Anthropology and the Paranormal
From 13th – 17th October 2013 the Centre for Theory and Research at the Esalen Institute (CTR), in Big Sur, California, invited group of scholars to discuss the contribution that social and cultural anthropology, and related disciplines, can make to our understanding of the paranormal. The Esalen Institute was founded in 1962 by Michael Murphy and Richard Price, and is in the vanguard of the human potential movement (Esalen: America and the Religion of No Religion, Jeffrey J. Kripal, University of Chicago Press, 2007). Michael Murphy, director of the Centre for Theory and Research, as well as being a most gracious host, took part in our discussions. Michael Murphy’s vision is one of transforming society through dialogue and personal growth. He has the courage to ‘think big’ and encourages others to do the same. Esalen’s stunning setting on California’s Pacific coast, with its abundance of wildlife, beautiful grounds and natural hot springs, provide a wonderful backdrop to the work carried out there. This includes a wide range of personal development workshops, holistic therapies, and symposia for people from the worlds of politics, economics and academia.
From left to right, back row: Michael Murphy, Susan Greenwood, Jane Hartford, Jeffrey Kripal, Raphael Locke, David Hufford, Charlie Emmons, Jack Hunter, Eddie Bullard, Stanley Krippner, Ed Kelly, Loriliai Biernacki. Middle row: Edie Turner, Tanya Luhrmann, Ann Taves, Deb Frost. Front row: Geoffrey Samuel, Antonia Mills, Fiona Bowie, Sam Yau, Frank Poletti, Paul Stoller, Gregory Shushan.
Before we met email discussions between invited participants got underway on the use of the term ‘paranormal’. The word is commonly used in a Western setting but less useful when discussing non-Western societies where the boundaries of what is considered normal may vary considerably. The symposium was built on a long-running series of discussions that had been looking at evidence for the survival of consciousness from a variety of scientific and humanistic perspectives (known as SURSEM or the Survival Seminar). One outcome from these meetings was the publication in 2007 of The Irreducible Mind: Toward a Psychology for the 21st Century, edited by Edward and Emily Kelly a.o. A second volume is in preparation. Around half the participants at our symposium had been involved in the SURSEM discussions. The inspiration for the Anthropology and the Paranormal symposium was the journal Paranthropology edited by Jack Hunter. Jack, along with Jeffrey Kripal and David Hufford, were responsible for putting together the participants for this symposium, with Frank Poletti in charge of practical arrangements. Our discussions also benefited from the presence of the Chair of the CTR board, Sam Yau, and the symposium funder, Deb Frost. For some sessions we were also joined by Michael’s PA, Jane Hartford, and a young member of the Esalen workforce, Lauren, who won a ballot to join our symposium as community representative.
Common Themes
I identified three common,
overlapping themes that emerged from our discussions, with different
emphases, to some extent along disciplinary lines. These can be
summarised as epistemological, hermeneutical and
morphological concerns.
1) Epistemological concerns: ‘We
know that there is something real going on’.
David
Hufford coined the term ‘Experiential Source Hypothesis’
(ESH) for phenomena that appear to manifest across time and culture,
as a result of personal experience. In Hufford’s case the key
experience was sleep paralysis accompanied by the sound of someone
approaching, the sensation of being suffocated and the sense of an
evil presence. Many years after his own experience he conducted
fieldwork in Newfoundland and found that what he had regarded as an
unpleasant, private, and for all he knew unique experience, was
culturally recognised as visitations by the ‘old hag’ (work
published under the title, The
Terror that Comes in the Night). The key features of this
experience turned out to be universal, although the interpretation of
them varies from one culture to another. Another example of the
experiential source hypothesis was given by Gregory Shushan, who has
studied near
death experiences (NDEs), across unrelated cultures. Shushan
found that he could reconstruct the key features of a NDE, as widely
recognised in the writings of Bruce Greyson (who produced the
so-called Greyson
Scale), and Raymond Moody’s nine
elements of a NDE, from his sources, without reference to these
more recent American studies. The main characteristics of a near
death experience appear to be universal and relate to actual
individual experience, not easily explained by cultural programming,
expectation or neurology.
The work done by the SURSEM group,
and set out in The Irreducible Mind, provided a clear platform
from which we could assert the reality of the paranormal, or
anomalous experiences, and it was not necessary to go over that
ground again.
The epistemological concerns
expressed within the group took the character of:
(a) Problems of audience and translation. The dominant
materialist paradigm in the academy and elsewhere in Western
societies tends to lead to self-censorship and produces a deep-seated
anxiety around finding terminology that is acceptable to the
gatekeepers of this hegemonic discourse, while not wishing to deny
the reality of spirits or paranormal phenomena. In published works
most scholars, including those present, are therefore parsimonious
with their statements, seeing their work as the ‘thin end of the
wedge’, as Geoffrey Samuel put it, in a hostile academic
environment. Many scholars in this field refuse to state their
conclusions in public (such as Ian Stevenson with his work on
reincarnation at the Division of Perceptual Studies at the University
of Virginia) lest it damage their reputation for scientific balance.
(b) ‘We don’t know what it is, or how to explain it’.
There were various levels of engagement, knowledge and experience
relating to the issues discussed. Some participants had many years
experience as healers, shamans, witches and mediums, (as well as
out-of-body travellers, lucid dreamers, practitioners of meditation
and followers of various spiritual paths), drawing on many different
cultural idioms and traditions. Others were newer to the field and at
an earlier exploratory stage, or used a less experience-near form of
knowing. There was not surprisingly a gradient from those who were
testing initial hypotheses to those who had a deep personal knowledge
of, and context from which to explain, the ‘paranormal’ (the term
was not one that was generally adopted when referring to a
non-Western context).
(c) Following from this, some discussions returned to questions
of what we mean by terms such as ‘real’ and ‘know’. The role
of personal knowledge based on direct experience was a sub-theme that
ran throughout our discussions, without being fully explored. In fact
the extent of experience-near knowledge within the group did not
fully emerge until it was time to part at the end of the symposium.
This may well reflect the caution that academics are used to
exercising when it comes to revealing personal experiences and
orientations, even within a ‘safe space’ such as that created at
Esalen.
(d) Each contributor had around 30 minutes to introduce themselves
and to give an informal summary of their work, followed by an hour
for discussion (papers were distributed ahead of the symposium). In
almost all cases participants described an ‘Ah-ha’ moment that
persuaded them that what might be described as paranormal phenomena
are real. For the social anthropologists this often takes place in a
non-Western setting – as when Edie
Turner saw a gray plasma blob leave an Ndembu woman during an
Ihamba healing ritual, and Paul
Stoller’s encounter with sorcery in Niger. Stanley
Krippner described numerous personal encounters with the
paranormal power of shamans and mediums. For Jack
Hunter in his study of a physical mediumship circle it was
personally losing control of his body whilst in a light trance that
persuaded him that there is at the very least a real somatic element
to physical mediumship. This moment of personal knowing could be more
prosaic, but equally life-changing for the researcher. Such was the
case with Ed Kelly’s encounter with Bill Delmore, a research
subject at the Division
of Perceptual Studies at the University of Virginia, who
consistently scored 35% or, 10% over chance, guessing one of four
items on a random probability machine. For Fiona
Bowie it was the recognition of the similarity in certain
descriptions of the afterlife and how it operates in a wide variety
of unrelated settings and cultures that led to a deeper engagement
with the topic. The ‘ah-ha’ can therefore be cognitive and
intellectual as well as somatic or sensory.
2) Hermeneutical or interpretive
questions
There was general agreement that
studies in this field of research need to incorporate the perspective
or standpoint of both researcher/s and subjects, and be as
inclusive as possible. Each issue needs to be examined from as many
dimensions as one can find. Another way of putting this is the
necessity of using both left and right brain, to be open to phenomena
that challenge our existing presuppositions. Ann
Taves for example, in her work on Mormonism’s founding golden
plates, revealed to Joseph Smith, was concerned to find a way of
talking about the plates that overcame a dualistic true/false or
believer/detractor dichotomy. Rafael
Locke focused on what makes a good researcher, and the need for
those involved in laboratory psi experiments to take account of
cultural factors that they may not be aware of. Eddie
Bullard tried to hold a middle ground in the contentious and
divided field of ufology. Charlie
Emmons and Susan
Greenwood grappled with first-person research, in which
subjective knowing and ‘going native’ are central to the
enterprise but potentially compromising at the same time. BUT, it was
clear that we all have our ‘boggle thresholds’ (such as one UFO
contactee’s encounter with a giant ant in Eddie Bullard’s case),
and we need to be aware of our personal boundaries and how we react
to them. It is only then that we can come up with new interpretations
and understandings of challenging phenomena. The process is
essentially dynamic and dialogical.
3) Morphological discussions, i.e.
‘What is it that we know?’
This is where careful, descriptive
ethnographic work comes to the fore, with analysis and interpretation
following rather than preceding the ethnographic process. Although
this direction of movement (from practice to theory) is central to
most social and cultural anthropology, it is often problematic when
faced with necessity of coming up with hypotheses and premature
results in grant applications, based on a model of science or
quantitative social science, in which hypothesis testing and theory
form the basis of subsequent research, rather than arising from the
empirical investigation. Within this arena, some of the research
presented focused on sociological questions such as ‘who’, ‘why’,
‘what’, ‘when’, i.e. the social context and its actors. Other
research and subsequent discussions were more concerned with the
phenomenological content of the experience (while not ignoring
contextual questions). These tended to be somatic and often deeply
personal experiences that opened the researcher to new understandings
of their ethnographic material, and their own path in life. In
different ways these interests were reflected in Tanya
Luhrmann’s work on prayer among Evangelical Christians,
Geoffrey
Samuel and Loriliai
Biernacki’s deep engagement with Buddhist and Hindu religious
practices, and Susan Greenwood’s cultivation of magical
consciousness. For Antonia
Mills, working with native people’s in British Columbia, the
experience of one of her children being recognised as a reincarnation
of a member of the group she was studying, and her subsequent own
‘memories’ of a previous life as a member of one of these groups,
transformed her understanding of reincarnation among these peoples,
as well as informing her understanding of her own life trajectory.
The importance of story telling, another sub-theme, identified as a
central form in which knowledge about the ‘paranormal’ is
disseminated, was introduced by Jeff
Kripal. It was demonstrated by some wonderful formal and informal
story telling throughout the symposium by a number of colleagues
(most notably in an evening of paranormal tales around the fireside –
a kind of academics’ karaoke!).
These fascinating, sometime
challenging, and often humorous, discussions tended to flow around
and across each other, weaving a colourful tapestry. They provided a
platform from which to continue our various explorations but did not
of themselves provide a unified vision of a way forward. It is in the
nature of Esalen’s symposia that relationships and ideas nurtured
here are likely to be maintained and developed. Several of the
participants, for example, will be attending the 6th Exploring
the Extraordinary conference in Gettysburg, PA, from 21st-23rd
March 2014, hosted by Charlie Emmons (all are welcome!).
Snake healing ceremony
After the official discussions had
ended, Rafael Locke invited those who were still at Esalen (and who
could be out of bed before 7am) to take part in an Australian
Aboriginal snake healing ritual on the lawn outside Murphy house.
(Those up early enough got to see a full moon set over the Pacific
Ocean, a wonderful counterbalance to the spectacular sunsets we had
enjoyed each day). Rafael is a shamanic
healer as well as a cultural anthropologist, and he started by
telling us one of the founding dreamtime myths of the formation of
the land and first creatures in Australia. It included a spider with
her egg-sack of spiderlings, who crossed the land in the stomach of a
python, creating the landscape and its physical features as they
travelled towards the centre. At a certain point the spiderlings
matured and burst out of the egg-sack. Finding themselves in the
darkness of the snake’s stomach they ate their way through the
stomach lining until they reached the light of the outside world.
They were then scattered by the wind to form the creatures of the
air, earth and water. The snake was wounded by their activity but not
fatally, and after resting recovered. She sloughed her skin, which
was given life to become her companion, and together the snakes
became powerful healers who will come when summoned. I saw our
symposium participants a little like the spiderlings, struggling to
reach maturity and then to fight their way through the walls of
ignorance, fear and doubt towards the light that is the birthright of
every human being. Each one, like the different creatures who were
formed from the spiderlings, has a different and unique role. The
institutions through which we fight our way may be wounded, but can
also be renewed and find a healing power that can be used for the
renewal of society. This might seem rather a utopian vision but it is
consistent with Esalen’s mission to renew and transform society
through dialogue, and through connection with the earth and one
another.
Paul Stoller summed up the mood of
the symposium with his post-Esalen farewell: ‘The
Songhay people have a lovely custom at farewells. They never say
‘goodbye’. Instead they say kala ni
kaya which means, “until your
return”. Looking forward to our returns’.
Labels: Afterlife., Anthropology, Esalen Institute, Michael Murphy, Near Death Experience, Paranormal, Parapsychology, Psi, reincarnation, Witchcraft and Sorcery
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