IF WHALES CAN DO IT?
If whales can do it, why can't humans?
Scientific research has established that whales possess a form of
communication that allows them to signal other whales hundreds of miles
away. Some experts say it's a form of telepathy. Does human telepathy
exist? Is there scientific evidence for this particular form of
extra-sensory perception (ESP)? Certainly if human telepathy existed
we
could explain many weird human experiences. Telepathy would account
for
how the Sydney mother "saw" her daughter miles away roll her
car over in a
traffic accident and "saw" her injured and trapped within
the wreckage. It
would explain the Adelaide woman who "felt" her mother die
suddenly at the
precise moment she passed away half way around the world in London.
Telepathy would explain many strange little happenings. We hear the
telephone ring and we know who's ringing before we pick up the phone.
The fact remains that there is no scientific proof that human telepathy
exists.
Telepathy means direct communication from one mind to another. It refers
to the supposed ability to perceive the thoughts of others without the
use
of recognized senses. The term was first used in 1882 by psychologist,
F.W. Myers. If telepathy existed, it would dramatically violate several
established laws of physics. For instance, with telepathy, it doesn't
seem
to matter how far apart two people are or how many other people there
are
in between them when the "communication" takes place. The
messages seem to
be able to span great distances, slide around corners, penetrate walls,
and
travel under water. The process is not even strictly bound by time.
Those who have attempted to account for so-called telepathic experiences
usually cite one of two explanations. The first is the "radio wave
theory". According to this idea, telepathy works like radio waves.
People
often speak of "vibes" as though there were telepathic "brain-waves"
going
from one person to another. The problem with this theory is that if
there
were some kind of wave, we ought to be able to detect it coming from
people's brains. But we cannot. The brain's electrical activity can
be
detected at best only a few centimeters away from the skull. There would
also need to be a "vibes" transmitter in one brain and a "vibes"
receiver
in the other brain. No sign of either has ever been detected in any
human
brain. Also, the strength of the "signal" ought to decay with
distance.
But it seems that it doesn't. The second is the "timeless/spaceless
psychic field" theory. According to this idea, there is some unknown
"psychic field" in which the impressions of every thought
are stored are
stored for all time. Telepathy involves picking-up "vibes"
from this
psychic field. However, no evidence for any such a "psychic field"
exists.
Furthermore, if it did, we would be inundated with the trillions of
thoughts left behind by every human who ever existed---everyone from
Alexander the Great to Hitler's tailor. It is inconceivable to imagine
how
one brain could pick up only those messages it needed and ignore all
the
rest.
Scientists have attempted to obtain evidence for telepathy. A pioneer
in
this effort was Joseph Banks Rhine of Duke University. In 1927, Rhine
began conducting what are still considered the most famous experiments
in
this area. Rhine tested hundreds of people using specially designed
cards
developed by his colleague, Karl Zener. These so-called "ESP cards"
consisted of a deck of 25 cards, five each with one of five figures
on its
face (a star, a cross, a square, a circle, or three wavy lines). After
the
cards were shuffled, subjects attempted to correctly guess the figure
on
the card after the figure was mentally "sent" to them by a
person looking
at it. The number of correct responses was then compared to chance.
Through years of experiments, neither "senders" nor "receivers"
of
telepathic messages were ever discovered to be performing beyond chance.
Hence the verdict: Telepathy doesn't exist.
But today the effort continues to prove telepathy's existence. Dr.
Mario
Varvoglis of the Institut Metapsychique International in Paris has since
the late 1970s used the Galvanic Skin Response Detector (a machine that
detects physiological changes) in experiments similar to Rhine's.
Varvoglis claims that during "sending periods" (when an attempt
is being
made to mentally send a message), the GSR levels are higher in the
"receiver" than during "relax periods"(when no attempt
is being made).
Varvoglis maintains that this indicates that the body may be receiving
a
message, but the brain is unable to pick it up unless the psychological
conditions are perfect. Furthermore, Varvoglis argues that when a
dream-like state is induced in a "receiver" (in what is called
the
"Gansfeld state"), a statistically significant better performance
in the
card guessing task results from most subjects---beyond chance. Of course,
we cannot completely rule out such unusual forms of human communication.
As we learn more about the brain, perhaps we will one day uncover the
full
extent of our brain's communicative ability.
Perhaps we do have some ability that we are now totally unaware of
or
incapable of utilizing, but that if the precise conditions emerge, the
ability will emerge. For example, perhaps when we "see" our
child in
danger, such factors as emotion come into play such that an unusual
communication is possible. Perhaps this ability shows itself fleetingly,
only to hide again in our bodies and brains because conditions are not
precise enough to allow a reappearance.
While science says "No", we don't know for sure. But if whales
can do it,
why can't we?