Are ghosts real or just a scientific phenomenon?

In summary, the conversation discusses the possibility of ghosts or apparitions existing and potential scientific explanations for reported sightings. Some suggest drug-induced hallucinations, mental illness, age-related experiences, and neurological conditions as potential explanations. Others mention the influence of reality TV and the power of suggestion. The conversation also touches on the difficulty of testing and proving these claims, and the idea of using advanced brain imaging technologies for lie detection.
  • #1
conn96
Hi all,

Don't worry, I'm not one of those wackos trying to convince you ghosts exist. I don't even believe in spirits. What I do believe is that people are really experiencing real things, but I believe that there is a scientific explanation to it all. I'm not a physics wiz, so I'm hoping to get some knowledge from you guys. Is there any possible scientific cause to explain ghosts? By ghosts I mean apparitions, if you will, that appear in human form, and appear and disappear. Thanks, looking for a good SCIENTIFIC answer.
 
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  • #2
I can think of three:
1. Drug induced hallucinations.
2. Mental illness
3 Age related ie approaching death many more people see appartions of previously departed loved ones.
 
  • #3
I think you would have to examine case by case, and for folks who DO believe in ghosts that would be a waste of time since it's like religion. No rational explanation is likely to be meaningful to them.
 
  • #4
256bits said:
I can think of three:
1. Drug induced hallucinations.
2. Mental illness
3 Age related ie approaching death many more people see appartions of previously departed loved ones.
It's also a fad. It's "cool" to see ghosts because of the reality tv shows.

The scientific answer is that there is no scientific evidence. Nada.
 
  • #5
256bits said:
I can think of three:
1. Drug induced hallucinations.
2. Mental illness
3 Age related ie approaching death many more people see appartions of previously departed loved ones.

There are also several neurological conditions that cause illusions and outright hallucinations that could be construed as ghosts, depending on how they're interpreted.

For example: I haven't mentioned this one before, but there is a simple partial seizure whose only symptom is the strong feeling of a "presence".

I don't know much about it since I've only seen it mentioned in lists of simple partial seizures, but I surmise it works like this: when we know there is someone else in the room or house with us, we make a mental note of it and keep that knowledge running in the background. There is a dedicated circuit, in fact, that performs this task.

If that circuit starts to fire by itself hyper-synchronously, a person will be overwhelmed by the certainty there is someone in the room or house with them, even when there isn't, because they can so strongly "feel" a presence.

In addition to various kinds of seizures most people have never heard about, people with Migraines and Multiple Sclerosis are subject to all kinds of odd physical and emotional sensations that might get attributed to ghosts; cold spots, the sensation of being touched, that sort of thing.

There is also a phenomenon called "musical hallucinations" which most often happens to elderly people who are hard of hearing: they hallucinate the sound of music, so realistically that they often spend hours trying to track down the radio or TV they think is producing it. This is the sort of thing that might be attributed to ghosts.

Somewhat more indirectly, phantom limb phenomenon used to be supposed to be proof that we had a spirit that would survive the death of the physical body. If your physical arm was gone, but you could still feel it, was that not proof that you were experiencing your spiritual arm?
 
  • #6
Someone who believes in ghosts or entertains them as a viable hypothesis is more likely to incorrectly attribute phenomenon to them e.g. movement in the corner of the eye is attributed to a "spirit" rather than an optical illusion. This is exacerbated when you put said people in an encouraging environment such as surrounded by TV crews and "ghosthunters".

Something else that is worth bearing in mind is confabulation. With repeated telling of an event, especially to people who are encouraging you or going a long with your conclusions it is easy for people to lay down false memories.
 
  • #7
'Ghost Hunters' is a good example of the logic [or lack thereof] that relies on 'did you hear/see/feel/smell/taste that?' evidence. Hard to criticize those guys given they made a living off it.
 
  • #8
As I've discussed here before, my wife and I had some very strange experiences for which, from my pov, I have never seen or heard a reasonable explanation, including those offered in this thread. To this day, some 25 years or so later, the experiences still haunt me [pun intended]. Neither of us have ever had any other similar experiences. They were unique to one apartment in Glendale, Ca. And the only thing I am certain of is that it wasn't our imaginations.

I don't think the word "ghost" has any clear meaning. It is a word used to describe a wide variety of claimed phenomena.
 
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  • #9
While the brain is amazing (relatively) at taking in sensory inputs, analyzing sub-consciously, and provide a "reality" output, it's prone to interpretation errors.

For as long as the moon looks big when low in the horizon, I can't give much weight to a personal experience, group experience ect. None the less, I've read it here. Such experiences may as well have been real.

I believe in the belief of ghosts. :rolleyes:
 
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  • #10
nitsuj said:
I can't give much weight to a personal experience, group experience ect.

Nope, a story is just a story. However, that position of intellectual solace no longer exists for me. And therein lies the rub. There is no evidence that anyone here has ever suggested [that I can remember] that would allow various related claims to be tested, because all such claimed events are transient and unpredictable in nature - not repeatable on demand [even if real]. So there is really no way to test these claims, and a story is just a story, unless the story is yours.

The only thing I can see on the horizon that might help resolve some of this is the ability to determine if a memory is real, and the story truthful, using advanced brain imaging technologies - advanced lie detection, if you will. In some cases, if the stories are real and truthful and this can be demonstrated with a valid test, then it would be far more difficult to dismiss the stories as flights of fancy, lies, etc. There are times when a story doesn't leave much room for doubt that a true mystery exists, if the story is true. If all such stories are lies, then it could be the next challenge for Randi to advertise.
 
  • #11
I agree with your first comment.

The second one; my memory of a Big moon low in the horizon is real, however misrepresented by my brain. the only thing not real is the moon being any bigger and or any closer.
 
  • #12
Ivan Seeking said:
Nope, a story is just a story. However, that position of intellectual solace no longer exists for me. And therein lies the rub. There is no evidence that anyone here has ever suggested [that I can remember] that would allow various related claims to be tested, because all such claimed events are transient and unpredictable in nature - not repeatable on demand [even if real]. So there is really no way to test these claims, and a story is just a story, unless the story is yours.
This isn't absolutely true though. You can learn and discover and come up with empirical explanations that beyond reasonable doubt are true. For example if several people independantly historically reported moving lights in the sky of certain colours, patterns etc and then later we discover the Northern Lights and how the work we could say that was almost certainly what they saw.
Ivan Seeking said:
The only thing I can see on the horizon that might help resolve some of this is the ability to determine if a memory is real, and the story truthful, using advanced brain imaging technologies - advanced lie detection, if you will. In some cases, if the stories are real and truthful and this can be demonstrated with a valid test, then it would be far more difficult to dismiss the stories as flights of fancy, lies, etc. There are times when a story doesn't leave much room for doubt that a true mystery exists, if the story is true. If all such stories are lies, then it could be the next challenge for Randi to advertise.
This may help tell if someone is lying but not if their memory is an accurate recording of events. Our brain both fills in the gaps and makes up memories all the time. Additionally I'm not convinced by this thought experiment that the outcomes would be so clear because the brain does not hold information in the way most people think, even whilst remembering something we are tricked into thinking we have a more complete memory than we do. To expand on that last point here's an excercise: think of any event that happened with friends/family, not recent and not special (i.e. not yesterday and not a wedding). Picture these people at this event, then try to remember what they are wearing. The vast majority of the time you will not be able to yet you still have a memory in which they are clothed as opposed to being a disembodied head. If you continue to persist with this memory you may be able to spot confabulation in real time as your brain fills in what they are wearing with generic clothes or clothes you have seen them wear on other equations.
 
  • #13
Ryan_m_b said:
This isn't absolutely true though. You can learn and discover and come up with empirical explanations that beyond reasonable doubt are true. For example if several people independantly historically reported moving lights in the sky of certain colours, patterns etc and then later we discover the Northern Lights and how the work we could say that was almost certainly what they saw.

The problem I generally see in this regard is that virtually no amount of anecdotal evidence is considered sufficient motivation for serious investigation. But I think the reason for that with topics like this is understandable. The biggest problem with any potential transient and elusive phenomenon is repeatability. Unless you can test something under laboratory conditions, which generally means either producing the phenomenon on demand, or at least knowing it should occur after some number of events, e.g. millions of collisions in a particle collider, it is difficult to justify serious consideration. Where does one even begin? And what benefit will be derived from the research? Who wants to pay for it? Even worse is the complication of perception. Where we have an apparent lack of any concievable, resonable explanation for a class of claims, and then the additional complication of cult and pop followings with their own theories and explanations, the topic gets tagged as crackpot. People tend to stop making the distinction between the evidence [be it purely anecdotal or a more complex mix], and the popular interpretations of the claims.

This may help tell if someone is lying but not if their memory is an accurate recording of events. Our brain both fills in the gaps and makes up memories all the time. Additionally I'm not convinced by this thought experiment that the outcomes would be so clear because the brain does not hold information in the way most people think, even whilst remembering something we are tricked into thinking we have a more complete memory than we do. To expand on that last point here's an excercise: think of any event that happened with friends/family, not recent and not special (i.e. not yesterday and not a wedding). Picture these people at this event, then try to remember what they are wearing. The vast majority of the time you will not be able to yet you still have a memory in which they are clothed as opposed to being a disembodied head. If you continue to persist with this memory you may be able to spot confabulation in real time as your brain fills in what they are wearing with generic clothes or clothes you have seen them wear on other equations.

As I understand it, some of the latest technologies allow or will allow one to determine if a memory is real. I would have to do some digging to confirm this but I am almost certain I have seen this discussed before: The recall of real memories has identifiable characteristics, as opposed to something like a dream, or a lie. At the least we should be able to determine with high confidence if the person believes it to be true. At that point, if a claim could be verified through the truthful recall of numerous witnesses, it would be difficult to dismiss the claim as entirely bogus.

Simple errors in perception are not always likely or even reasonably possible. In some cases the claim is fairly clear cut; if truthful, we have a real mystery on our hands.
 
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  • #14
Ivan Seeking said:
The problem I generally see in this regard is that virtually no amount of anecdotal evidence is considered sufficient motivation for serious investigation. But I think the reason for that with topics like this is understandable. The biggest problem with any potential transient and elusive phenomenon is repeatability. Unless you can test something under laboratory conditions, which generally means either producing the phenomenon on demand, or at least knowing it should occur after some number of events, e.g. millions of collisions in a particle collider, it is difficult to justify serious consideration. Where does one even begin? And what benefit will be derived from the research? Who wants to pay for it? Even worse is the complication of perception. Where we have an apparent lack of any concievable, resonable explanation for a class of claims, and then the additional complication of cult and pop followings with their own theories and explanations, the topic gets tagged as crackpot. People tend to stop making the distinction between the evidence [be it purely anecdotal or a more complex mix], and the popular interpretations of the claims.
Anecdotes are reports of observation, deciding whether or not to investigate (and at what level) them is a process whereby the likelihood of truthfulness, the perceived chance of repeatability, the cost and the potential pay off are all taken into account.
Ivan Seeking said:
As I understand it, some of the latest technologies allow or will allow one to determine if a memory is real. I would have to do some digging to confirm this but I am almost certain I have seen this discussed before: The recall of real memories has identifiable characteristics, as opposed to something like a dream, or a lie. At the least we should be able to determine with high confidence if the person believes it to be true. At that point, if a claim could be verified through the truthful recall of numerous witnesses, it would be difficult to dismiss the claim as entirely bogus.

Simple errors in perception are not always likely or even reasonably possible. In some cases the claim is fairly clear cut; if truthful, we have a real mystery on our hands.
fMRI machines have been use experimentally to tell if someone is lying by looking at the comparison of activity between areas of the brain involved in memory and those involved in imagination. I've yet to see any research that shows a method of telling if a memory is fake. It's not like your brain stores real memories on one area and fake in another.
 
  • #15
Well , I think that real unknown entities might exist and may be called ghosts . May be there are dark matter planets and life or may be creatures that inhabits other dimensions but I do believe that most people who claim an experience with ghosts are either mentally ill , liers or there is a scientific explanation for what happened to them .
 
  • #16
See, the problem with people simply dismissing paranormal claims and telling someone, "you experienced something in which you were deceived but there's a scientific method that will say how you were deceived," is that the scientific method hasn't done anything itself. As scientists, we tend to have the problem of claiming that if there isn't a scientific explanation then the phenomena doesn't exist, and then when there is an answer we giddily claim, "that's explained by such and such, science has all the answers." This is the exact wrong approach, and, in my opinion, the way to being a bad scientist.

I think the correct stance is to be agnostic. Until science actually has an explanation for the various paranormal activities that haven't been explained, claiming they don't exist is just as faith based as claiming they do exist, which is the wrong approach. I agree, there are phonies and fakes who've invented personalities and/or stories that make it easy to discredit the whole thing. Still, the consensus on this thread seems to be that all paranormal activity can be explained by fakes, brain errors, or ignorance of physical phenomena. This is like saying all mechanics are governed by Newtonian mechanics, and if you see something that's not it's either electrodynamics or just your brain playing tricks on you -- but by the way, we can't fully explain these brain tricks.
 
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  • #17
Ryan_m_b said:
Anecdotes are reports of observation, deciding whether or not to investigate (and at what level) them is a process whereby the likelihood of truthfulness, the perceived chance of repeatability, the cost and the potential pay off are all taken into account.

Could you provide a few examples of where this has happened. I don't see it. I don't think it happens. It seems to me that claims shown to be true, like the legend of the Milky Sea, and rogue waves, are only validated inadvertantly. What I have seen, for example, is that I spent a good part of 8 years repeatedly trying to make the simple distinction between "UFO" and "ET", still most people tend to view those concepts as "crackpot" and the same. In fact, consider that the very notion of ghosts and UFOs are considered crackpot BECAUSE people automatically fail to make the distinction between the claimed observations, and the interpretations. The subjects get tagged crackpot based on sloppy logic and ignorance of the facts, and for the most part, that the end of it. And I can certainly show plenty of evidence for that right here in this forum.

That UFOs get tagged as a crackpot subject is the easiest example. How can a claimed observation without any interpretation be "crackpot"? It might be a lie, and if not, it's an observation. The crackpottery lies in the interpretations, the amateur investigations, and the accompanying cult "theories", but not in simple observations. So why is the subject - the volumes of accounts and evidence, much of which comes from the government itself [!] - considered "crackpot".

fMRI machines have been use experimentally to tell if someone is lying by looking at the comparison of activity between areas of the brain involved in memory and those involved in imagination. I've yet to see any research that shows a method of telling if a memory is fake. It's not like your brain stores real memories on one area and fake in another.

I'll have to see if I can find something. The essential point was that I thought they are learning to make this distinction.., but I'm not sure what I saw now as it was some time ago.

Nonetheless, reliable lie detection could be used effectively in some cases. For example, I would love to see Travis Walton and his crew subject to an irrefutable lie detector test.

I would gladly submit to an irrefutable lie detector test in regards to our own experiences in Glendale. [Late Edit: Consider that my public and standing challenge to James Randi. :biggrin:]
 
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  • #18
Ryan_m_b said:
Anecdotes are reports of observation, deciding whether or not to investigate (and at what level) them is a process whereby the likelihood of truthfulness, the perceived chance of repeatability, the cost and the potential pay off are all taken into account.

One more point that comes to mind. "The likelihood of truthfulness" is a completely subjective interpretation based on expectations. This is not a scientific measure. The concept has little value within the context of potentially dramatic and inexplicable phenomena. Or put another way, if the claim is beyond my comfort zone, I ain't buying it. This is human nature. There have been a number of times that even after our experiences in Glendale, I would hear a ghost story and think "yeah right", and then realize that my story would sound very much the same to someone else. My story is true but that guy is full of it! :biggrin: What an odd reaction, eh?

If a claim is simply "unbelievable", if it doesn't seem to pass the truth test because it sounds too outrageous to believe, then it seems to me that if verfied, it is likely to be a significant discovery. This suggests to me that the most interesting mysteries are the most likely to be discarded as nonsense, even if they're genuine.
 
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  • #19
Here you go. If this isn't the same thing that I saw, it sure sounds like similar research.

In other words, the brain persuaded itself that it had seen objects that were visually imagined. As far as the brain was concerned, those false memories were true.

Brain imaging scans showed that different areas of the brain were at work with false and accurate memories.

The mental images left a trace in the brain that was later mistaken for the trace that would have been produced had the object actually been seen, say the researchers.

The brain activity on MRI during the study phase could predict which objects would subsequently be falsely remembered as having been seen in a photograph...
http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-500368_162-650656.html
 
  • #20
Ivan Seeking said:
As I understand it, some of the latest technologies allow or will allow one to determine if a memory is real.
Ivan Seeking said:
Here you go. If this isn't the same thing that I saw, it sure sounds like similar research.
http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-500368_162-650656.html

You have misunderstood the article. The imaging during the implantation of false memory allows them to predict which false memories will later be remembered as real.

It does not provide a way to sort out which memories are false after the fact.

Here's the actual paper:
http://faculty.kutztown.edu/rryan/classes/cog/resources/neuroimaging_false_memories.pdf
 
  • #21
zoobyshoe said:
You have misunderstood the article. The imaging during the implantation of false memory allows them to predict which false memories will later be remembered as real.

It does not provide a way to sort out which memories are false after the fact.

Here's the actual paper:
http://faculty.kutztown.edu/rryan/classes/cog/resources/neuroimaging_false_memories.pdf

I didn't really misread the report. I was referencing a previous report and found a similar article. Whether this is the same thing or not, I'm not sure. But it does show that research is advancing in this arena.
 
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  • #22
Mindscrape said:
This is like saying all mechanics are governed by Newtonian mechanics, and if you see something that's not it's either electrodynamics or just your brain playing tricks on you -- but by the way, we can't fully explain these brain tricks.

To your point, we know far less of the brain than we do most other physical stuff such as electromagnetic energies.
 
  • #23
"scientific explanation" and "ghosts" sounds like an oxymoron
 
  • #24
Ryan_m_b said:
Anecdotes are reports of observation, deciding whether or not to investigate (and at what level) them is a process whereby the likelihood of truthfulness, the perceived chance of repeatability, the cost and the potential pay off are all taken into account.

Ivan Seeking said:
Could you provide a few examples of where this has happened. I don't see it. I don't think it happens.

Correction, that is pretty much what has happened with ball lightning. There is far more evidence for ET-UFOS, or at least anomalous UFOS, than there is for ball lightning, but we can get our heads around the concept of ball lightning [we assume we can explain it using existing models], so it is generally accepted as real based on nothing but anecdotes and a few photos.

While there have been things somewhat like ball lighthning produced in the lab, and while there are a good many papers on the subject, some of the key features such as being self-sustaining, the lifetime, size, and the alleged ability to pass through surfaces, to my knowledge have never been duplicated.
 
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  • #25
SuperiorPrep said:
"scientific explanation" and "ghosts" sounds like an oxymoron

Implicit in your statement is the assumption that any real "ghostly" phenomena is necessarily "supernatural", and therefore doesn't exist. Right?

How about if we consider the option of "real" but not supernatural?
 
  • #26
Ivan Seeking said:
I didn't really misread the report. I was referencing a previous report and found a similar article. Whether this is the same thing or not, I'm not sure. But it does show that research is advancing in this arena.
Since they knew which memories were real in this study, they could actually already check if there's a difference between a brainscan of someone recalling a false memory and a real memory, if they wanted to.

It wouldn't settle anything, though, because a memory can be real and still not prove anything about what's remembered.

As far as I'm concerned the memory you and your wife have of something "sitting" at the foot of the bed is real, in so far as something actually disturbed the bed. Proving by brain imaging that this memory is real would do nothing to explain what disturbed the foot of the bed, just as proving that someone really saw something in the sky that was saucer shaped wouldn't tell you anything about what that thing actually was.

Eliminating hallucination or false memory still doesn't get you to the paranormal or ET.

I've told this story before: my high school physics teacher's apartment was periodically disturbed by a feminine-sounding ghostly whine. Each time it happened he investigated but it always stopped before he found the source. Finally one day he tracked it to the toilet water supply tank. Opening that, he found the copper float was vibrating like crazy and this is what was causing the whine. He surmised there was some leak in the water supply line that cause a vibration at the resonant frequency of the float (pretty freaky and against the odds). He replaced it with a plastic one and the whine never happened again.

His memory of the whine would be just as real had he never been able to track the cause and, had he never found the cause anyone could interpret it as evidence of the paranormal, based on the argument "it was never explained to my satisfaction", without it actually being evidence of the paranormal.
 
  • #27
Ivan Seeking said:
I didn't really misread the report. I was referencing a previous report and found a similar article. Whether this is the same thing or not, I'm not sure. But it does show that research is advancing in this arena.
Zoobyshoe has already addressed this but unless you have the person hooked up to a machine as the memory is being made (and you have the events to compare) you're back to square one.
Ivan Seeking said:
Correction, that is pretty much what has happened with ball lightning. There is far more evidence for ET-UFOS, or at least anomalous UFOS, than there is for ball lightning, but we can get our heads around the concept of ball lightning [we assume we can explain it using existing models], so it is generally accepted as real based on nothing but anecdotes and a few photos.

While there have been things somewhat like ball lighthning produced in the lab, and while there are a good many papers on the subject, some of the key features such as being self-sustaining, the lifetime, size, and the alleged ability to pass through surfaces, to my knowledge have never been duplicated.

Ivan Seeking said:
Implicit in your statement is the assumption that any real "ghostly" phenomena is necessarily "supernatural", and therefore doesn't exist. Right?

How about if we consider the option of "real" but not supernatural?
Obviously when starting a line of enquiry about an unknown phenomenon you start by building out from what you already know. In the case of ball lightning the reports somewhat match what we know about regular lightning and so from their studies can be done. It's not that difficult to take what resources we have (our understanding, our electrical equipment, the sky above us) and test.

In the case of ghosts there are so many contradictory, illogical and fake claims that it's hard to know where to start. As with anything though we must start with what we know, so we start with looking for what could make someone see a ghost. Is it a trick of the light? A hallucination? A scam? etc. Eventually if we haven't got any good reason and we can't see any other avenue to explore then we have to leave it as unknown for now. If you can't find any evidence that suggests it was a hallucination, if there's nothing that could have caused an illusion and beyond reasonable doubt you think the people are telling the truth then what can you do?
 
  • #28
Ryan_m_b said:
Zoobyshoe has already addressed this but unless you have the person hooked up to a machine as the memory is being made (and you have the events to compare) you're back to square one.
Had they scanned these subjects twice, both during the formation of the memories and also during the recall, it might have turned out that there was a tell-tale on the brain scan when they were recalling false memories as real.

That tell-tale, if it existed, could later be used to screen for false memories even when you had no data about the formation of the memory. That is: anyone could be screened at any time to see if a memory were real or false in the complete absence of a scan taken while the memory was being formed. This is the sort of thing Ivan is hoping for.

They didn't think to try this, and the chances are there is no tell-tale, that all memories recalled as real have the same "signature" whether they're false or real.

The point I was making is just that they could already test for this tell-tale if they wanted to. No innovations necessary.
 
  • #29
Ivan Seeking said:
While there have been things somewhat like ball lightning produced in the lab, and while there are a good many papers on the subject, some of the key features such as being self-sustaining, the lifetime, size, and the alleged ability to pass through surfaces, to my knowledge have never been duplicated.

Lots of those papers on ball lightning make reference to the neutrino, notorious for its alacrity to penetrate solid structure. Oddly enough, the neutrino is sometimes referred to as the "ghost particle" :bugeye:

Respectfully submitted,
Steve
 
  • #30
zoobyshoe said:
It wouldn't settle anything, though, because a memory can be real and still not prove anything about what's remembered.

I disagree. As I have stated a number of times, there are cases involving multiple witnesses that leave little doubt, if the stories are truthful. The ability to know the memory is real would be even more helpful, but a reliable lie detector could go a long way towards changing the landscape. Again, I cite the Travis Walton case as a great example. And by the way, a lie detector was used in that case. IIRC, four of five witnesses passed and the other was hiding a criminal record. But the test could be flawed, so it means nothing.

A reliable test may not stand as proof of what happened, but stories like this would unavoidably take on much greater credibility if the witnesses could be reliably tested for truthfulness... and they passed.
 
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  • #31
Ivan Seeking said:
I disagree. As I have stated a number of times, there are cases involving multiple witnesses that leave little doubt, if the stories are truthful. The ability to know the memory is real would be even more helpful, but a reliable lie detector could go a long way towards changing the landscape. Again, I cite the Travis Walton case as a great example. And by the way, a lie detector was used in that case. IIRC, four of five witnesses passed and the other was hiding a criminal record. But the test could be flawed, so it means nothing.

A reliable test may not stand as proof of what happened, but stories like this would unavoidably take on much greater credibility if the witnesses could be reliably tested for truthfulness... and they passed.
I'm not sure why we're still stuck on this, perhaps I'm missing something. Where is the research that can tell if a memory is false without having to have the participant in the machine when the memory is laid down?

Also lie detectors as in the polygraph are not a credible machine. AFAIK no polygraph test has ever stood up to a properly done blinded peer review test.
 
  • #32
Ryan_m_b said:
I'm not sure why we're still stuck on this, perhaps I'm missing something. Where is the research that can tell if a memory is false without having to have the participant in the machine when the memory is laid down?

Also lie detectors as in the polygraph are not a credible machine. AFAIK no polygraph test has ever stood up to a properly done blinded peer review test.

My point was that we don't need the ability to determine if a memory is real, though it would be helpful. Reliable lie detection using brain imaging technology seems to be available now, or nearly so. At very least it seems to be reasonable to hope for this soon. That alone would be tremendously helpful. For example, when we have five or six witnesses to an alleged event with distinctive details, such as "a beam of light from the UFO lifted Travis several feet off the ground and threw him backwards fifty feet, and at that point we thought he was dead" [actually a paraphrase, not a direct quote], and if it can be shown that Travis Walton wasn't involved in a hoax, then what is left?

There is an entire world of skepticism that depends solely on the claim that the witnesses of the alleged event X were lying.

We saw that here with the Iran 1976 UFO discussion. When all else fails, the skeptical explanation defaults to a cheesy conspiracy theory.
 
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  • #33
Ivan Seeking said:
My point was that we don't need the ability to determine if a memory is real, though it would be helpful. Reliable lie detection using brain imaging technology seems to be available now, or nearly so. At very least it seems to be reasonable to hope for this soon. That alone would be tremendously helpful. For example, when we have five or six witnesses to an alleged event with distinctive details, such as "a beam of light from the UFO lifted Travis several feet off the ground and threw him backwards fifty feet, and at that point we though he was dead", and if it can be shown that Travis Walton wasn't involved in a hoax, then what is left?

There is an entire world of skepticism that depends solely on the claim that the witnesses of the alleged event X were lying.

We saw that here with the Iran 1976 UFO discussion. When all else fails, the skeptical explanation defaults to a cheesy conspiracy theory.
True but I wonder if there will be some backfire when a group of witnesses are determined to be telling the "truth". None of them may be lying but they could be A) telling false memories and B) making conclusions based on faulty reasoning.
 
  • #34
Ryan_m_b said:
True but I wonder if there will be some backfire when a group of witnesses are determined to be telling the "truth". None of them may be lying but they could be A) telling false memories and B) making conclusions based on faulty reasoning.

Well, explain how that would be possible in the Travis Walton case. I use this as an example because it is difficult to imagine any other reasonable explanation, except that it was either an elaborate hoax played by Walton, or they were all lying. What else is possible?
 
  • #35
Ivan Seeking said:
Well, explain how that would be possible in the Travis Walton case. I use this as an example because it is difficult to imagine any other reasonable explanation, except that it was either an elaborate hoax played by Walton, or they were all lying. What else is possible?
I don't know what the Travis Walton case is. If it wasn't a scam, a lie, mass confabulation and there is no reasonable explanation for whatever occurred then it is an unknown event.
 

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