google.com/?id=WIZ53Ea82GQC| date = 1988-11| publisher = Time-Life Books| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-8094-6336-7| oclc = 17877875| pages = 7–8, 27, 82, 85 }}</ref> | |||
* Influencing events (sports, gambling, election, prolongation of life, etc.).<ref name="MindOverMatter"/> | |||
* Biological healing.<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Hathaway, Michael R.| title = The Everything Psychic Book| url = http://books.google.com/?id=8_262Olw3RUC| date = 2003-09-01| publisher = Adams Media / F+W Publications Company| location = Avon, Massachusetts, USA| isbn = 978-1-58062-969-0| pages = 139, 271| chapter = Glossary| quote = Psychokinesis. The ability to levitate, move objects, heal, and manipulate psychic energy...Psychokinesis is the ability to...create healing. }}</ref> | |||
** ''See also'' ] | |||
* ] (disappearing and reappearing elsewhere).<ref name=Guiley/><ref name=MindOverMatter/><ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = ed. in chief Frederick C. Mish| title = Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition| url = http://books.google.com/?id=TAnheeIPcAEC| year = 2004| publisher = Merriam-Webster, Incorporated| location = Springfield, Massachusetts, USA| isbn = 978-0-87779-809-5| oclc = 146761465| page = 1284| quote = Teleportation. The act or process of moving an object or person by psychokinesis. }}</ref> | |||
* Phasing through matter.<ref name=MindOverMatter/> | |||
* ] of matter.<ref name=MindOverMatter/><ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Colman, Andrew M.| title = Dictionary of Psychology| url = http://books.google.com/?id=2tenQgAACAAJ| year = 2001| publisher = Oxford University Press| location = Oxford, England, UK| isbn = 978-0-19-866211-2| page = 599| quote = Psychokinesis. The movement or change of physical objects by mental processes }}</ref> | |||
* Metamorphosis ].<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = editor in chief, Richard Cavendish ; editorial board, C.A. Burland ... ; new edition edited and compiled by Richard Cavendish and Brian Innes.| coauthors = Brian Innes| title = Man, Myth & Magic: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion, and the Unknown| url = http://books.google.com/?id=H-QaAQAAMAAJ| year = 1995| publisher = Marshall Cavendish Corporation| location = New York| isbn = 978-1-85435-731-1| oclc = 228665658| page = 2354| quote = Shape-shifting. The idea that it is possible, in certain circumstances, for men to change their natural bodily form... Sorcerers also, and some great heroes, were believed to have the same power, by virtue of magical knowledge or some innate quality; and so, though more rarely, were a few otherwise ordinary people who acquired the gift through possession of a charm or the performance of a ritual act. }}</ref> | |||
* Energy shield (]).<ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://skepdic.com/refuge/funk3.html | |||
| title = Mass Media Funk | |||
| work = The Skeptic's Dictionary | |||
| accessdate=February 27, 2007 | |||
| quote = Those who practice TT believe they are able to move 'energy,' some sort of psychic force field or chi which they believe permeates the body and surrounding aura.}}</ref> | |||
* Control of magnetism.<ref name=MindOverMatter/> | |||
* Control of ] (light waves/particles).<ref> | |||
{{cite book | |||
| author = Bersani, F. | |||
| coauthors = Martelli, A. | |||
| year = 1983 | |||
| title = Psychoenergetics: The Journal of Psychophysical Systems | |||
| publisher = Gordon and Breach Science Publishers | |||
| location = United Kingdom | |||
| pages = 99–128 | |||
| quote = The effects observed range from the typical bending of metal objects, such as spoons, keys, bars, etc., to strange effects like light flashes and teleportation.}}</ref> | |||
* ] projection aka ] projection (a physically perceived person, animal, creature, object, ghostly entity, etc., created in the mind and projected into three-dimensional space and observable by others; for thought images allegedly placed on film, see ]).<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = McCoy, Edain| title = Astral Projection for beginners| url = http://books.google.com/?id=ak1__e0HmgYC| date = 1999-03-01| publisher = Llewllyn Publications| location = Woodbury, Minnesota| isbn = 978-1-56718-625-3| page = 207| quote = Creative visualization is the practice of mentally envisioning a desired outcome, infusing it with personal energy, and then releasing it to the cosmos so that it can grow to manifest in the physical. While all that sounds unduly complicated, what it boils down to is that it creates a thoughtform on the astral plane that, with proper effort, can be brought into the physical world. }}</ref><ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = editor in chief, Richard Cavendish ; editorial board, C.A. Burland ... ; new edition edited and compiled by Richard Cavendish and Brian Innes.| coauthors = Brian Innes| title = Man, Myth & Magic: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion, and the Unknown| url = http://books.google.com/?id=H-QaAQAAMAAJ| year = 1995| publisher = Marshall Cavendish Corporation| location = New York| isbn = 978-1-85435-731-1| oclc = 228665658| page = 2679| quote = The evocation of a ''tulpa'', an entity created entirely by an act of the imagination, was described by Alexandra David-Néel in her book '' Magic and }}</ref> | |||
== |
===Physics=== | ||
The ideas of telekinesis violates several well-established laws of physics, including the ],{{Which|reason=There are many inverse square laws in physics; TK might not violate ALL of them|date=April 2024}} the ], and the ].<ref name="Gilovich"/><ref>{{cite book|last1=Frazier|first1=Kendrick|title=Paranormal Borderlands of Science|date=1981|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=9780879751487|pages=60–65|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XjENAQAAMAAJ|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> Because of this, scientists have demanded a high standard of evidence for telekinesis, in line with ]'s dictum "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof".<ref name="Humphrey"/><ref name="Sutherland">{{cite book|last1=Sutherland|first1=Stuart|title=Irrationality: The Enemy Within|date=1994|publisher=Penguin Books|location=London|isbn=9780140167269|page=309|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HAVjQgAACAAJ|access-date=11 December 2015|quote=he movement of objects without the application of physical force would, if proven, require a complete revision of the laws of physics. (...) he more improbable something is, the better the evidence needed to accept it}}</ref> The ] law of parsimony in scientific explanations of phenomena suggests that the explanation of telekinesis in terms of ordinary ways—by trickery, special effects or by poor experimental design—is preferable to accepting that the ] should be rewritten.<ref name="Girden"/><ref name="Hyman"/> | |||
In September 2006, a survey about belief in various religious and paranormal topics conducted by phone and mail-in questionnaire ] Americans on their belief in telekinesis. Of these participants, 28% of male participants and 31% of female participants selected "agree" or "strongly agree" with the statement "''It is possible to influence the world through the mind alone''". There were 1,721 participants, and the poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 4%.<ref></ref> | |||
Philosopher and physicist ] has written that:<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bunge|first1=Mario|title=Philosophy in Crisis: The Need for Reconstruction|url=https://archive.org/details/philosophycrisis00mari|url-access=limited|date=2001|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York|isbn=978-1573928434|page=}}</ref><blockquote> violates the principle that mind cannot act directly on matter. (If it did, no experimenter could trust his readings of measuring instruments.) It also violates the principles of conservation of energy and momentum. The claim that quantum mechanics allows for the possibility of mental power influencing randomizers—an alleged case of micro-—is ludicrous since that theory respects the said conservation principles, and it deals exclusively with physical things.</blockquote>Physicist ], who has investigated parapsychological claims, has written that an unknown fifth force causing telekinesis would have to transmit a great deal of energy. The energy would have to overcome the ] binding the atoms together, because the atoms would need to respond more strongly to the fifth force than to electric forces. Such an additional force between atoms should therefore exist all the time and not during only alleged paranormal occurrences. Taylor wrote there is no scientific trace of such a force in physics, down to many orders of magnitude; thus, if a scientific viewpoint is to be preserved, the idea of any fifth force must be discarded. Taylor concluded that there is no possible physical mechanism for telekinesis, and it is in complete contradiction to established science.<ref name="Taylor"/>{{rp|27–30}} | |||
In April 2008, British psychologist and skeptic ] published the results of an online survey he conducted entitled "Magicians and the Paranormal: A Survey," in which 400 magicians worldwide participated. For the question <i>Do you believe that psychokinesis exists (i.e., that some people can, by paranormal | |||
means, apply a noticeable force to an object or alter its physical characteristics)?</i>, the results were as follows: No 83.5%, Yes 9%, Uncertain 7.5%.<ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://richardwiseman.com/magicsurvey | |||
| title = Magicians and the Paranormal: A Survey | |||
|accessdate= May 7, 2008 | |||
}} Published April 23, 2008.</ref> | |||
In 1979, ] and Richard Mattuck published a parapsychology paper proposing a quantum explanation for telekinesis. Physicist ] wrote that their explanation contained assumptions not supported by any scientific evidence. According to Stenger their paper is "filled with impressive looking equations and calculations that give the appearance of placing on a firm scientific footing... Yet look what they have done. They have found the value of one unknown number (wavefunction steps) that gives one measured number (the supposed speed of -induced motion). This is numerology, not science."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Stenger|first1=Victor J.|title=Physics and Psychics: The Search for a World Beyond the Senses|date=1990|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=9780879755751|pages=248–250}}</ref> | |||
===Notable claimants of telekinetic ability=== | |||
{{Category see also|People claiming to have strong telekinetic abilities}} | |||
] (right) monitors for fraud, Milan, 1892.]] | |||
* ] (1927–1997), the author whose 1972 novel '']'' was used as the basis for the television series '']'' and '']'', claimed to be able to cause movement by means of telekinesis in one or multiple small tabletop "energy wheels," also known as ]s beginning in the mid 1980s.<ref> | |||
{{cite journal | |||
| last = Caidin | |||
| first= Martin | |||
| date = January 1994 | |||
| title = Telekinesis | |||
| journal = Fate | |||
| location = Lakeville, USA | |||
| page = | |||
| url = http://www.fatemag.com/fatemagold/issues/1990s/1994-01.html | |||
| publisher = Llewellyn Publications/Galde Press, Inc. | |||
}}</ref><ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Auerbach, Loyd| title = Mind Over Matter| url = http://books.google.com/?id=77xnPQAACAAJ| date = 1996-05-01| publisher = Kensington Publishing Corporation| isbn = 978-1-57566-047-9 }}</ref><ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Heath, Pamela Rae| title = Mind-Matter Interaction: A Review of Historical Reports, Theory and Research| url = http://books.google.com/?id=OwVgHlx4KQEC| date = 2011-02-24| publisher = McFarland| location = Jefferson, North Carolina USA| isbn = 978-0-7864-4971-2 }}</ref> Parapsychologist ], a friend of Caidin's who sometimes accompanied him in demonstrations and workshops, reiterated a strong endorsement of him in his June 2004 '']'' magazine column: "Martin Caidin was capable of moving things with his mind."<ref> | |||
{{cite journal | |||
| last = Auerbach | |||
| first= Loyd | |||
| date = June 2004 | |||
| title = The Psychokinetic Zone | |||
| journal = Fate | |||
| location = Lakeville, USA | |||
| page = | |||
| publisher = Galde Press, Inc. | |||
}} Monthly column "Psychic Frontiers"</ref> James Randi offered to test Caidin's claimed abilities in 1994.<ref name="Swift-May20-94"> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| title = Swift, September 24, 2004 | |||
| url = http://www.randi.org/jr/092404from.html | |||
| accessdate = February 1, 2011 | |||
}} Online newsletter of the JREF.</ref> In September 2004, Randi wrote: "He frantically avoided accepting my challenge by refusing even the simplest of proposed control protocols, but he never tired of running on about how I would not test him."<ref name=Swift-May20-94/> | |||
* ] (1946 – ), the Israeli famous for his ] demonstrations, allegedly by PK.<ref name=Berger/> Geller has been caught many times using sleight of hand<ref>{{cite book| author = Terence Hines| last = Hines| first = Terence| title = Pseudoscience and the Paranormal| url = http://books.google.com/?id=Px0RAQAAIAAJ| edition = 2nd| year = 2003| publisher = Prometheus| isbn = 978-1-57392-979-0| page = 126 }}</ref> and according to author Terence Hines, all his effects have been recreated using conjuring tricks.<ref>{{cite book| author = Terence Hines| last = Hines| first = Terence| title = Pseudoscience and the Paranormal| url = http://books.google.com/?id=Px0RAQAAIAAJ| edition = 2nd| year = 2003| publisher = Prometheus| isbn = 978-1-57392-979-0| page = 130 }}</ref> | |||
* Many of India's ] have claimed macro-PK abilities and demonstrated apparently miraculous phenomena in public, although as more controls are put in place to prevent trickery, fewer phenomena are produced.<ref>{{cite book| author = Richard John Wiseman| last = Wiseman| first = Richard| title = Deception & Self-deception: Investigating Psychics| url = http://books.google.com/?id=pDMNAQAAMAAJ| year = 1997| publisher = Prometheus Books| isbn = 978-1-57392-121-3 }} chapters 6-8</ref> Perhaps the most notable is the spectacular allegation of Mahaavatar Babaji's materialization of an entire palace, mentioned in Paramahamsa Yogananda's classic Autobiography of a Yogi. | |||
* ] (1926–1990), who came to wide public attention following the publication of Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder's best seller, Psychic Discoveries Behind The Iron Curtain. The alleged Soviet psychic of the late 1960s and early 1970s was filmed apparently performing telekinesis while seated in numerous black-and-white short films,<ref name=Berger/><ref>{{cite book | |||
| author = J. Gaither Pratt, H. H. Jürgen Keil | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| year = 1973 | |||
| title = First Hand Observations of Nina S. Kulagina Suggestive of PK on Static Objects | |||
| publisher = Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research | |||
| volume = 67 | |||
| location = | |||
| pages = 381–390 | |||
| isbn = | |||
| quote = | |||
}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | |||
| author = Jürgen Keil | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| year = 1984 | |||
| title = Parapsychologie in der Sowjetunion | |||
| publisher = Zeitschrift für Parapsychologie und Grenzgebiete der Psychologie | |||
| volume = 26 | |||
| location = | |||
| pages = 191–210 | |||
| language = German | |||
| isbn = | |||
| quote = | |||
}}</ref> mentioned in the ''U.S. Defence Intelligence Agency'' report from 1978.<ref>{{cite book | |||
| author = | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| year = 30. March 1978 | |||
| title = Paraphysics R&D - Warsaw Pact (U). Prepared by U.S. Air Force, Air Force Systems Command Foreign Technology Division. DST-1810S-202-78, Nr. DIA TASK NO. PT-1810-18-76 | |||
| publisher = Defense Intelligence Agency | |||
| location = | |||
| pages = 7–8 | |||
| url = http://www.dia.mil/publicaffairs/Foia/pa_warsaw.pdf | |||
| isbn = | |||
| quote = G.A. Sergevev is known to have studied Nina Kulagina, a well-known psychic from Leningrad. Although no detailed results are available, Sergevev's inferences are that she was successful in repeating psychokinetic phenomena under controlled conditions. G.A. Sergevev is a well-respected researcher and has been active in paraphysics research since the early 1960's. | |||
}}</ref> | |||
* ] (1955 – ) of the United Kingdom was the subject of laboratory research in the United States and England involving PK in the late 1970s and today claims healing powers.<ref name=Berger /><ref name="ManMythMagic" /> | |||
* ] (1854–1918; alternate spelling: Eusapia Paladino) was an Italian medium who allegedly could cause objects to move during seances and was endorsed by world famous magician ] (1869–1936), who said he witnessed her levitation of a table.<ref> | |||
{{cite book | |||
| author = Muldoon, Sylvan | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| year = 1947 | |||
| title = Psychic Experiences of Famous People | |||
| publisher = Aries Press | |||
| location = Chicago | |||
| pages = 55–56 | |||
| isbn = | |||
| quote = | |||
}} See endorsement quote by Thurston at ] article. also available at google.books.com</ref> | |||
* ] (1925–1996), a ] skilled in controlling his heart functions who was studied at the ] in the spring and fall of 1970, and was alleged by some observers at the foundation to have telekinetically moved a knitting needle twice from a distance of five feet.<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Elmer Green| last = Green| first = Elmer| coauthors = Alyce Green| title = Beyond Biofeedback| url = http://books.google.com/?id=f3aN8vnf3YIC| year = 1977| publisher = Knoll Publishing Co| isbn = 978-0-440-00583-4| pages = 197–218 }}</ref> Although Swami Rama wore a facemask and gown to prevent allegations that he moved the needle with his breath or body movements, and air vents in the room had been covered, at least one physician observer who was present at the time was not convinced and expressed the opinion that air movement was somehow the cause.<ref> | |||
{{cite web | url = http://www.swamij.com/pdf/swami-rama-beyond-biofeedback.pdf | title = http://www.swamij.com/pdf/swami-rama-beyond-biofeedback.pdf | format = PDF | pages = 12–16 | accessdate=July 24, 2007}}Elmer Green's description of Swami Rama's alleged psychokinetic demonstration (with illustrations).</ref> | |||
Physicist ] has written that spoons, like all matter, are made up of ]s and that any movement of a spoon with the mind would involve the manipulation of those atoms through the four ]: the ], the ], electromagnetism, and ]. Telekinesis would have to be either some form of one of these four forces, or a new force that has a billionth the strength of gravity, for otherwise it would have been captured in experiments already done. This leaves no physical force that could possibly account for telekinesis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2008/02/18/telekinesis-and-quantum-field-theory/ |title=Telekinesis and Quantum Field Theory: Cosmic Variance |publisher=Discover Magazine |date=2008-02-18 |access-date=2014-03-11}}</ref> | |||
===Notable witnesses to PK events=== | |||
Alleged psychokinetic events have been witnessed by psychologists in the United States,<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Roll, William G.| coauthors = Storey, Valerie| title = Unleashed — Of Poltergeists and Murder: The Curious Story of Tina Resch| url = http://books.google.com/?id=y-X8haq31KAC| date = 2004-05-18| publisher = Paraview Pocket Books/Simon and Schuster| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-7434-8294-3| oclc = 55117933 }} ], Ph.D., and Jeannie Lagle (Masters degree) both state that they witnessed psychokinesis involving ]. Roll additionally reports numerous other cases he investigated.</ref><ref name="DeanRadin"> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.deanradin.com/NewWeb/bio.html | |||
| title = Official website of Dean Radin | |||
| accessdate= June 9, 2007 | |||
}} ''see also'' </ref><ref name="PamelaHeath"> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://pamelaheath.com/about.htm | |||
| title = Official website of Pamela Heath | |||
| accessdate= June 9, 2007 | |||
}}</ref> and elsewhere in the world by | |||
professionals with medical degrees,<ref name=PamelaHeath/><ref name="MichaelCrichton">{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.crichton-official.com/aboutmichaelcrichton-biography.html | |||
| title = Official website of Michael Crichton | |||
| accessdate= March 27, 2012 | |||
}} ''See also, same site:'' .</ref> physicists,<ref>{{cite book| author = Hasted, John B.| title = The Metal Benders| url = http://books.google.com/?id=PLc9AAAAIAAJ| date = 1981-03-05| publisher = Routledge and Kegan Paul| location = London| isbn = 978-0-7100-0597-7| oclc = 7923491 }}John B. Hasted (1921-2002), Ph.D., Physics professor, University of London. In his book ''The Metal- Benders'', he describes his research of psychokinesis claimants and psychokinesis events he personally witnessed.</ref> | |||
electrical engineers,<ref name=DeanRadin/> military personnel,<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Ronson, Jon| title = The Men Who Stare at Goats| url = http://books.google.com/?id=KrwdbEHBd6AC| date = 2006-04-04| publisher = Simon & Schuster| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-7432-7060-1| pages = 63, (Back cover) }}"In 1979, a secret unit was established by the most gifted minds within the US Army. Defying all known accepted military practice—and indeed, the laws of physics—they believed that a soldier could adopt a cloak of invisibility, pass cleanly through walls, and, perhaps most chillingly, kill goats just by staring at them."; "Lenny from Special Forces disappeared into the room where the goat was. He came back and answered, with surprise and solemnity, "The goat is down.'"</ref> police officers,<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Roll, William G.| coauthors = Storey, Valerie| title = Unleashed — Of Poltergeists and Murder: The Curious Story of Tina Resch| url = http://books.google.com/?id=y-X8haq31KAC| date = 2004-05-18| publisher = Paraview Pocket Books/Simon and Schuster| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-7434-8294-3| oclc = 55117933 }} Two police officers witnessed alleged psychokinetic activity in the Resch home in the 1984 Columbus poltergeist case.</ref> | |||
and other professionals and ordinary citizens. ] Ph.D., professor at Boston University, has written "I do believe that some psychokinesis is real" referring to the evidence for micro-psychokinesis obtained by the Princeton PEAR laboratory experiments and similar studies and some reports of macro-RSPK observed in poltergeist cases. He reports once seeing a book "jumping off a shelf" while in a room where a female psychokinesis agent was also present.<ref> | |||
{{cite journal | |||
| last = Schoch|first= Robert M. | |||
| date = January/February 2008 | |||
| title = Psychokinesis: A Scientist Searches for the Reality Behind PK's Representations | |||
| journal = Atlantis Rising | |||
| location = Livingston, Montana USA | |||
| pages = 42–43, 70–71 | |||
}}</ref> Best-selling author and medical doctor ] described what he termed a "successful experience" with psychokinesis at a "spoon bending party" in his 1988 book ''Travels''.<ref name=MichaelCrichton/> Senior Scientist at the ], author ] has reported that he, like Michael Crichton, was able to bend the bowl of a spoon over with unexplained ease of force with witnesses present at a different informal PK experiment gathering. He described his experience in his 2006 book ''Entangled Minds: Extrasensory Experiences in a Quantum Reality'' and online (with photos).<ref name=DeanRadin/> Author ] (1953–1992) described a variety of spontaneous psychokinetic events he experienced and were witnessed by family and friends in two of his books, ''Beyond the Quantum'' and ''The Holographic Universe''. | |||
Physicist ] has found it suspicious that a phenomenon should only ever appear at the limits of detectability of questionable statistical techniques. He cites this feature as one of ]'s indicators of ].<ref name="Park"/> Park pointed out that if mind really could influence matter, it would be easy for parapsychologists to measure such a phenomenon by using the alleged telekinetic power to deflect a ], which would not require any dubious statistics. "he reason, of course, is that the microbalance stubbornly refuses to budge." He has suggested that the reason statistical studies are so popular in parapsychology is that they introduce opportunities for uncertainty and error, which are used to support the experimenter's biases.<ref name="Park"/> | |||
French biologist ] carried out a number of experiments to test psychokinesis. Because of the results of one of the experiments, Chauvin came to believe that mind can influence matter.<ref>Znanie-Sila magazine, No 9, 1967 U.S.S.R.</ref> Chauvin's experiment involved using a uranium isotope, a ] and several assistants. Some parapsychologists have written that ordinary people may be able to influence ] ] from distance such as the growth rates of ] and ].<ref>Barry, J. (1968). General and comparative study of the psychokinetic effect on fungus culture. Journal of Parapsychology, 32, 237–243 also see Barry, J. (1968). PK on fungus growth. Journal of Parapsychology, 32, 55. (Abstract.)</ref> Carroll Nash (1984) reported that human subjects could use their psychokinetic ability to influence the rate at which bacterial genes mutate.<ref>Nash, C. B. (1984). Test of psychokinetic control of bacterial mutation. Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research, 78, 145–152.</ref> | |||
===Explanations in terms of bias=== | |||
Anecdotes such as these - stories by eyewitnesses outside of controlled conditions - are considered insufficient evidence by the majority of scientists to establish the scientific validity of psychokinesis.<ref name=Broughton/><ref> | |||
] research has suggested that people are susceptible to illusions of telekinesis. These include both the illusion that they themselves have the power, and that the events they witness are real demonstrations of telekinesis.<ref name="Blackmore">{{cite journal|last=Blackmore|first=Susan J.|title=Psychic Experiences: Psychic Illusions|journal=Skeptical Inquirer|volume=16|pages=367–376|year=1992}}</ref> For example, the ] is an ] between intention and external events, and believers in the paranormal have been shown to be more susceptible to this illusion than others.<ref name="Benassi">{{cite journal|last1=Benassi|first1=Victor A.|last2=Sweeney|first2=Paul D.|last3=Drevno|first3=Gregg E.|title=Mind over matter: Perceived success at psychokinesis.|journal=Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|date=1979|volume=37|issue=8|pages=1377–1386|doi=10.1037/0022-3514.37.8.1377}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Blackmore|first1=Susan|last2=Trościanko|first2=Tom|title=Belief in the paranormal: Probability judgements, illusory control, and the 'chance baseline shift'|journal=British Journal of Psychology|date=November 1985|volume=76|issue=4|pages=459–468|doi=10.1111/j.2044-8295.1985.tb01969.x}}</ref> Psychologist ] explains this as a biased interpretation of personal experience. For example, someone in a dice game wishing for a high score can interpret high numbers as "success" and low numbers as "not enough concentration".<ref name="Gilovich"/> Bias towards belief in telekinesis may be an example of the human tendency to see patterns where none exist, called the ], which believers are also more susceptible to.<ref name="Blackmore"/> | |||
{{cite book| author = Hennacy Powell, M.D., Diane| title = The ESP Enigma: The Scientific Case for Psychic Phenomena| url = http://books.google.com/?id=pvlv2efnFY0C| date = 2009-01-13| publisher = Walker & Company| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-8027-1606-4| page = 5 }}</ref> | |||
A 1952 study tested for ] with respect to telekinesis. Richard Kaufman of ] gave subjects the task of trying to influence eight dice and allowed them to record their own scores. They were secretly filmed, so their records could be checked for errors. Believers in telekinesis made errors that favored its existence, while disbelievers made opposite errors. A similar pattern of errors was found in ]'s dice experiments, which were considered the strongest evidence for telekinesis at that time.<ref name="Gardner"/>{{rp|306}} | |||
===PK Parties=== | |||
"PK Parties" were a cultural fad in the 1980s, where groups of people were guided through rituals and chants to awaken metal-bending powers. They were encouraged to shout at the items of cutlery they had brought and to jump and scream to create an atmosphere of pandemonium (or what scientific investigators called heightened ]). Critics were excluded and participants were told to avoid looking at their hands. Thousands of people attended these emotionally charged parties, and many became convinced that they had bent silverware by paranormal means.<ref>{{cite book| author = ]| last = Frazier| first = Kendrick| editor = Kendrick Frazier| title = The Hundredth Monkey and Other Paradigms of the Paranormal| url = http://books.google.com/?id=AzQNAQAAMAAJ| date = 1990-12-31| publisher = Prometheus Books| isbn = 978-0-87975-655-0| pages = 156–157| chapter = Improving Human Performance: What About Parapsychology? }}</ref> | |||
In 1995, Wiseman and Morris showed subjects an unedited videotape of a magician's performance in which a fork bent and eventually broke. Believers in the paranormal were significantly more likely to misinterpret the tape as a demonstration of telekinesis, and were more likely to misremember crucial details of the presentation. This suggests that ] affects people's interpretation of telekinesis demonstrations.<ref name="Wiseman">{{cite journal|last1=Wiseman|first1=Richard|last2=Morris|first2=Robert L.|author-link1=Richard Wiseman|author-link2=Robert L. Morris| title=Recalling pseudo-psychic demonstrations|journal=British Journal of Psychology|date=February 1995|volume=86|issue=1|pages=113–125|doi=10.1111/j.2044-8295.1995.tb02549.x|url=http://www.richardwiseman.com/resources/BJPpseudo-psychic.pdf|hdl=2299/2288|hdl-access=free}}</ref> Psychologist ] cites confirmation bias as an explanation of why belief in psychic phenomena persists, despite the lack of evidence:<ref>{{cite book|last1=Sternberg|first1=Robert J.|author-link=Robert J. Sternberg|last2=Roediger III|first2=Henry J.|last3=Halpern|first3=Diane F.|title=Critical Thinking in Psychology|date=2007|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|isbn=9780521608343|page=292|edition=1st|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3mA9NPAgWR0C|access-date=11 December 2015|quote=Some of the worst examples of confirmation bias are in research on parapsychology (...) Arguably, there is a whole field here with no powerful confirming data at all. But people want to believe, and so they find ways to believe.}}</ref> | |||
== Scientific view == | |||
If PK were to exist as claimed by some experimenters, it would violate some well-established laws of physics, including the ], the ], and the ], according to ] and ].<ref>{{cite book| author = Kendrick Frazier| last = Gardner| first = Martin| editor = Kendrick Frazier| title = Paranormal Borderlands of Science| url = http://books.google.com/?id=XjENAQAAMAAJ| date = 1981-09| publisher = Prometheus| isbn = 978-0-87975-148-7| pages = 60–65| chapter = Einstein and ESP }}</ref><ref name="Gilovich"/> Hence scientists have demanded a high standard of evidence for PK, in line with ]'s dictum "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof".<ref name="Humphrey1995" /><ref name="Sutherland">{{cite book| author = Stuart Sutherland| last = Sutherland| first = Stuart| title = Irrationality: the enemy within| url = http://books.google.com/?id=HAVjQgAACAAJ| year = 1994| publisher = Penguin books| isbn = 978-0-14-016726-9| page = 309| quote = he movement of objects without the application of physical force would, if proven, require a complete revision of the laws of physics. (...) he more improbable something is, the better the evidence needed to accept it }}</ref> When apparent PK can be produced in ordinary ways—by trickery, special effects or by poor experimental design—scientists accept that explanation as more ] than to accept that the ] should be rewritten.<ref name=Broughton/> | |||
<blockquote>Some of the worst examples of confirmation bias are in research on parapsychology ... Arguably, there is a whole field here with no powerful confirming data at all. But people want to believe, and so they find ways to believe.</blockquote> | |||
The late ] included telekinesis in a long list of "offerings of pseudoscience and superstition" which "it would be foolish to accept (...) without solid scientific data" though even highly improbable claims may possibly be eventually verified. He placed the ] on the proponents, but cautioned readers to "await—or, much better, to seek—supporting or disconfirming evidence" for claims that have not been resolved either way.<ref>{{cite book| author = Carl Sagan| last = Sagan| first = Carl| title = ]: Science as a candle in the dark| url = http://books.google.com/?id=CYo7PgAACAAJ| year = 1995| publisher = Headline| isbn = 978-0-7472-7745-3| pages = 208–212 }}</ref> Nobel Prize laureate ] advocated a similar position.<ref>{{cite book| author = Richard Phillips Feynman| last = Feynman| first = Richard P.| title = ]| url = http://books.google.com/?id=AdGBQwAACAAJ| date = 1999-02-01| publisher = Penguin| isbn = 978-0-14-027635-0| pages = 68–71 }}</ref> | |||
Psychologist ] has argued that an ] contributes to belief in telekinesis.<ref name="selfismagic">{{cite book|last1=Baer|first1=John|last2=Kaufman|first2=James C.|last3=Baumeister|first3=Roy F.|title=Are We Free? Psychology and Free Will |date=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=9780195189636|page=Self is Magic|url=http://isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb.topic67047.files/2_13_07_Wegner.pdf|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> He observes that in everyday experience, intention (such as wanting to turn on a light) is followed by action (such as flicking a light switch) in a reliable way, but the underlying neural mechanisms are outside awareness. Hence, though subjects may feel that they directly introspect their own ], the experience of control is actually inferred from relations between the thought and the action. This theory of ''apparent mental causation'' acknowledges the influence of ]'s view of the mind.<ref name="selfismagic"/> This process for detecting when one is responsible for an action is not totally reliable, and when it goes wrong there can be an illusion of control. This can happen when an external event follows, and is congruent with, a thought in someone's mind, without an actual causal link.<ref name="selfismagic"/> As evidence, Wegner cites a series of experiments on ] in which subjects were induced to think they had influenced external events. In one experiment, subjects watched a ] player taking a series of ]. When they were instructed to visualize him making his shots, they felt that they had contributed to his success.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Pronin|first1=Emily|last2=Wegner|first2=Daniel M.|last3=McCarthy|first3=Kimberly|last4=Rodriguez|first4=Sylvia|title=Everyday magical powers: The role of apparent mental causation in the overestimation of personal influence.|journal=Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|date=2006|volume=91|issue=2|pages=218–231|doi=10.1037/0022-3514.91.2.218|pmid=16881760|url=http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~wegner/pdfs/Pronin,%20Wegner,%20McCarthy,%20&%20Rodriguez%20(2006).pdf|access-date=2009-07-03|issn=0022-3514|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110105011719/http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~wegner/pdfs/Pronin%2C%20Wegner%2C%20McCarthy%2C%20%26%20Rodriguez%20%282006%29.pdf|archive-date=January 5, 2011|df=mdy-all|citeseerx=10.1.1.405.3118}}</ref> Other experiments designed to create an illusion of telekinesis have demonstrated that this depends, to some extent, on the subject's prior belief in telekinesis.<ref name="Benassi"/><ref name="Wiseman"/><ref name="Wilson">{{cite journal|last1=Wilson|first1=Krissy|last2=French|first2=Christopher C.|title=Magic and memory: using conjuring to explore the effects of suggestion, social influence, and paranormal belief on eyewitness testimony for an ostensibly paranormal event|journal=Frontiers in Psychology|date=13 November 2014|volume=5|pages=1289|doi=10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01289|pmid=25431565|pmc=4230037|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
] coauthored a 1991 scientific paper that agreed with the theories of earlier published researchers that consciousness and the creative mind could have a role in affecting the statistical outcomes of quantum phenomena.<ref name="Josephson-paper-1991" />]] | |||
In their 1991 research paper ''Biological Utilization of Quantum Nonlocality'', Nobel Prize laureate ] and coauthor Fotini Pallikara-Viras proposed that explanations for both psychokinesis and telepathy might be found in quantum physics.<ref name="Josephson-paper-1991"> | |||
{{cite web | |||
| url = http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~bdj10/papers/bell.html | |||
| title = Biological Utilization of Quantum Nonlocality | |||
| author = Josephson, Brian D. | |||
| coauthors = Pallikari-Viras, Fotini | |||
|accessdate= December 18, 2008 | |||
}} ''Foundations in Physics'', Vol. 21, pp. 197-207, 1991, Plenum Press, New York.</ref><ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Michael Hanlon| title = 10 Questions Science Can't Answer (Yet)| url = http://books.google.com/?id=5y-NgsrQn8MC| date = 2007-05-29| publisher = Macmillan| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-230-51758-5| pages = 165–166 }}</ref> ]'s concept of a ], a theoretical particle that travels faster than the speed of light has been advocated by some parapsychologists who claim that it could explain psychokinesis.<ref>Marc Seifer, Stanley Krippner ''Transcending the Speed of Light'' 2008, p. 52</ref> Haakon Forwald (1897-1978) a Swedish electrical engineer suggested that psychokinesis of objects could occur due to gravitational fields produced by mental influence acting on ] in the ] inside the objects, however his hypothesis has never been proven and critics have pointed out his hypothesis is faulted by ].<ref>Haakon Forwald ''Mind, matter, and gravitation: a theoretical and experimental study'' Parapsychology Foundation, 1969</ref><ref>''The Journal of parapsychology'', Volume 48, Duke University Press, 1984, p. 302</ref> | |||
A 2006 meta-analysis of 380 studies found a small positive effect that can be explained by ].<ref name="Bosch">{{cite journal|last1=Bösch|first1=Holger|last2=Steinkamp|first2=Fiona|last3=Boller|first3=Emil|title=Examining psychokinesis: The interaction of human intention with random number generators--A meta-analysis.|journal=Psychological Bulletin|date=2006|volume=132|issue=4|pages=497–523|doi=10.1037/0033-2909.132.4.497|pmid=16822162}}</ref> | |||
There is a broad consensus, including several proponents of parapsychology, that PK research, and parapsychology more generally, has not produced a reliable, repeatable demonstration.<ref name="Vyse1997"/><ref name="Humphrey1995" /><ref>{{cite book| author = Thomas Gilovich| last = Gilovich| first = Thomas| title = How We Know What Isn't So: The fallibility of human reason in everyday life| url = http://books.google.com/?id=LURGkHCPAJEC| year = 1993| publisher = Simon & Schuster| isbn = 978-0-02-911706-4| pages = 160, 169 }}</ref><ref name="park2000"/> | |||
===Magic and special effects=== | |||
In 1984, the ], at the request of the US Army Research Institute, formed a scientific panel to assess the best evidence from 130 years of parapsychology. Part of its purpose was to investigate military applications of PK, for example to remotely jam or disrupt enemy weaponry. The panel heard from a variety of military staff who believed in PK and made visits to the ] and two other laboratories that had claimed positive results from micro-PK experiments. | |||
] performing the "Levitation of Princess Karnac" illusion, 1894, U.S. Library of Congress]] | |||
{{See also|Mentalism}} | |||
Magicians have successfully simulated some of the specialized abilities of telekinesis, such as object movement, ], levitation and teleportation.<ref>]. (2004). ''The Nature of the Mind: An Introduction''. Routledge. 135-136.</ref> According to ], there are many impressive magic tricks available to amateurs and professionals to simulate telekinetic powers.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Carroll|first1=Robert Todd|author-link=Robert Todd Carroll|title=The Skeptic's Dictionary: A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions|date=2003|publisher=Wiley|location=Hoboken, New Jersey|isbn=9780471272427|page=316|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6FPqDFx40vYC|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> Metal objects such as keys or cutlery can be bent using a number of different techniques, even if the performer has not had access to the items beforehand.<ref name="Hines"/>{{rp|127–131}} | |||
According to ] there are a number of ways for faking telekinetic metal bending. These include switching straight objects for pre-bent duplicates, the concealed application of force, and secretly inducing metallic fractures.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Wiseman|first1=Richard|author-link1=Richard Wiseman|last2=Greening|first2=Emma|title=It's still bending: Verbal suggestion and alleged psychokinetic ability|journal=British Journal of Psychology|date=February 2005|volume=96|issue=1|pages=115–127|doi=10.1348/000712604x15428|pmid=15826327|url=http://www.richardwiseman.com/resources/BJP-key.pdf}}</ref> Research has also suggested that telekinetic metal bending effects can be created by ]. On this subject the magician Ben Harris wrote:<ref>{{cite book|last=Harris|first=Ben|title=Gellerism Revealed: the Psychology and Methodology Behind the Geller Effect|date=1985|publisher=M. Hades International|location=Calgary|isbn=9780919230927|pages=195–196}}</ref> | |||
The panel criticised macro-PK experiments for being open to deception by conjurors, and said that virtually all micro-PK experiments "depart from good scientific practice in a variety of ways". Their conclusion, published in a 1987 report, was that there was no scientific evidence for the existence of psychokinesis. Parapsychology advocates responded by accusing the panel of bias.<ref>{{cite book| author = Kendrick Frazier| last = Frazier| first = Kendrick| editor = Kendrick Frazier| title = The Hundredth Monkey and Other Paradigms of the Paranormal| url = http://books.google.com/?id=AzQNAQAAMAAJ| date = 1990-12-31| publisher = Prometheus Books| isbn = 978-0-87975-655-0| pages = 149–161| chapter = Improving Human Performance: What About Parapsychology? }}</ref> | |||
<blockquote>If you are doing a really convincing job, then you should be able to put a bent key on the table and comment, "Look, it is still bending", and have your spectators really believe that it is. This may sound the height of boldness; however, the effect is astounding – and combined with suggestion, it does work.</blockquote> | |||
Research with random number generators has been influenced by ], viewing the effect of PK as weak but real "signal" hidden in the "noise" of experimental results. An effect too weak to be demonstrated in a replicable experiment would still show up as a statistically significant effect in a large set of data. To test this, parapsychologists have carried out ] of large data sets, with apparently impressive positive results.<ref>{{cite book |last=Radin|first=Dean|authorlink=Dean Radin|title=The Conscious Universe: The Scientific Truth of Psychic Phenomena | publisher=HarperEdge|year=1997}}</ref> This has in turn been criticized as an invalid use of meta-analysis, since the original studies are too dissimilar for the resulting statistics to be meaningful.<ref name="Hyman2007"/> A 2006 meta-analysis of 380 studies found a small positive effect within the margin that could be explained by ].<ref name="Bosch2006"/> | |||
Between 1979 and 1981, the McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research at ] reported a series of experiments they named ], in which two teenaged male subjects had demonstrated telekinesis phenomena (including metal-bending and causing images to appear on film) under less than stringent laboratory conditions. ] eventually revealed that the subjects were two of his associates, amateur conjurers ] and Michael Edwards. The pair had created the effects by standard trickery, but the researchers, being unfamiliar with magic techniques, interpreted them as proof of telekinesis.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Colman|first1=Andrew M.|title=Facts, Fallacies and Frauds in Psychology |date=1987|publisher=Hutchinson|location=London|isbn=9780091730413|pages=195–185}}</ref> | |||
Physicist ] finds it suspicious that a phenomenon should only ever appear at the limits of detectability of questionable statistical techniques. He cites this feature as one of ]'s indicators of ]. Park argues that if PK really existed it would be easily and unambiguously detectable, for example using modern ]s which can detect tiny amounts of force.<ref name="park2000">{{cite book| author = Robert L. Park| last = Park| first = Robert L.| authorlink = Robert L. Park| title = Voodoo Science: The road from foolishness to fraud| url = http://books.google.com/?id=xzCK6-Kqs6QC| date = 2002-07| publisher = Oxford University Press| isbn = 978-0-19-860443-3| pages = 198–200 }}</ref> | |||
A 2014 study that utilized a magic trick to investigate paranormal belief on eyewitness testimony revealed that believers in telekinesis were more likely to report a key continued to bend than non-believers.<ref name="Wilson"/> | |||
PK hypotheses are also tested implicitly in a number of contexts outside parapsychological experiments. Gardner considers a dice game played in casinos, where gamblers have a large incentive to affect the numbers that come up. This is in effect a large sample-size test of the same hypothesis as the J. B. Rhine dice experiments, but year after year the house takings are exactly those predicted by chance.<ref>{{cite book| author = Martín Gardner| last = Gardner| first = Martin| authorlink = Martin Gardner| title = ]| url = http://books.google.com/?id=TwP3SGAUsnkC| year = 1957| publisher = Dover| isbn = 978-0-486-20394-2| page = 307 }}</ref> Psychologist ] argues that many experiments in ], ] or ] assume that the intentions of the subjects or experimenter do ''not'' physically distort the apparatus. Humphrey counts them as replications of PK experiments (but implicitly so) in which PK fails to appear.<ref name="Humphrey1995"/> | |||
=== Prize money for proof of telekinesis === | |||
In the book ''Parapsychology: The Controversial Science'' (1991), British parapsychologist Richard S. Broughton, Ph.D, wrote of the differences of opinion among top scientists encountered by ], director of the (now-closed) ], regarding the psychokinesis research that the lab was engaged in at the time.<ref name=Broughton/> | |||
{{Main|List of prizes for evidence of the paranormal}} | |||
Internationally, there are individual skeptics of the paranormal and ] who offer cash prize money for demonstration of the existence of an extraordinary psychic power, such as telekinesis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://skepdic.com/randi.html |title=Randi $1,000,000 paranormal challenge |publisher=The Skeptic's Dictionary |access-date=2014-04-12}}</ref> Prizes have been offered specifically for telekinesis demonstrations: for example, businessman Gerald Fleming promised to offer £250,000 to ] if he could bend a spoon under controlled conditions.<ref>{{cite journal|journal=British and Irish Skeptic|last=Hutchinson|first=Mike|year=1988|title=A Thorn in Geller's Side|issue=July/August | pages=2–4}}</ref> The ] offered the ] to any accepted candidate who managed to produce a paranormal event in a controlled, mutually agreed upon experiment.<ref name=rolling>{{Cite magazine|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/james-randi-obituary-1079316/|title = James Randi, Famed Magician and Paranormal Skeptic, Dead at 92| magazine=] |date = October 22, 2020}}</ref><ref name=challenge>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/09/magazine/the-unbelievable-skepticism-of-the-amazing-randi.html?_r=0|title=The Unbelievable Skepticism of the Amazing Randi|newspaper=The New York Times|date=November 7, 2014|last1=Higginbotham|first1=Adam}}</ref> Currently, the ] offers a prize of $250,000, the largest in the world, for proof of the paranormal.<ref name="CFI">{{cite web |title=Prove Your Paranormal Powers and Win $250,000 from the CFI Investigations Group |url=https://centerforinquiry.org/press_releases/prove-your-paranormal-powers-and-win-250000-from-the-cfi-investigations-group/ |website=centerforinquiry.org |date=June 26, 2020 |publisher=Center For Inquiry |access-date=14 June 2022}}</ref><ref name="SI">{{cite web |last1=Underdown |first1=Jim |last2=Hillman |first2=Lou |title=$250,000 Remains Unclaimed: CFI Investigators Recount a Year of Applicants |url=https://skepticalinquirer.org/2021/04/250000-remains-unclaimed-cfi-investigators-recount-a-year-of-applicants/ |website=skepticalinquirer.org |date=April 30, 2021 |publisher=Skeptical Inquirer |access-date=14 June 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Belief== | |||
===Explanations in terms of bias=== | |||
Between 1979 and 1981, a survey on belief in various religious and paranormal topics conducted by phone and mail-in questionnaire ] 1,721 Americans on their belief in telekinesis. Of these participants, 28% of male participants and 31% of female participants selected "agree" or "strongly agree" with the statement, "''It is possible to influence the world through the mind alone.''"<ref>{{cite web|title=American Piety in the 21st Century: New Insights to the Depth and Complexity of Religion in the US|url=http://www.baylor.edu/content/services/document.php/33304.pdf|access-date=21 April 2014}} Study conducted by the Gallup Organization between October 8, 2005 and December 12, 2005 on behalf of the Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion, Baylor University, of Waco, Texas, in the United States.</ref> | |||
] research has been interpreted to argue that people are susceptible to illusions of PK. These include both the illusion that they themselves have the power, and that events they witness are real demonstrations of PK.<ref name="Blackmore psychic illusions">{{cite journal| last = Blackmore| first = Susan J. | |||
| title = Psychic Experiences: Psychic Illusions| journal = Skeptical Inquirer| volume = 16| pages = 367–376 | |||
| year = 1992}}</ref> For example, ] is an ] between intention and external events, and believers in the paranormal have been shown to be more susceptible to this illusion than skeptics.<ref name="Benassi1979">{{cite journal | |||
| last = Benassi | first = Victor A. | coauthors = Paul D. Sweeney, and Gregg E. Drevno | |||
| title = Mind over matter: Perceived success at psychokinesis | journal = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | |||
| volume = 37 |issue=8| accessdate =2008-11-16|url=http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/psp/37/8/1377/ | pages = 1377–1386| year = 1979|doi=10.1037/0022-3514.37.8.1377}}</ref><ref> | |||
{{cite journal| last = Blackmore| first = Susan J.| coauthors = Tom Trościanko | |||
| title = Belief in the paranormal Probability judgements, illusory control, and the "chance baseline shift." | |||
| journal = British Journal of Psychology| volume = 76 |issue=4| pages = 459–468| year = 1985|url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=5701336&site=ehost-live|accessdate=2008-11-16| doi = 10.1111/j.2044-8295.1985.tb01969.x}}</ref> Psychologist ] explains this as a biased interpretation of personal experience. For example, to someone in a dice game willing for a high score, high numbers can be interpreted as "success" and low numbers as "not enough concentration."<ref name="Gilovich">{{cite book| author = Thomas Gilovich| last = Gilovich| first = Thomas| title = How We Know What Isn't So: The fallibility of human reason in everyday life| url = http://books.google.com/?id=LURGkHCPAJEC| year = 1993| publisher = Simon & Schuster| isbn = 978-0-02-911706-4| pages = 174–175 }}</ref> Bias towards belief in PK may be an example of the ], which believers are also more susceptible to.<ref name="Blackmore psychic illusions" /> | |||
=== Subsets of telekinesis === | |||
A 1952 study tested for ] in a PK context. Richard Kaufman of ] gave subjects the task of trying to influence eight dice and allowed them to record their own scores. They were secretly filmed, so their records could be checked for errors. The results in each case were random and provided no evidence for PK, but believers made errors that favoured the PK hypothesis, while disbelievers made opposite errors. A similar pattern of errors was found in ]'s dice experiments which at that time were the strongest evidence for PK.<ref>{{cite book| author = Martín Gardner| last = Gardner| first = Martin| authorlink = Martin Gardner| title = ]| url = http://books.google.com/?id=TwP3SGAUsnkC| year = 1957| publisher = Dover| isbn = 978-0-486-20394-2| page = 306 }}</ref> | |||
Parapsychologists divide telekinetic phenomena into two categories: ''macro-telekinesis'', large-scale telekinetic effects that can be seen with the naked eye; and ''micro-telekinesis,'' small-scale telekinetic effects that require the use of statistics to be detected.<ref name="introduction"/> Some phenomena—such as ],<ref name="introduction"/> ],<ref name="introduction"/> ],<ref name="introduction"/> ],<ref name="introduction"/> ],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/psi_powers |title=Themes: Psi Powers |publisher=Science Fiction Encyclopedia |access-date=2016-03-12|quote=Fire-raising, alias pyrolysis or pyrokinesis, can be considered as a fine-tuned variant of Telekinesis – feeding kinetic energy to the target's individual molecules to increase its temperature rather than move it as a unit.}}</ref> ],<ref>{{cite book|last=Smith|first=Jonathan C.|title=Pseudoscience and Extraordinary Claims of the Paranormal: A Critical Thinker's Toolkit|year=2010|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|location=Malden, Massachusetts|isbn=978-1444310139|page=246}}</ref> and ]<ref name="introduction"/>—are considered examples of telekinesis. | |||
In 2016, ] stated "Overall, the majority of academic parapsychologists do not find the evidence compelling in favour of macro-".<ref>{{cite book|last1=Watt|first1=Caroline|title=Parapsychology: A Beginner's Guide|publisher=Oneworld Publications|isbn=9781780748870|page=37|year=2016}}</ref> | |||
Wiseman and Morris (1995) showed subjects an unedited videotape of a magician's performance in which a fork bent and eventually broke. Believers in the paranormal were significantly more likely to misinterpret the tape as a demonstration of PK, and were more likely to misremember crucial details of the presentation. This suggests that ] affects people's interpretation of PK demonstrations.<ref name="Wiseman1995"/> Psychologist ] cites confirmation bias as an explanation of why belief in psi phenomena persists, despite the lack of evidence: "eople want to believe, and so they find ways to believe."<ref>{{cite book| author = Robert J. Sternberg| last = Sternberg| first = Robert J.| coauthors = Henry L. Roediger, Diane F. Halpern| editor = Robert J. Sternberg, Henry L. Roediger, Diane F. Halpern| title = Critical Thinking in Psychology| url = http://books.google.com/?id=3mA9NPAgWR0C| year = 2007| publisher = Cambridge University Press| isbn = 978-0-521-60834-3| page = 292| chapter = Critical Thinking in Psychology: It really is critical| quote = Some of the worst examples of confirmation bias are in research on parapsychology (...) Arguably, there is a whole field here with no powerful confirming data at all. But people want to believe, and so they find ways to believe. }}</ref> | |||
===Notable claimants of telekinetic abilities=== | |||
Psychologist ] has argued that an ] contributes to belief in psychokinesis.<ref name="selfismagic">{{cite book| author = John Baer| last = Wegner| first = Daniel M.| coauthors = James C. Kaufman, Roy F. Baumeister| editor = John Baer, James C. Kaufman, Roy F. Baumeister| title = Are we free?: psychology and free will| url = http://isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb.topic67047.files/2_13_07_Wegner.pdf| accessdate = 2008-07-02| year = 2008| publisher = Oxford University Press| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-19-518963-6| chapter = Self is Magic }}</ref> He observes that in everyday experience, intention (such as wanting to turn on a light) is followed by action (such as flicking a light switch) in a reliable way, but the underlying neural mechanisms are outside awareness. Hence though subjects may feel that they directly introspect their own ], the experience of control is actually inferred from relations between the thought and the action. This theory of ''apparent mental causation'' acknowledges the influence of ]'s view of the mind.<ref name="selfismagic" /> This process for detecting when one is responsible for an action is not totally reliable, and when it goes wrong there can be an ]. This could happen when a external event follows, and is congruent with, a thought in someone's mind, without an actual causal link.<ref name="selfismagic" /> | |||
] (right) monitors for fraud, Milan, 1892.]] | |||
] hoaxer ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/get_out/article_503fed83-70f0-5378-a73d-f345c2db5464.html?mode=image&photo |title=New exhibit looks at occult photography |work=East Valley Tribune |date=September 27, 2005 |access-date=2014-04-18}}</ref> (1840–1901) of France fakes telekinesis in this 1875 ] photograph titled ''Fluidic Effect''.]] | |||
There have been claimants of telekinetic ability throughout history. Angelique Cottin (ca. 1846) known as the "Electric Girl" of France was an alleged generator of telekinetic activity. Cottin and her family claimed that she produced electric emanations that allowed her to move pieces of furniture and scissors across a room.<ref name="Podmore">{{cite book|last1=Podmore|first1=Frank|author-link=Frank Podmore|title=Modern Spiritualism: A History and a Criticism|date=2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|isbn=978-1108072588|pages=41–42}}</ref> ] wrote there were many observations which were "suggestive of fraud" such as the contact of the girl's garments to produce any of the alleged phenomena and the observations from several witnesses that noticed there was a double movement on the part of Cottin, a movement in the direction of the object thrown and afterwards away from it, but the movements so rapid they were not usually detected.<ref name="Podmore"/> | |||
Spiritualist ] have also claimed telekinetic abilities. ], an Italian medium, could allegedly cause objects to move during séances. However, she was caught levitating a table with her foot by magician ], and using tricks to move objects by psychologist ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Christopher|first1=Milbourne|author-link=Milbourne Christopher|title=Search for the Soul|date=1979|publisher=Crowell|location=New York|isbn=9780690017601|page=|edition=1st|url=https://archive.org/details/searchforsoul0000chri/page/47}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Hansel|first1=C.E.M.|author-link=C. E. M. Hansel|title=The Search for Psychic Power: ESP and Parapsychology Revisited|date=1989|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=9780879755164|page=240}}</ref> Other alleged telekinetic mediums exposed as frauds include ] and ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Moreman|first1=Christopher M.|title=The Spiritualist Movement: Speaking with the Dead in America and around the World |date=2013|publisher=Praeger|location=Santa Barbara|isbn=9780313399473|pages=77–78}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Polidoro|first1=Massimo|author-link=Massimo Polidoro|title=Final Séance: The Strange Friendship Between Houdini and Conan Doyle|url=https://archive.org/details/finalseance00mass|url-access=registration|date=2001|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York |isbn=9781573928960|page=}}</ref> | |||
As evidence, Wegner cites a series of experiments on ] in which subjects were induced to think they had influenced external events. In one experiment, subjects watched a ] player taking a series of ]. When they were instructed to visualise him making his shots, they felt that they had contributed to his success.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Pronin|first=Emily|coauthors=Daniel M. Wegner, Kimberly McCarthy, Sylvia Rodriguez|year=2006|title=Everyday Magical Powers: The Role of Apparent Mental Causation in the Overestimation of Personal Influence|journal=Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|publisher=American Psychological Association|volume=91|issue=2|pages=218–231|issn=0022-3514|url=http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~wegner/pdfs/Pronin,%20Wegner,%20McCarthy,%20&%20Rodriguez%20(2006).pdf|accessdate=2009-07-03|doi=10.1037/0022-3514.91.2.218|pmid=16881760}}</ref> | |||
Polish medium ], active in the early 20th century, claimed to be able to perform acts of telekinetic levitation by way of an entity she called "Little Stasia".<ref>]. (1934). ''These Mysterious People''. Rider. Chapter 21.</ref> A 1909 photograph of her, showing a pair of scissors "floating" between her hands, is often found in books and other publications as an example of telekinesis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.diomedia.com/public/3693080/imageDetails.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140102195819/http://www.diomedia.com/public/3693080/imageDetails.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=January 2, 2014 |title=Stanisława Tomczyk photo description at Diomedia |access-date=November 18, 2013}} Description page at a stock photo agency representing the Mary Evans Picture Library, where the date is also given as 1909. She visited the researcher in 1908 and 1909; hence, the exact year is uncertain and reported as 1908 elsewhere.</ref><ref name="Jinks">{{cite book|last1=Jinks|first1=Tony|title=An Introduction to the Psychology of Paranormal Belief and Experience|date=2012|publisher=McFarland|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|isbn=9780786465446|page=11|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ylxJ5fXPd7YC&q=%22Stanis%C5%82awa+Tomczyk%22&pg=PA11|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref> Scientists suspected Tomczyk performed her feats by the use of a fine ] or hair between her hands. This was confirmed when psychical researchers who tested Tomczyk occasionally observed the thread.<ref name="Jinks"/><ref>{{cite book|last=Carrington|first=Hereward|title=The Story of Psychic Science (psychical research)|date=1990|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|location=Kila, Montana|isbn=9781564592590|page=136}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Wolman|first=Benjamin B.|title=Handbook of Parapsychology|date=1977|publisher=Van Nostrand Reinhold|location=New York|isbn=9780442295769|page=320}}</ref> | |||
===Magic and special effects=== | |||
{{See also|Mentalism}} | |||
Many of India's "]" have claimed macro-telekinetic abilities and demonstrated apparently miraculous phenomena in public, although as more controls are put in place to prevent trickery, fewer phenomena are produced.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wiseman|first1=Richard|author-link=Richard Wiseman|title=Deception & Self-deception: Investigating Psychics|date=1997|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York|isbn=9781573921213|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pDMNAQAAMAAJ|access-date=11 December 2015|pages=182–196}}</ref> | |||
Magicians, sleight-of-hand-artists, etc., have successfully simulated some of the specialized abilities of PK (object movement, ], levitation, teleportation), but not all of the feats of claimed spontaneous and intentional psychokinesis have been reproduced under the same observed conditions as the original.<ref name=Broughton/> According to philosopher ], there are many impressive magic tricks available to amateurs and professionals to simulate psychokinetic powers.<ref>{{cite book| author = Robert Todd Carroll| last = Carroll| first = Robert Todd| title = The Skeptic's Dictionary: a collection of strange beliefs, amusing deceptions, and dangerous delusions| url = http://books.google.com/?id=6FPqDFx40vYC| date = 2003-07-17| publisher = Wiley| isbn = 978-0-471-27242-7| page = 316| chapter = Psychokinesis }}</ref> These can be purchased on the Internet from magic supply companies. Metal objects such as keys or cutlery can be bent by a number of different techniques, even if the performer has not had access to them beforehand.<ref>{{cite book| author = Terence Hines| last = Hines| first = Terence| title = Pseudoscience and the Paranormal| url = http://books.google.com/?id=Px0RAQAAIAAJ| edition = 2nd| year = 2003| publisher = Prometheus| isbn = 978-1-57392-979-0| pages = 127–131 }}</ref> Amateur-made videos alleging to show feats of psychokinesis, particularly spoon bending and the telekinetic movement of objects, can be found on video-sharing websites such as YouTube. Critics point out that it is now easier than ever for the average person to fake psychokinetic events and that without more concrete proof, the topic, apart from its enjoyment in fiction, will continue to remain controversial.<ref name=Genzmer/> | |||
] | |||
The need for PK researchers to be aware of conjuring techniques was illustrated by events in the early 1980s. The McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research at Washington University reported a series of experiments in which two subjects had demonstrated PK phenomena (including metal-bending and causing images to appear on film) and other psychic powers under laboratory conditions. Magician ] revealed that the subjects were two of his associates, amateur conjurers Steve Shaw and Michael Edwards. The pair had created the effects by standard trickery, but the researchers, being unfamiliar with magic techniques, interpreted them as proof of PK. The laboratory closed not long after.<ref>{{cite book|last=Colman|first=Andrew M.|title=Facts, Fallacies and Frauds in Psychology |publisher=Unwin Hyman | year=1987|pages=195–6 | isbn=978-0-09-173041-3}}</ref> | |||
], a 19-year-old secretary, was said to have telekinetic powers by parapsychologist ] in the ] case in the 1960s. Magicians and scientists who investigated the case suspected the phenomena were produced by trickery.<ref name="Taylor">{{cite book|last1=Taylor|first1=John|title=Science and the Supernatural: An Investigation of Paranormal Phenomena Including Psychic Healing, Clairvoyance, Telepathy, and Precognition by a Distinguished Physicist and Mathematician|date=1980|publisher=T. Smith|location=London|isbn=978-0851171913}}</ref>{{rp|107–108}}<ref>{{cite book|author=Kendrick Frazier|year=1986|title=Science Confronts the Paranormal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i2Nm8OyXpyQC&pg=PA35|publisher=Prometheus Books|isbn=9781615926190|pages=35–}}</ref> | |||
=== Prize money for proof of psychokinesis === | |||
{{Main|List of prizes for evidence of the paranormal}} | |||
Internationally, there are several individual skeptics of the paranormal and ] who offer cash prize money for demonstration of the existence of an extraordinary psychic power, such as psychokinesis. Experimental design must be agreed upon prior to execution, and additional conditions, such as a minimum level of fame, may be imposed. Prizes have been offered specifically for PK demonstrations, for example businessman Gerald Fleming's offer of ]250,000 to Uri Geller if he can bend a spoon under controlled conditions.<ref>{{cite journal|work=British and Irish Skeptic|last=Hutchinson|first=Mike|year=1988|title=A Thorn in Geller's Side|issue=July/August | pages=2–4}}</ref> These prizes remain uncollected by people claiming to possess paranormal abilities. | |||
], a ] skilled in controlling his heart functions, was studied at the ] in the spring and fall of 1970 and was alleged by some observers at the foundation to have telekinetically moved a knitting needle twice from a distance of five feet.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Green|first1=Elmer|last2=Green|first2=Alyce|title=Beyond Biofeedback|url=https://archive.org/details/beyondbiofeedba00gree|url-access=limited|date=1977|publisher=Delacorte Press/S. Lawrence|location=New York|isbn=9780440005834|pages=–218|edition=2nd}}</ref> Although he wore a face-mask and gown to prevent allegations that he moved the needle with his breath or body movements, and air vents in the room were covered, at least one physician observer who was present was not convinced and expressed the opinion that air movement was somehow the cause.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swamij.com/pdf/swami-rama-beyond-biofeedback.pdf|title=Beyond Biofeedback (chapter "Swami Rama")|pages=12–16|access-date=July 24, 2007}} Elmer Green's description of Swami Rama's alleged psychokinetic demonstration (with illustrations).</ref> | |||
The ] offers ]1,000,000 to anyone who has a demonstrated media profile as well as the support from some member of the academic community, and who can produce a paranormal event, such as psychokinesis, in a controlled, mutually agreed upon experiment. | |||
===Psychics=== | |||
==In religion, mythology and popular culture== | |||
Russian psychic ] came to wide public attention following the publication of Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder's bestseller ''Psychic Discoveries Behind The Iron Curtain''. The alleged Soviet psychic of the late 1960s and early 1970s was shown apparently performing telekinesis while seated in numerous black-and-white short films,<ref name="Berger">{{cite book|last1=Berger|first1=Arthur S.|last2=Berger|first2=Joyce|title=The Encyclopedia of Parapsychology and Psychical Research|date=1991|publisher=Paragon House|location=New York|isbn=9781557780430|pages=|edition=1st|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofpa00berg/page/326}}</ref> and was also mentioned in the ''U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency'' report from 1978.<ref>{{cite book|date=30 March 1978|title=Paraphysics R&D – Warsaw Pact (U). Prepared by U.S. Air Force, Air Force Systems Command Foreign Technology Division. DST-1810S-202-78, Nr. DIA TASK NO. PT-1810-18-76|publisher=Defense Intelligence Agency|pages=7–8|quote=G.A. Sergevev is known to have studied Nina Kulagina, a well-known psychic from Leningrad. Although no detailed results are available, Sergevev's inferences are that she was successful in repeating psychokinetic phenomena under controlled conditions. G.A. Sergevev is a well-respected researcher and has been active in paraphysics research since the early 1960s.}}</ref>{{ISBN missing|date=December 2015}} Magicians and skeptics have argued that Kulagina's feats could easily be performed by one practiced in sleight of hand, or through means such as cleverly concealed or disguised threads, small pieces of magnetic metal, or mirrors.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.randi.org/encyclopedia/Kulagina,%20Nina.html |archive-url=https://archive.today/20060503004631/http://www.randi.org/encyclopedia/Kulagina,%20Nina.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2006-05-03 |title=James Randi Educational Foundation — An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural |publisher=Randi.org |access-date=2014-03-17}}</ref><ref name="Polidoro">{{cite web|url=http://www.cicap.org/new/articolo.php?id=101003 |title=Secrets of a Russian Psychic |publisher=Cicap.org |access-date=2014-03-14}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Couttie|first=Bob|title=Forbidden Knowledge: The Paranormal Paradox|date=1988|publisher=Lutterworth|location=Cambridge|isbn=9780718826864|page=141}}</ref><ref name="Stein">{{cite book|last=Stein|first=Gordon|title=The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal|date=1996|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York|isbn=9781573920216|page=384|edition=2nd}}</ref> | |||
{{See also|List of superhuman features and abilities in fiction}} | |||
], an American ] expert and psychic, was famous for his alleged telekinetic ability to turn the pages of books and make pencils spin while placed on the edge of a desk. It was later revealed by magicians that he achieved his feats by air currents.<ref>{{cite book|last=Regal|first=Brian|title=Pseudoscience: A Critical Encyclopedia|url=https://archive.org/details/pseudosciencecri00rega_858|url-access=limited|date=2009|publisher=Greenwood Press|location=Santa Barbara, California|isbn=9780313355073|page=}}</ref> Psychologist ] wrote that Hydrick learnt to move objects by blowing in a "highly deceptive" and skillful way.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wiseman|first=Richard|author-link=Richard Wiseman|title=Paranormality: Why We See What Isn't There|date=2011|publisher=Macmillan|location=London|isbn=9780230752986|pages=81–95}}</ref> Hydrick confessed to ] that his feats were tricks: "My whole idea behind this in the first place was to see how dumb America was. How dumb the world is."<ref>{{cite book|last=Korem|first=Dan|title=Powers: Testing the Psychic & Supernatural|date=1988|publisher=InterVarsity Press|location=Downers Grove, Illinois|isbn=978-0830812776|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/powerstestingpsy0000kore/page/149}}</ref> In the late 1970s, British psychic ] was the subject of laboratory research in the United States and England, and today claims healing powers.<ref name="Berger"/><ref name="ManMythMagic">{{cite book|last1=Cavendish|first1=Richard|title=Man, Myth & Magic: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion and the Unknown|date=1995|publisher=M. Cavendish|location=New York|isbn=9781854357311|page=2442|edition=New|url=https://archive.org/details/manmythmagici02cave|url-access=registration|access-date=11 December 2015|quote=Spiritualism aroused violent antagonism and criticism concentrating particularly on the physical phenomena occurring at seances, which opponents claimed were faked.}}</ref> Magicians ] and ] have suspected Manning used trickery to perform his feats.<ref>{{cite book|last=Booth|first=John|title=Psychic Paradoxes|date=1986|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=978-0879753580|pages=12–57}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Gordon|first=Henry|title=Extrasensory Deception: ESP, Psychics, Shirley MacLaine, Ghosts, UFOs|date=1988|publisher=Macmillan of Canada|location=Toronto|isbn=978-0771595394|pages=|edition=Canadian|url=https://archive.org/details/extrasensorydece0000gord/page/101}}</ref> | |||
There are written accounts and oral legends of events fitting the description of psychokinesis dating back to early history, most notably in the stories found in various religions and mythology. In the Bible, for example, Jesus is described as transmuting water into wine, an act some have described as an example of psychokinesis,<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Brian, Denis| title = The Voice of Genius: Conversations with Nobel Scientists and Other Luminaries| url = http://books.google.com/?id=x1BYMA-8oq8C| date = 2000-11| publisher = Basic Books, imprint of Perseus Books| location = New York| isbn = 978-0-7382-0447-5| page = 288| quote = . . . parapsychologists are studying some of the unusual events recorded in the Bible: changing water into wine could be called psychokinesis; . . . People have spoken of such things from early times and they seem to occur in every civilization. }}</ref> healing the sick, and multiplying food.<ref> | |||
{{cite book| author = Heath, Pamela Rae, M.D., Psy.D.| title = The PK Zone: A Cross-Cultural review of Psychokinesis| url = http://books.google.com/?id=nRfTKWwCTIoC| date = 2003-07| publisher = iUniverse| location = Bloomington, Indiana| isbn = 978-0-595-27658-5| page = 3| quote = Religion has seemed to provide fertile ground for both spontaneous and intentional PK. Every great religious tract of mankind includes stories of people with the ability to heal and to multiply food, such as the Bible says were performed by Jesus Christ. }}</ref> | |||
In 1971, an American psychic named Felicia Parise allegedly moved a pill bottle across a kitchen counter by telekinesis. Her feats were endorsed by parapsychologist ]. Science writer ] wrote that Parise had "bamboozled" Honorton by moving the bottle with an invisible thread stretched between her hands.<ref name="Stein"/><ref name="Frazier">{{cite book|last1=Frazier|first1=Kendrick|title=The Hundredth Monkey: and other Paradigms of the Paranormal|date=1991|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=9780879756550|url=https://archive.org/details/hundredthmonkey00kend|url-access=registration|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref>{{rp|163}} | |||
Mythological beings, such as witches, have been described as levitating people, animals, and objects.<ref>{{cite book |author= Guiley, Rosemary Ellen |author-link=Rosemary Ellen Guiley |year=1989 |title= The Encyclopedia of Witches and Witchcraft |publisher= ] |location= New York |isbn= 0-8160-1793 |quote= In hauntings, witches, poltergeists, and fairies have been blamed for levitating people, animals, and objects. |page= 201}}</ref> The court wizard and prophet ] in the ] legend, is said to have used his power to transport ] across the sea to England from Ireland.<ref>{{cite book |author= Newall, Venetia |coauthors= Richard Mercer Dorson |title= The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft & Magic |year= 1974 |publisher= The Dial Press |location= New York |isbn= 978-0-8037-2343-6 |page= 121 |quote= He performed many feats of magic, sailing through the ocean in a house of glass and transporting Stonehenge across the sea from Ireland. }}</ref> | |||
Boris Ermolaev, a Russian psychic, was known for levitating small objects. His methods were exposed on the World of Discovery documentary ''Secrets of the Russian Psychics'' (1992). He would sit on a chair and allegedly move the objects between his knees; but when filmed, lighting conditions revealed a fine thread fixed between his knees, suspending the objects.<ref name="Polidoro"/> | |||
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Russian psychic Alla Vinogradova was said to be able to move objects without touching them on transparent acrylic plastic or a plexiglass sheet. Parapsychologist ] observed Vinogradova rub an aluminum tube before moving it allegedly by telekinesis. He suggested that the effect was produced by an ]. Vinogradova was featured in the Nova documentary '']'' (1993) which followed the ] work of ].<ref name="Polidoro"/> She demonstrated her alleged telekinetic abilities on-camera for Randi and other investigators. Before the experiments, she was observed combing her hair and rubbing the surface of the acrylic plastic. ] has replicated Vinogradova's feats with acrylic surface, showing how easy it is to move any kind of object on it when it is charged with static electricity by rubbing a towel or hand on it.<ref name="Polidoro"/> Physicist ] wrote, "It is very likely that electrostatics is all that is needed to explain Alla Vinogradova's apparently paranormal feats."<ref name="Taylor"/>{{rp|103}} | |||
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Psychokinesis has been an aspect in movies, television, computer games, literature, and other forms of popular culture, often presented as a ]. An early example is the 1952 novella '']'' by ]. Notable portrayals of psychokinetic characters include ] as a troubled high school student in the 1976 film '']'', based on the ] ], and ] in the healer-themed film ] (1980).<ref> | |||
===Metal bending=== | |||
{{cite web | |||
{{See also|Spoon bending}} | |||
| title = http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-awards-and-nominations/carrie.3 1 | |||
] was famous for his spoon bending demonstrations.]] | |||
| url = http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-awards-and-nominations/carrie.3 1 | |||
Psychics have also claimed the telekinetic ability to bend metal. ] was famous for his ] demonstrations, allegedly by telekinesis.<ref name=Berger/> He has been caught many times using ]. According to science writer ], all of Geller's effects have been recreated using conjuring tricks.<ref name="Randi">{{cite book|last1=Randi|first1=James|title=The Truth About Uri Geller|date=1982|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=978-0879751999|edition=Revised|title-link=The Truth About Uri Geller}}</ref><ref name="Hines">{{cite book|last1=Hines|first1=Terence|author-link=Terence Hines|title=Pseudoscience and the Paranormal|date=2002|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York|isbn=9781573929790|edition=2nd|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Px0RAQAAIAAJ|access-date=11 December 2015}}</ref>{{rp|126–130}} | |||
| accessdate = September 30, 2011 | |||
}}</ref><ref> | |||
The French psychic Jean-Pierre Girard has claimed he can bend metal bars by telekinesis. He was tested in the 1970s but failed to produce any paranormal effects in scientifically controlled conditions.<ref name="Blanc">{{cite journal|last1=Blanc|first1=Marcel|title=Fading spoon bender|journal=New Scientist|date=16 February 1978|volume=77|issue=1090|page=431|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rTTswrb4YRMC&q=Jean-Pierre+Girard+psychokinesis&pg=PA431|access-date=17 February 2017|language=en|issn=0262-4079}}</ref> He was tested on January 19, 1977, during a two-hour experiment in a ] laboratory, directed by physicist Yves Farge. A magician was also present. Girard failed to make any objects move paranormally. He failed two tests in ] in June 1977 with magician James Randi.<ref name="Blanc"/> He was also tested on September 24, 1977, at a laboratory at the Nuclear Research Centre, and failed to bend any bars or change the metals' structure. Other experiments into spoon-bending were also negative, and witnesses described his feats as fraudulent. Girard later admitted he sometimes cheated to avoid disappointing the public, but insisted he had genuine psychic power.<ref name="Blanc"/> Magicians and scientists have written that he produced all his alleged telekinetic feats through fraudulent means.<ref name="Randi"/><ref>{{cite book|last1=Jones|first1=Warren H.|last2=Zusne|first2=Leonard|title=Anomalistic Psychology: A Study of Magical Thinking|date=1989|publisher=L. Erlbaum|location=Hillsdale, New Jersey|isbn=978-0805805086|edition=2nd}}</ref> | |||
{{cite web | |||
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Stephen North, a British psychic in the late 1970s, was known for his alleged telekinetic ability to bend spoons and ] objects in and out of sealed containers. British physicist ] tested North in a series of experiments which he claimed had demonstrated telekinesis, though his experiments were criticized for lack of scientific controls.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hasted|first1=John|title=The Metal-Benders|date=1981|publisher=Routledge & Paul|location=London|isbn=978-0710005977}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=February 2017}}<ref>{{cite book|last1=Gardner|first1=Martin|author-link=Martin Gardner|title=The New Age: Notes of a Fringe watcher|date=1991|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=978-0879756444|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/newagenotesof00gard/page/28}}</ref> North was tested in Grenoble on December 19, 1977, in scientific conditions and the results were negative.<ref name="Blanc"/> According to James Randi, during a test at ], North was observed to have bent a metal sample with his bare hands. Randi wrote "I find it unfortunate that never had an epiphany in which he was able to recognize just how thoughtless, cruel, and predatory were the acts perpetrated on him by fakers who took advantage of his naivety and trust."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Randi|first1=James|title=Flim-Flam!: Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions|date=1987|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Buffalo, New York|isbn=978-0879751982|edition=9th}}</ref> | |||
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| accessdate = September 30, 2011 | |||
"Telekinesis parties" were a cultural fad in the 1980s, begun by Jack Houck,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/latimes/obituary.aspx?pid=163910022 |title=George Houck Obituary |website=Los Angeles Times |access-date=2014-04-18}}</ref> where groups of people were guided through rituals and chants to awaken metal-bending powers. They were encouraged to shout at the items of cutlery they had brought and to jump and scream to create an atmosphere of pandemonium (or what scientific investigators called heightened ]). Critics were excluded and participants were told to avoid looking at their hands. Thousands of people attended these emotionally charged parties, and many were convinced they had bent the objects by paranormal means.<ref name="Frazier"/>{{rp|149–161}} | |||
}}</ref> Psychokinesis is also commonly used as a power in a large number of ]s and ]s. | |||
Telekinesis parties have been described as a campaign by paranormal believers to convince people of the existence of telekinesis, on the basis of nonscientific data from personal experience and testimony. The ] has criticized telekinesis parties on the grounds that conditions are not reliable for obtaining scientific results and "are just those which psychologists and others have described as creating states of heightened suggestibility."<ref name="Frazier"/>{{rp|149–161}} | |||
Ronnie Marcus, an Israeli psychic and claimant of telekinetic metal-bending, was tested in 1994 in scientifically controlled conditions and failed to produce any paranormal phenomena.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://archive.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/2062-the-song-remains-the-same.html |title=The Song Remains the Same |publisher=James Randi Educational Foundation |access-date=2014-03-13}}</ref> According to magicians, his alleged telekinetic feats were sleight of hand tricks. Marcus bent a letter opener by the concealed application of force and a frame-by-frame analysis of video showed that he bent a spoon from pressure from his thumb by ordinary, physical means.<ref>{{cite web|author-link=Joe Nickell|last=Nickell|first=Joe|url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/mind_over_metal|title=Mind Over Metal |date=July 2013|publisher=Committee for Skeptical Inquiry|access-date=2014-03-13}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mindspring.com/~anson/randi-hotline/1994/0010.html|title=Randi's Geller Hotline for 1994: Ronnie at Berkeley|publisher=Mindspring.com|date=1994-04-05|access-date=2014-03-13}}</ref> | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
Telekinesis has commonly been portrayed as a ] in comic books, movies, television, video games, literature, and other forms of popular culture.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://images.businessweek.com/ss/10/10/1019_superhero_tech/19.htm |title=Twenty Technologies That Can Give You Super Powers: Super Power: Psychokinesis |publisher=BusinessWeek |access-date=2014-04-11 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140111141632/http://images.businessweek.com/ss/10/10/1019_superhero_tech/19.htm |archive-date=January 11, 2014 |df=mdy-all}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Gresh|first1=Lois|last2=Weinberg|first2=Robert|title=The Science of Superheroes|date=2002|publisher=J. Wiley|location=Hoboken, New Jersey|isbn=9780471024606|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/scienceofsuperhe0000gres|url-access=registration|access-date=11 December 2015|quote="Every member of the X-Men had a code name that matched his or her super power. Thus, Archangel, Warren Worthington III, had wings and could fly. Cyclops, Scott Summers, shot deadly power beams from his eyes. Jean Grey, Marvel Girl, was a telekinetic and also a telepath. . . ."}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=CellFactor®: Psychokinetic Wars|url=https://www.playstation.com/en-us/games/cellfactor-psychokinetic-wars-ps3/|website=Playstation|access-date=2014-04-11|date=2014-01-22}}</ref> | |||
Notable portrayals of telekinetic characters include the Teleks in the 1952 ] novella '']'';<ref>{{cite journal|last=Vance|first=Jack|date=January 1952|title=Telek|journal=]|title-link=Telek}}</ref> ] in the ] novel and its ] ] ], '']'';<ref>{{cite web|url=http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie/carrie.3/|title=Carrie (1976) – Overview|publisher=MSN Movies|access-date=2014-04-11|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130410000157/http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie/carrie.3/|archive-date=April 10, 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref> ] in the 1980 healer-themed film '']'';<ref>{{cite web |url=http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-awards-and-nominations/resurrection.5/?ipp=15 |title=Resurrection (1980) – Awards & Nominations |publisher=MSN Movies |access-date=2014-04-11 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140102192232/http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-awards-and-nominations/resurrection.5/?ipp=15 |archive-date=January 2, 2014 |df=mdy-all}}</ref> the ] and ] in the '']'' franchise;<ref>{{cite book|last1=Windham|first1=Ryder|last2=Wallace|first2=Dan|title=Star Wars: The Ultimate Visual Guide|date=2012|publisher=Dorling Kindersley Publishing|location=London, England|isbn=9780756692483|pages=19, 21|edition=Updated and expanded.|quote=Page 19 "Object Movement": "Although such ability is commonly known as a ] 'object movement' power, it is more accurately described as a manipulation of ] — the energy field that surrounds and binds everything — to control the direction of objects through space. Jedi utilize this talent not only to push, pull, and lift objects, but also to redirect projectiles and guide their starships through combat." Page 21 "] Powers" : "Levitating his adversary and choking him in a telekinetic stranglehold, ] simultaneously relieves Vos of his lightsaber."}}</ref> the Psychic-type Pokémon in the '']'' franchise,{{Citation needed|date=August 2021}} the Scanners in the 1981 film '']'';,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1018315-scanners/ |title=Scanners |publisher=Rotten Tomatoes |access-date=2014-04-11}}</ref> George Malley in John Travolta’s 1996 movie '']'', ] in the 1988 children's novel '']'' and its ];<ref>{{cite news|author=Serena Allott |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/8160186/Waltzing-Matilda-Dahls-classic-dances-on-to-the-stage.html |title=Waltzing Matilda: Dahl's classic dances on to the stage |publisher=Daily Telegraph |date=2010-11-26 |access-date=2016-08-09}}</ref> three high school seniors in the 2012 film '']'';<ref>{{cite news|last1=Sharkey|first1=Betsy|title=Review: 'Chronicle' is smart about its telekinetic teens|url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-xpm-2012-feb-03-la-et-chronicle-20120203-story.html|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|access-date=2014-04-11|date=2012-02-03}}</ref> ] as well as Vecna and various lab children from the ] series '']'';<ref>{{cite news|last1=Chaney|first1=Jen|title=Stranger Things' Millie Bobby Brown on Playing Eleven, Her Love-Hate Relationship With Scary Movies, and Acting Without Speaking|url=http://www.vulture.com/2016/07/stranger-things-millie-bobby-brown-playing-eleven-scary-movies.html|access-date=16 October 2016|work=Vulture|date=18 July 2016|language=en}}</ref> ] in the '']'' game and series franchise;<ref>{{cite web |last1=Amaike |first1=Yoshinari |title=Creating Silver the Hedgehog |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2006/09/26/creating-silver-the-hedgehog |website=] |access-date=4 April 2021 |language=en |date=26 September 2006}}</ref> ] from the '']'' franchise{{Citation needed|date=November 2021}} and ] in the 2018 film '']''.{{Citation needed|date=December 2020}} | |||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
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==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
* {{cite book|author1=Henry Gordon|author-link1=Henry Gordon (magician)|title=Extrasensory Deception: ESP, Psychics, Shirley MacLaine, Ghosts, UFOs|date=1988|publisher=Macmillan of Canada|location=Toronto|isbn=978-0771595394|edition=Canadian|url=https://archive.org/details/extrasensorydece0000gord}} | |||
*''Minds and motion: the riddle of psychokinesis'', ], Taplinger Pub. Co., 1978. | |||
* {{cite book|author1=David F. Marks|author-link1=David Marks (psychologist)|title=The Psychology of the Psychic|date=2000|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York|isbn=978-1573927987|edition=2nd|title-link=The Psychology of the Psychic}} | |||
*''To stretch a plank: a survey of psychokinesis'', Diana Robinson, Nelson-Hall, 1981. | |||
* {{cite book|author1=Richard Wiseman|author-link1=Richard Wiseman|title=Deception & Self-Seception: Investigating Psychics|date=1997|publisher=Prometheus Books|location=Amherst, New York|isbn=9781573921213}} | |||
* ''The Conscious Universe: The Scientific Truth of Psychic Phenomena, ''], HarperEdge, 1997. | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Panati |first1=Charles |title=Supersenses, Our Potential for Parasensory Experience |date=1974 |publisher=] |location=New York |isbn=9780385111928 |url=https://archive.org/details/supersensesourpo0000pana}} | |||
* {{cite book| author = William Braud| title = Distant mental influence: its contributions to science, healing, and human interactions| url = http://books.google.com/?id=WEUHAAAACAAJ| date = 2003-12| publisher = Hampton Roads Pub Co Inc| isbn = 978-1-57174-354-1 }} | |||
* {{cite book| author = Richard John Wiseman| title = Deception & self-deception: investigating psychics| url = http://books.google.com/?id=pDMNAQAAMAAJ| year = 1997| isbn = 978-1-57392-121-3 }} | |||
* {{cite book| author = Charles T. Tart| coauthors = Huston Smith, Kendra Smith| title = The end of materialism: how evidence of the paranormal is bringing science and spirit together| url = http://books.google.com/?id=tzZj0FHfMggC| date = 2009-03-15| publisher = Ions / Nhp| isbn = 978-1-57224-645-4 }} | |||
* ''Entangled Minds: Extrasensory Experiences in a Quantum Reality,'' ], Pocket Books, 2006. | |||
* {{cite book| author = Diane Hennacy Powell| title = The ESP Enigma: The Scientific Case for Psychic Phenomena| url = http://books.google.com/?id=pvlv2efnFY0C| date = 2009-01-13| publisher = Walker & Company| isbn = 978-0-8027-1606-4 }} | |||
* {{cite book| author = Lynne McTaggart| title = The Field: The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe| url = http://books.google.com/?id=VtNaz_vSnIIC| date = 2007-12-18| publisher = Harper Paperbacks| isbn = 978-0-06-143518-8 }} | |||
* {{cite book| author = James Randi| title = Flim-flam!: psychics, ESP, unicorns, and other delusions| url = http://books.google.com/?id=UHoQAQAAIAAJ| date = 1982-06-01| publisher = Pyr Books| isbn = 978-0-87975-198-2 }} | |||
* {{cite book| author = James Houran| coauthors = Rense Lange| title = Hauntings and poltergeists: multidisciplinary perspectives| url = http://books.google.com/?id=BwTP31-3JRcC| date = 2001-06-30| publisher = McFarland & Company| isbn = 978-0-7864-0984-6 }} | |||
* {{cite book| author = Thomas Gilovich| title = How we know what isn't so: the fallibility of human reason in everyday life| url = http://books.google.com/?id=LURGkHCPAJEC| year = 1993| publisher = Free Press| isbn = 978-0-02-911706-4 }} | |||
===Published Papers on PK / TK=== | |||
* A journal of PK-related research papers published by EmergentMind.org. | |||
* by Holger Bösch, Fiona Steinkamp, and Emil Boller, ''Psychological Bulletin'', 132, 497-523, 2006. | |||
* by Eckhard Etzold ''Journal of Parapsychology'', Fall 2005. | |||
* by Eckhard Etzold, presented at the Parapsychological Association Convention 2004. | |||
* by Jack Houck, presented at the Science of Whole Person Healing Conference, March 28, 2003. | |||
* "Can Our Intentions Interact Directly with the Physical World?" by William G. Braud, ''European Journal of Parapsychology'', Vol. 10, 1994. | |||
* "A review of psychokinesis (PK)" by Edward Girden (1962). ''Psychological Bulletin'' 59 (5) pages 353-388 {{doi|10.1037/h0048209}} | |||
* {{dead link|date=March 2012}} by Robert G. Jahn, ''(1982) Proceedings IEEE, 70, No.2, pp. 136–170. | |||
* by Victor A. Benassi, Paul D. Sweeney, and Gregg E. Drevno (1979). ''Journal of Personality and Social Psychology'' 37 (8) pp. 1377–1386. {{doi|10.1037/0022-3514.37.8.1377}} | |||
===Military Papers on PK / TK=== | |||
* A 1985 study on potential military applications of psychokinesis by the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas USA. Listed at the U.S. ]'s website and available to the public through the U.S. National Technical Information Service. | |||
* A study published in 2004 that reviews the current state research of real and hypothetical methods of teleportation. Includes a section titled ''PK phenomenon''. Conducted by Eric Davis of Warp Drive Metrics, Nevada and sponsored by the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory at Edwards AFB, California. Available publicly on the Federation of American Scientists website. | |||
* A 1967 study by Helmut Schmidt conducted at the Boeing Scientific Research Laboratory in Seattle, Washington USA that concluded: "From the results, it is tentatively concluded that there exists a weak but significant correlation between the statistical processes operative in these experiments and the experimenter who initiates the processes." Listed at the U.S. ]'s website and available to the public through the U.S. National Technical Information Service. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Commons category|Psychokinesis}} | |||
* hosted at Princeton University in the United States. | |||
* entry in the online edition of the ''Skeptic's Dictionary'' by philosopher Robert Todd Carroll. | |||
* | |||
* A series of scientifically controlled, web-based PK experiments. | |||
* An invitation by the Rhine Research Center of Durham, North Carolina USA to submit reports of PK as part of an academic research study. | |||
* Includes the "List of Cultural References to Psychokinesis and Telekinesis" that was formerly on Misplaced Pages. | |||
* {{dmoz|Society/Paranormal/Psychic/Psychokinesis/|Psychokinesis}} | |||
* '']'', October 23, 2009. In depth article on the U.S. military's psychic "super-soldier" program with emphasis on DMILS (Direct Mental Interaction with Living Systems). | |||
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Latest revision as of 05:05, 7 January 2025
Influencing of objects without physical interaction "Psychokinesis" redirects here. For the film, see Psychokinesis (film). For other uses, see Telekinesis (disambiguation).
Telekinesis (from Ancient Greek τηλε- 'far off' and -κίνησις 'motion') is a purported psychic ability allowing an individual to influence a physical system without physical interaction. Experiments to prove the existence of telekinesis have historically been criticized for lack of proper controls and repeatability. There is no reliable evidence that telekinesis is a real phenomenon, and the topic is generally regarded as pseudoscience.
Reception
Evaluation
There is a broad scientific consensus that telekinetic research has not produced a reliable demonstration of the phenomenon.
A panel commissioned in 1988 by the United States National Research Council to study paranormal claims concluded that:
despite a 130-year record of scientific research on such matters, our committee could find no scientific justification for the existence of phenomena such as extrasensory perception, mental telepathy or "mind over matter" exercises ... Evaluation of a large body of the best available evidence simply does not support the contention that these phenomena exist.
In 1984, the National Academy of Sciences, at the request of the US Army Research Institute, formed a scientific panel to assess the best evidence for telekinesis. Part of its purpose was to investigate military applications of telekinesis, for example to remotely jam or disrupt enemy weaponry. The panel heard from a variety of military staff who believed in telekinesis and made visits to the PEAR laboratory and two other laboratories that had claimed positive results from micro-telekinesis experiments. The panel criticized macro-telekinesis experiments for being open to deception by conjurors, and said that virtually all micro-telekinesis experiments "depart from good scientific practice in a variety of ways". Their conclusion, published in a 1987 report, was that there was no scientific evidence for the existence of telekinesis.
Carl Sagan included telekinesis in a long list of "offerings of pseudoscience and superstition" which "it would be foolish to accept ... without solid scientific data". Nobel Prize laureate Richard Feynman advocated a similar position.
Felix Planer, a professor of electrical engineering, has written that if telekinesis were real then it would be easy to demonstrate by getting subjects to depress a scale on a sensitive balance, raise the temperature of a waterbath which could be measured with an accuracy of a hundredth of a degree centigrade, or affect an element in an electrical circuit such as a resistor, which could be monitored to better than a millionth of an ampere. Planer writes that such experiments are extremely sensitive and easy to monitor but are not utilized by parapsychologists as they "do not hold out the remotest hope of demonstrating even a minute trace of " because the alleged phenomenon is non-existent. Planer has written that parapsychologists have to fall back on studies that involve only statistics that are unrepeatable, owing their results to poor experimental methods, recording mistakes and faulty statistical mathematics.
According to Planer, "All research in medicine and other sciences would become illusionary, if the existence of had to be taken seriously; for no experiment could be relied upon to furnish objective results, since all measurements would become falsified to a greater or lesser degree, according to his ability, by the experimenter's wishes." Planer concluded that the concept of telekinesis is absurd and has no scientific basis.
Telekinesis hypotheses have also been considered in a number of contexts outside parapsychological experiments. C. E. M. Hansel has written that a general objection against the claim for the existence of telekinesis is that, if it were a real process, its effects would be expected to manifest in situations in everyday life; but no such effects have been observed.
Science writers Martin Gardner and Terence Hines and the philosopher Theodore Schick have written that if telekinesis were possible, one would expect casino incomes to be affected, but the earnings are exactly as the laws of chance predict.
Psychologist Nicholas Humphrey argues that many experiments in psychology, biology or physics assume that the intentions of the subjects or experimenter do not physically distort the apparatus. Humphrey counts them as implicit replications of telekinesis experiments in which telekinesis fails to appear.
Physics
The ideas of telekinesis violates several well-established laws of physics, including the inverse-square law, the second law of thermodynamics, and the conservation of momentum. Because of this, scientists have demanded a high standard of evidence for telekinesis, in line with Marcello Truzzi's dictum "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof". The Occam's razor law of parsimony in scientific explanations of phenomena suggests that the explanation of telekinesis in terms of ordinary ways—by trickery, special effects or by poor experimental design—is preferable to accepting that the laws of physics should be rewritten.
Philosopher and physicist Mario Bunge has written that:
violates the principle that mind cannot act directly on matter. (If it did, no experimenter could trust his readings of measuring instruments.) It also violates the principles of conservation of energy and momentum. The claim that quantum mechanics allows for the possibility of mental power influencing randomizers—an alleged case of micro-—is ludicrous since that theory respects the said conservation principles, and it deals exclusively with physical things.
Physicist John Taylor, who has investigated parapsychological claims, has written that an unknown fifth force causing telekinesis would have to transmit a great deal of energy. The energy would have to overcome the electromagnetic forces binding the atoms together, because the atoms would need to respond more strongly to the fifth force than to electric forces. Such an additional force between atoms should therefore exist all the time and not during only alleged paranormal occurrences. Taylor wrote there is no scientific trace of such a force in physics, down to many orders of magnitude; thus, if a scientific viewpoint is to be preserved, the idea of any fifth force must be discarded. Taylor concluded that there is no possible physical mechanism for telekinesis, and it is in complete contradiction to established science.
In 1979, Evan Harris Walker and Richard Mattuck published a parapsychology paper proposing a quantum explanation for telekinesis. Physicist Victor J. Stenger wrote that their explanation contained assumptions not supported by any scientific evidence. According to Stenger their paper is "filled with impressive looking equations and calculations that give the appearance of placing on a firm scientific footing... Yet look what they have done. They have found the value of one unknown number (wavefunction steps) that gives one measured number (the supposed speed of -induced motion). This is numerology, not science."
Physicist Sean M. Carroll has written that spoons, like all matter, are made up of atoms and that any movement of a spoon with the mind would involve the manipulation of those atoms through the four forces of nature: the strong nuclear force, the weak nuclear force, electromagnetism, and gravitation. Telekinesis would have to be either some form of one of these four forces, or a new force that has a billionth the strength of gravity, for otherwise it would have been captured in experiments already done. This leaves no physical force that could possibly account for telekinesis.
Physicist Robert L. Park has found it suspicious that a phenomenon should only ever appear at the limits of detectability of questionable statistical techniques. He cites this feature as one of Irving Langmuir's indicators of pathological science. Park pointed out that if mind really could influence matter, it would be easy for parapsychologists to measure such a phenomenon by using the alleged telekinetic power to deflect a microbalance, which would not require any dubious statistics. "he reason, of course, is that the microbalance stubbornly refuses to budge." He has suggested that the reason statistical studies are so popular in parapsychology is that they introduce opportunities for uncertainty and error, which are used to support the experimenter's biases.
Explanations in terms of bias
Cognitive bias research has suggested that people are susceptible to illusions of telekinesis. These include both the illusion that they themselves have the power, and that the events they witness are real demonstrations of telekinesis. For example, the illusion of control is an illusory correlation between intention and external events, and believers in the paranormal have been shown to be more susceptible to this illusion than others. Psychologist Thomas Gilovich explains this as a biased interpretation of personal experience. For example, someone in a dice game wishing for a high score can interpret high numbers as "success" and low numbers as "not enough concentration". Bias towards belief in telekinesis may be an example of the human tendency to see patterns where none exist, called the clustering illusion, which believers are also more susceptible to.
A 1952 study tested for experimenter's bias with respect to telekinesis. Richard Kaufman of Yale University gave subjects the task of trying to influence eight dice and allowed them to record their own scores. They were secretly filmed, so their records could be checked for errors. Believers in telekinesis made errors that favored its existence, while disbelievers made opposite errors. A similar pattern of errors was found in J. B. Rhine's dice experiments, which were considered the strongest evidence for telekinesis at that time.
In 1995, Wiseman and Morris showed subjects an unedited videotape of a magician's performance in which a fork bent and eventually broke. Believers in the paranormal were significantly more likely to misinterpret the tape as a demonstration of telekinesis, and were more likely to misremember crucial details of the presentation. This suggests that confirmation bias affects people's interpretation of telekinesis demonstrations. Psychologist Robert Sternberg cites confirmation bias as an explanation of why belief in psychic phenomena persists, despite the lack of evidence:
Some of the worst examples of confirmation bias are in research on parapsychology ... Arguably, there is a whole field here with no powerful confirming data at all. But people want to believe, and so they find ways to believe.
Psychologist Daniel Wegner has argued that an introspection illusion contributes to belief in telekinesis. He observes that in everyday experience, intention (such as wanting to turn on a light) is followed by action (such as flicking a light switch) in a reliable way, but the underlying neural mechanisms are outside awareness. Hence, though subjects may feel that they directly introspect their own free will, the experience of control is actually inferred from relations between the thought and the action. This theory of apparent mental causation acknowledges the influence of David Hume's view of the mind. This process for detecting when one is responsible for an action is not totally reliable, and when it goes wrong there can be an illusion of control. This can happen when an external event follows, and is congruent with, a thought in someone's mind, without an actual causal link. As evidence, Wegner cites a series of experiments on magical thinking in which subjects were induced to think they had influenced external events. In one experiment, subjects watched a basketball player taking a series of free throws. When they were instructed to visualize him making his shots, they felt that they had contributed to his success. Other experiments designed to create an illusion of telekinesis have demonstrated that this depends, to some extent, on the subject's prior belief in telekinesis.
A 2006 meta-analysis of 380 studies found a small positive effect that can be explained by publication bias.
Magic and special effects
See also: MentalismMagicians have successfully simulated some of the specialized abilities of telekinesis, such as object movement, spoon bending, levitation and teleportation. According to Robert Todd Carroll, there are many impressive magic tricks available to amateurs and professionals to simulate telekinetic powers. Metal objects such as keys or cutlery can be bent using a number of different techniques, even if the performer has not had access to the items beforehand.
According to Richard Wiseman there are a number of ways for faking telekinetic metal bending. These include switching straight objects for pre-bent duplicates, the concealed application of force, and secretly inducing metallic fractures. Research has also suggested that telekinetic metal bending effects can be created by verbal suggestion. On this subject the magician Ben Harris wrote:
If you are doing a really convincing job, then you should be able to put a bent key on the table and comment, "Look, it is still bending", and have your spectators really believe that it is. This may sound the height of boldness; however, the effect is astounding – and combined with suggestion, it does work.
Between 1979 and 1981, the McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research at Washington University in St. Louis reported a series of experiments they named Project Alpha, in which two teenaged male subjects had demonstrated telekinesis phenomena (including metal-bending and causing images to appear on film) under less than stringent laboratory conditions. James Randi eventually revealed that the subjects were two of his associates, amateur conjurers Steve Shaw and Michael Edwards. The pair had created the effects by standard trickery, but the researchers, being unfamiliar with magic techniques, interpreted them as proof of telekinesis.
A 2014 study that utilized a magic trick to investigate paranormal belief on eyewitness testimony revealed that believers in telekinesis were more likely to report a key continued to bend than non-believers.
Prize money for proof of telekinesis
Main article: List of prizes for evidence of the paranormalInternationally, there are individual skeptics of the paranormal and skeptics' organizations who offer cash prize money for demonstration of the existence of an extraordinary psychic power, such as telekinesis. Prizes have been offered specifically for telekinesis demonstrations: for example, businessman Gerald Fleming promised to offer £250,000 to Uri Geller if he could bend a spoon under controlled conditions. The James Randi Educational Foundation offered the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge to any accepted candidate who managed to produce a paranormal event in a controlled, mutually agreed upon experiment. Currently, the Center for Inquiry offers a prize of $250,000, the largest in the world, for proof of the paranormal.
Belief
Between 1979 and 1981, a survey on belief in various religious and paranormal topics conducted by phone and mail-in questionnaire polled 1,721 Americans on their belief in telekinesis. Of these participants, 28% of male participants and 31% of female participants selected "agree" or "strongly agree" with the statement, "It is possible to influence the world through the mind alone."
Subsets of telekinesis
Parapsychologists divide telekinetic phenomena into two categories: macro-telekinesis, large-scale telekinetic effects that can be seen with the naked eye; and micro-telekinesis, small-scale telekinetic effects that require the use of statistics to be detected. Some phenomena—such as apports, levitation, materialization, psychic healing, pyrokinesis, retrocausality, and thoughtography—are considered examples of telekinesis.
In 2016, Caroline Watt stated "Overall, the majority of academic parapsychologists do not find the evidence compelling in favour of macro-".
Notable claimants of telekinetic abilities
There have been claimants of telekinetic ability throughout history. Angelique Cottin (ca. 1846) known as the "Electric Girl" of France was an alleged generator of telekinetic activity. Cottin and her family claimed that she produced electric emanations that allowed her to move pieces of furniture and scissors across a room. Frank Podmore wrote there were many observations which were "suggestive of fraud" such as the contact of the girl's garments to produce any of the alleged phenomena and the observations from several witnesses that noticed there was a double movement on the part of Cottin, a movement in the direction of the object thrown and afterwards away from it, but the movements so rapid they were not usually detected.
Spiritualist mediums have also claimed telekinetic abilities. Eusapia Palladino, an Italian medium, could allegedly cause objects to move during séances. However, she was caught levitating a table with her foot by magician Joseph Rinn, and using tricks to move objects by psychologist Hugo Münsterberg. Other alleged telekinetic mediums exposed as frauds include Anna Rasmussen and Maria Silbert.
Polish medium Stanisława Tomczyk, active in the early 20th century, claimed to be able to perform acts of telekinetic levitation by way of an entity she called "Little Stasia". A 1909 photograph of her, showing a pair of scissors "floating" between her hands, is often found in books and other publications as an example of telekinesis. Scientists suspected Tomczyk performed her feats by the use of a fine thread or hair between her hands. This was confirmed when psychical researchers who tested Tomczyk occasionally observed the thread.
Many of India's "godmen" have claimed macro-telekinetic abilities and demonstrated apparently miraculous phenomena in public, although as more controls are put in place to prevent trickery, fewer phenomena are produced.
Annemarie Schaberl, a 19-year-old secretary, was said to have telekinetic powers by parapsychologist Hans Bender in the Rosenheim Poltergeist case in the 1960s. Magicians and scientists who investigated the case suspected the phenomena were produced by trickery.
Swami Rama, a yogi skilled in controlling his heart functions, was studied at the Menninger Foundation in the spring and fall of 1970 and was alleged by some observers at the foundation to have telekinetically moved a knitting needle twice from a distance of five feet. Although he wore a face-mask and gown to prevent allegations that he moved the needle with his breath or body movements, and air vents in the room were covered, at least one physician observer who was present was not convinced and expressed the opinion that air movement was somehow the cause.
Psychics
Russian psychic Nina Kulagina came to wide public attention following the publication of Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder's bestseller Psychic Discoveries Behind The Iron Curtain. The alleged Soviet psychic of the late 1960s and early 1970s was shown apparently performing telekinesis while seated in numerous black-and-white short films, and was also mentioned in the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency report from 1978. Magicians and skeptics have argued that Kulagina's feats could easily be performed by one practiced in sleight of hand, or through means such as cleverly concealed or disguised threads, small pieces of magnetic metal, or mirrors.
James Hydrick, an American martial arts expert and psychic, was famous for his alleged telekinetic ability to turn the pages of books and make pencils spin while placed on the edge of a desk. It was later revealed by magicians that he achieved his feats by air currents. Psychologist Richard Wiseman wrote that Hydrick learnt to move objects by blowing in a "highly deceptive" and skillful way. Hydrick confessed to Dan Korem that his feats were tricks: "My whole idea behind this in the first place was to see how dumb America was. How dumb the world is." In the late 1970s, British psychic Matthew Manning was the subject of laboratory research in the United States and England, and today claims healing powers. Magicians John Booth and Henry Gordon have suspected Manning used trickery to perform his feats.
In 1971, an American psychic named Felicia Parise allegedly moved a pill bottle across a kitchen counter by telekinesis. Her feats were endorsed by parapsychologist Charles Honorton. Science writer Martin Gardner wrote that Parise had "bamboozled" Honorton by moving the bottle with an invisible thread stretched between her hands.
Boris Ermolaev, a Russian psychic, was known for levitating small objects. His methods were exposed on the World of Discovery documentary Secrets of the Russian Psychics (1992). He would sit on a chair and allegedly move the objects between his knees; but when filmed, lighting conditions revealed a fine thread fixed between his knees, suspending the objects.
Russian psychic Alla Vinogradova was said to be able to move objects without touching them on transparent acrylic plastic or a plexiglass sheet. Parapsychologist Stanley Krippner observed Vinogradova rub an aluminum tube before moving it allegedly by telekinesis. He suggested that the effect was produced by an electrostatic charge. Vinogradova was featured in the Nova documentary Secrets of the Psychics (1993) which followed the debunking work of James Randi. She demonstrated her alleged telekinetic abilities on-camera for Randi and other investigators. Before the experiments, she was observed combing her hair and rubbing the surface of the acrylic plastic. Massimo Polidoro has replicated Vinogradova's feats with acrylic surface, showing how easy it is to move any kind of object on it when it is charged with static electricity by rubbing a towel or hand on it. Physicist John Taylor wrote, "It is very likely that electrostatics is all that is needed to explain Alla Vinogradova's apparently paranormal feats."
Metal bending
See also: Spoon bendingPsychics have also claimed the telekinetic ability to bend metal. Uri Geller was famous for his spoon bending demonstrations, allegedly by telekinesis. He has been caught many times using sleight of hand. According to science writer Terence Hines, all of Geller's effects have been recreated using conjuring tricks.
The French psychic Jean-Pierre Girard has claimed he can bend metal bars by telekinesis. He was tested in the 1970s but failed to produce any paranormal effects in scientifically controlled conditions. He was tested on January 19, 1977, during a two-hour experiment in a Paris laboratory, directed by physicist Yves Farge. A magician was also present. Girard failed to make any objects move paranormally. He failed two tests in Grenoble in June 1977 with magician James Randi. He was also tested on September 24, 1977, at a laboratory at the Nuclear Research Centre, and failed to bend any bars or change the metals' structure. Other experiments into spoon-bending were also negative, and witnesses described his feats as fraudulent. Girard later admitted he sometimes cheated to avoid disappointing the public, but insisted he had genuine psychic power. Magicians and scientists have written that he produced all his alleged telekinetic feats through fraudulent means.
Stephen North, a British psychic in the late 1970s, was known for his alleged telekinetic ability to bend spoons and teleport objects in and out of sealed containers. British physicist John Hasted tested North in a series of experiments which he claimed had demonstrated telekinesis, though his experiments were criticized for lack of scientific controls. North was tested in Grenoble on December 19, 1977, in scientific conditions and the results were negative. According to James Randi, during a test at Birkbeck College, North was observed to have bent a metal sample with his bare hands. Randi wrote "I find it unfortunate that never had an epiphany in which he was able to recognize just how thoughtless, cruel, and predatory were the acts perpetrated on him by fakers who took advantage of his naivety and trust."
"Telekinesis parties" were a cultural fad in the 1980s, begun by Jack Houck, where groups of people were guided through rituals and chants to awaken metal-bending powers. They were encouraged to shout at the items of cutlery they had brought and to jump and scream to create an atmosphere of pandemonium (or what scientific investigators called heightened suggestibility). Critics were excluded and participants were told to avoid looking at their hands. Thousands of people attended these emotionally charged parties, and many were convinced they had bent the objects by paranormal means.
Telekinesis parties have been described as a campaign by paranormal believers to convince people of the existence of telekinesis, on the basis of nonscientific data from personal experience and testimony. The United States National Academy of Sciences has criticized telekinesis parties on the grounds that conditions are not reliable for obtaining scientific results and "are just those which psychologists and others have described as creating states of heightened suggestibility."
Ronnie Marcus, an Israeli psychic and claimant of telekinetic metal-bending, was tested in 1994 in scientifically controlled conditions and failed to produce any paranormal phenomena. According to magicians, his alleged telekinetic feats were sleight of hand tricks. Marcus bent a letter opener by the concealed application of force and a frame-by-frame analysis of video showed that he bent a spoon from pressure from his thumb by ordinary, physical means.
In popular culture
Telekinesis has commonly been portrayed as a superpower ability in comic books, movies, television, video games, literature, and other forms of popular culture.
Notable portrayals of telekinetic characters include the Teleks in the 1952 Jack Vance novella Telek; Carrie White in the Stephen King novel and its three film adaptations, Carrie; Ellen Burstyn in the 1980 healer-themed film Resurrection; the Jedi and Sith in the Star Wars franchise; the Psychic-type Pokémon in the Pokémon franchise, the Scanners in the 1981 film Scanners;, George Malley in John Travolta’s 1996 movie Phenomenon, Matilda Wormwood in the 1988 children's novel Matilda and its 1996 film adaptation; three high school seniors in the 2012 film Chronicle; Eleven as well as Vecna and various lab children from the Netflix series Stranger Things; Silver the Hedgehog in the Sonic the Hedgehog game and series franchise; Ness from the Mother franchise and Shin Seok-heon in the 2018 film Psychokinesis.
See also
- Clairvoyance
- Energy (esotericism)
- Extrasensory perception
- Force
- Force field (physics)
- Force field (technology)
- Human magnetism
- List of psychic abilities
- List of topics characterized as pseudoscience
- Levitation (paranormal)
- Psi (parapsychology)
- Science fiction
- Spiritism
- Telepathy
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Further reading
- Henry Gordon (1988). Extrasensory Deception: ESP, Psychics, Shirley MacLaine, Ghosts, UFOs (Canadian ed.). Toronto: Macmillan of Canada. ISBN 978-0771595394.
- David F. Marks (2000). The Psychology of the Psychic (2nd ed.). Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-1573927987.
- Richard Wiseman (1997). Deception & Self-Seception: Investigating Psychics. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 9781573921213.
- Panati, Charles (1974). Supersenses, Our Potential for Parasensory Experience. New York: Times Books. ISBN 9780385111928.