Has a recognised organisation ever recorded a (supernatural)

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The discussion centers on whether any recognized scientific organization has documented a supernatural event, defined as phenomena like levitating chairs or moving objects. Participants express skepticism about the existence of credible evidence, noting that despite claims of paranormal occurrences, no repeatable scientific validation has been achieved. The James Randi Educational Foundation offers a million-dollar prize for demonstrable evidence of supernatural abilities, emphasizing the need for repeatability in scientific inquiry. While some anecdotal accounts exist, such as a UCLA team filming toys moving in a supposedly haunted room, these instances lack rigorous scientific backing and repeatability. The Journal of the Society for Psychical Research is mentioned as a long-standing publication examining such phenomena, but it does not claim proof of the supernatural. Overall, the conversation highlights the challenges of substantiating supernatural claims within scientific frameworks, pointing out that many alleged events remain unverified and open to alternative explanations.
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Has a recognised organisation ever recorded a (supernatural) event?
By recognised i mean trained in the sciences needed for the investigation and able to rule out the hoax and natural explanations.

And by supernatural event i mean some thing like a chair levitating or some object moving.
 
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Though I guess it would help, evidence doesn't have to be collected by a scientist to be considered genuine. In either case, the answer is no.
 
http://www.randi.org/joom/content/view/38/31/

At JREF, we offer a one-million-dollar prize to anyone who can show, under proper observing conditions, evidence of any paranormal, supernatural, or occult power or event.

You don't necessarily need to posses super natural abilities yourself in order to get the 10^6$ from Randi. Providing evidence of a super natural event should be enough. This suggests that there are no scientists who would have succeeded in collecting any evidence of super natural events, because such scientist could have also used the evidence to claim the 10^6$.
 
Of course it could be, that perhaps some group of scientists has witnessed a super natural event, but are unable to detect it again, and then cannot use the phenomena to claim the Randi's 10^6$. But even then, from outsiders point of view, the phenomena has not passed the scientific verification.

If something can be proven in scientific manner, then it should also convince Randi.
 


When we're defining "supernatural" do we mean an event that defies the known physical laws of the universe?
 


LightbulbSun said:
When we're defining "supernatural" do we mean an event that defies the known physical laws of the universe?

Ay up i am not going down the walking through walls path.
 


wolram said:
Has a recognised organisation ever recorded a (supernatural) event?
By recognised i mean trained in the sciences needed for the investigation and able to rule out the hoax and natural explanations.

And by supernatural event i mean some thing like a chair levitating or some object moving.

I would say the answer is a qualifed yes. For example, a team from UCLA once filmed what appeared to be toys moving about an allegedly haunted room after everyone had left. But, even if events like this are genuine, the problem is that, AFAIK, there has never been any repeatable evidence of events of this kind. It is one thing to witness a seemingly inexplicable event, but it is quite another to produce it on demand.

Randi requires evidence that can be produced on demand. So Randi's challenge isn't just a challenge for evidence; it is also a challenge for repeatability - experimental evidence.

One more caveat: From what I understand, some testing for so called ESP and telekinesis [eg in the PEAR project] has produced results that are suggestive of a real phenomenon, but only by using meta analysis - the alleged variances from expectations or chance are exceedingly small and barely measurable. Obviously these results have not been generally accepted as valid.

Also, even a floating chair isn't proof of the "supernatural". In fact, I believe that all real phenomena must follow the laws of physics, even if we don't yet recognize or understand the physics involved. So, IMO, the word "supernatural" has no meaning. At most it alludes to phenomena not yet understood, and nothing more.
 
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I would not require repeatability, there are experiments where one only gets one shot, i would only require the oath of educated people and some tangible evidence, film would do.
 


wolram said:
I would not require repeatability, there are experiments where one only gets one shot, i would only require the oath of educated people and some tangible evidence, film would do.

Well, there are probably hundreds of these paranormal investigation groups, and some of them have at least one scientist involved. Many do get alleged videographic evidence. So you could probably spends a few weeks reviewing websites. The UCLA thing was at least twenty-five years ago, so I don't know if that film footage is available on the internet.

edit: I have looked for it in the past, but I think I saw it on the local news at the time and have never seen it since.

In any of these cases, how do we know that the presumably credible investigators weren't tricked?
 
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  • #10


As far as I'm concerned... If an event can't be understood or explained then we can't duplicate it because we don't know the variables involved. So we obviously can't collect money. Some of this stuff was probably discovered but no duplicated.
 
  • #11
It seems I interpreted the short description of the Randi's challenge incorrectly. Here http://www.randi.org/joom/content/view/40/32/ it says this:

I, James Randi, through the JREF, will pay US$1,000,000 [One Million Dollars/US] to any person who can demonstrate any psychic, supernatural or paranormal ability under satisfactory observing conditions.

So the prize is not necessarily for evidence of supernatural events, but for supernatural abilities of the person who is trying to claim the prize. That is unfortunate, actually. The challenge would have more debunking power if the prize could be claimed with wider possibilities of phenomena :frown:

It is clear that repeatability is key factor in science, but it is not precisely the same thing as being able to reproduce the phenomena on demand. For example, we cannot reproduce hurricanes at demand, and we cannot even predict when one is going to strike expect when a one is already only few days away. Still, we agree that hurricanes, as phenomena, satisfy the demand of repeatability because we keep getting hurricanes always again, and we can always gather more data on them.

According to the stories about paranormal stuff, these phenomena often take place at some specific haunted places, which are known, and which can be observed. So if the paranormal phenomena exist, it should be possible to gather evidence about them to extent that it could convince scientists. I believe, that these kind of phenomena would be debunkable, but in lack of Randi style challenge, it is difficult to consider these phenomena debunked with certainty now.
 
  • #12


In any of these cases, how do we know that the presumably credible investigators weren't tricked?

There is all ways a possibility of trickery, i think nature can even trick us some times
(mirage), the investigators would have to be wise to forms of trickery and do their best to rule them out, for one off events i think that is all one can ask.
 
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  • #13


jostpuur said:
According to the stories about paranormal stuff, these phenomena often take place at some specific haunted places, which are known, and which can be observed. So if the paranormal phenomena exist, it should be possible to gather evidence about them to extent that it could convince scientists. I believe, that these kind of phenomena would be debunkable, but in lack of Randi style challenge, it is difficult to consider these phenomena debunked with certainty now.

There are hundreds of allegedly haunted houses in which unexplained phenomena allegedly occur on regular basis, but even a hundred videos or audio recordings prove nothing. And indeed there are probably thousands of videos out there.

What proof can be offered; ectoplasm? Everyone can see a hurricane, but if one person sees a glass mysteriously fly across the room, who would know but that person?
 
  • #14


I remember ball lightning, that was considered crackpot and even now we can not reproduce all its observed properties, the problem with (unexplained) events is that there are so many ways to explain them as natural or a figment of the imagination and poo pooing the individual observer, even trained observers can be fooled into thinking they have seen some thing they have not.
What i am asking is, are there tested events with reasonable doubt for natural or imagination
reasons ruled out to the best of the testers ability.
 
  • #15


Though it doesn't qualify as a scientific journal here at PF, this is probably as close to what you're looking for as anything. They have over a century of investigations that allegedly maintain high academic standards. And though they have many well documented accounts, and many investigations during which seemingly inexplicable events were observed, they claim no proof of the supernatural. The council that runs this organization is comprised of mainly scientists, engineers, and other academics.

Journal of the Society for Psychical Research
The Journal of the Society for Psychical Research has been published continuously since 1884, promoting the Society's aim of examining "without prejudice or prepossession and in a scientific spirit those faculties of man, real or supposed, which appear to be inexplicable on any generally recognised hypothesis." The Journal's contents reflect the wide range of our contributors' specialisms and interests and include reports of current laboratory and fieldwork research, as well as theoretical, methodological and historical papers with a bearing on the field of parapsychology. There are also regular book reviews and correspondence sections.

Contributions are welcome from both members and non-members of the Society. All papers submitted to the Journal are strictly peer-reviewed, and any opinions expressed are those of the authors alone. Guidelines for potential authors are published on the inside back page of each JSPR issue, or can be obtained from the SPR Editor.

The Journal is published quarterly and the annual subscription, which includes the four issues and any Proceedings (occasional volumes containing longer papers on particular themes) published, is £40/$80. Information about membership, subscriptions and availability of back copies can be obtained from the SPR Office.

Full text of all the past Journals and Proceedings is available online for SPR members. There is also a themed Abstracts Catalogue, and access to both is free to members on registration via the Online Library. JSPR abstracts since 2000 are also available on this website by clicking on the relevant entry in the list to the right.
http://www.spr.ac.uk/expcms/index.php?section=41
 
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  • #16


Originally Posted by Ivan Seeking
Originally Posted by wolram
Has a recognised organisation ever recorded a (supernatural) event?
By recognised i mean trained in the sciences needed for the investigation and able to rule out the hoax and natural explanations.

And by supernatural event i mean some thing like a chair levitating or some object moving.

I would say the answer is a qualifed yes. For example, a team from UCLA once filmed what appeared to be toys moving about an allegedly haunted room after everyone had left.

How can you declare the answer is a 'yes' with no proof and no links to any proof. This is just hear-say and I thought there were rules on this site not allowing unsubstantiated statements like this?
 
  • #17


Yes, it is just hearsay based on what I posted. But I provided a link to an organization run mainly by scientists and academics that has studied this for over a century. I also pointed out that there are at least hundereds of organizations out there who claim many hours of video evidence.

My goal was to point interested parties in the right direction, not to make a career out of digging through websites.

Anyone who follows this stuff knows that there are plenty of videos out there. The problem is that videos prove nothing; not that video evidence is lacking.
 
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  • #18


Thanks for the help Ivan.
 

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