James "The Amazing" Randi has, through various demonstrations, cast doubt on Geller's claims of psychic powers. Geller has sued Randi. This case has now been completed, and Geller has lost. However Skeptics are still advised to exercise extreme caution in addressing this topic, given Geller's history of litigation.
One of Geller's more (in)famous claims is that he has made millions by finding oil. The following was posted by James Randi on this subject:
Geller SAYS that he has made fortunes with mining companies. When CSICOP checked this out, it was found that only one mining company, ZANEX, ever paid Geller, and that was far far less than the million dollars he says he got from 11 mining companies. Dont always believe everything that he claims, or didn't you learn that already?
Geller's stage appearances feature a range of stage magic. For more details on how he does his tricks, read books by James Randi, especially "The Truth About Uri Geller". Here are some hilights:
* "Broken" watches are often just gummed up. Warm it, shake it, and it will start ticking. Whether it carries on ticking or keeps good time is another matter.
* Spoon bending is usually done by misdirection. Get everyone to look away while you bend the spoon. Geller has even been known to hold up a bent spoon and say "its bending, its bending" while gradually revealing more of the bend between his fingers.
2.2: I have had a psychic experience.
That is pretty remarkable. But before you post to the Net, consider:-
If you want to make a formal registration of your predictions, send
mail to
There is a book by Prof Robert Morris and Dr Richard Wiseman called
Guidelines for Testing Psychic Claimants.
University of Hertfordshire Press, 1995, pp 72, stlg7 pbk
Sensory leakage is something that designers of tests for psi must be
careful to guard against. Tests for psi use powerful statistical
tests to search for faint traces of communication. Unfortunately the
fact that communication has taken place does not prove that it was
done by telepathy. It could have been through some more mundane form
of signal.
For instance one experiment involved a "sender" in one room with a
stack of numbered cards (1-10) and a "receiver" in another room trying
to guess what the next card was. The sender looked at a card and
pressed a button to signal to the receiver. The receiver then tried
to guess the number on the card. There was a definite correlation
between the card numbers and the guesses. However the sender could
signal the receiver by varying the delays between buzzes. When this
channel of communication was removed, the effect disappeared.
Targ and Puthoff spring to mind, but actually, Puthoff is no longer
doing psi research (I don't have any idea what Targ is up to these
days.) Granted, their SRI work is quite famous, but if we want to
review the historical (rather than currently active) figures, you
probably want to go back at least as far as the Rhines.
Helmut Schmidt, a physicist who has been looking at PK, is still
active at the Mind Science Foundation in Texas. (Sorry, I don't know a
more specific address than that.)
The Foundation for Research into the Nature of Man (FRNM), which is
what Rhine's work at Duke eventually developed into, is still active
near Duke. It is currently headed by K. Ramakrishna Rao.
The Koestler Chair of Parapsychology at the University of Edinburgh
is still active. The current incumbent is named Robert Morris; his
main assistant is Deborah Delanoy. He and Dr Richard Wiseman have
written a small book "Guidelines for Testing Psychic Claimants".
[Does anyone have publisher details?]
Roger Nelson is active in the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research
center (PEAR) and occasionally posts to the net.
Active workers in the field that I can think of currently include Dean
Radin, who also posts to sci.skeptic as <dir2@gte.com>,
Jessica Utts, and Ed May. The Parapsychological Association has a much
larger roster than that, of course, but I'm not a member myself and
don't have access to their membership roll.
Dowsing is the art of finding underground water by extra-sensory
perception. Sometimes tools are used. The traditional one is a
forked hazel stick. When held in the correct way this will twitch in
response to small muscle movements in the back and shoulders. Another
tool that has become popular in recent years is a pair of rods mounted
in tubes that are held in each hand just in front of the user.
When water (or something else) is dowsed, the rods turn towards each
other. Like the forked hazel stick it amplifies small movements of
the arm and shoulder muscles.
Unfortunately careful tests of dowsers have revealed absolutely no
ability to find water or anything else by extra-sensory perception.
Dowsing success stories can be explained by noting that wherever you
dig you will find water. You just have to dig deep enough. It has
also been suggested that dowsers may unconsciously use clues in the
environment.
James Randi has tested more than 100 dowsers (I don't know the actual
count). He tells that only 2 tried to cheat. This suggests that
dowsers are basically honest people.
The Skeptical Inquirer has published a number of articles on dowsing.
James Randi's "A Controlled Test of Dowsing" was in vol. 4, no. 1, pp.
16-20. Michael Martin's "A New Controlled Dowsing Experiment" was in
vol. 8, pp. 138-140. Dick Smith's "Two Tests of Divining in
Australia" was in vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 34-37. Randi's book Flim-Flam!
has a section on dowsing. The main skeptical book about dowsing is
Vogt, E.Z. and Hyman R. (1959, 2nd edition 1979) Water Witching USA.
The University of Chicago Press. 260 pages. Available as a paperback.
Psychic researchers have noted something they call the "shyness
effect" (or more grandly "psi-mediated experimenter effects"). This
is invoked to explain the way in which many subjects' psychic powers
seem to fade when exposed to careful scrutiny and proper controls.
Often it is alleged that having a skeptic in the audience can prevent
the delicate operation of psi.
In its most extreme form this hypothesis becomes a "catch-22" that
makes any results consistent with a psi hypothesis. This renders the
hypothesis unfalsifiable and therefore unscientific. Less extreme
forms might be testable.
A claim is sometimes made that the Skeptics movement only tests those
psychics which it knows to be frauds. The real psychics are supposedly
being ignored by skeptics who are afraid to be proved wrong.
There are three problems with this claim.
Firstly, it assumes that all the skeptics are engaged in a conspiracy
to persuade the world that psychic powers do not exist. This is only
a Petty Conspiracy theory (see section 0), since it only requires the
involvement of a few dozen of the most prominent skeptics, but it is
still difficult to see any motive for such a deception. "Fear of
being proved wrong" implies that they already know they are wrong,
which makes their continued activity rather puzzling.
Secondly, most skeptics are always ready to take part in any
reasonable test. The "real" psychics are perfectly at liberty to
challenge the skeptics.
Thirdly, there are always more alleged psychics. Hence this
argument presents the skeptics with an ever-receding target. The
dialogue goes something like this:
A state of sensory deprivation which may enhance psychic abilities.
The subject lies on a soft bed, with a "white noise" hissing sound
played through headphones and half of a ping-pong ball placed over
each eye to give an empty field of view. The subject then talks to a
tape recorder, describing any ideas which enter his or her mind.
To test whether psychic communication is occurring, a "sender"
concentrates on some image while the "receiver" is in the ganzfeld.
Then the image is shown to the receiver along with three other images.
The receiver must pick the image that was seen by the sender.
Dean Radin <dradin@festival.ed.ac.uk> has been conducting some careful
ganzfeld experiments, which he describes as follows:
Our methodology was based on Honorton's auto-ganzfeld setup, which
automated most aspects of the experiment, except we were even more
obsessive: Our system uses a computer to randomly select the target,
to automatically present the target clip to the sender, to
automatically present the judging clips in a random order to the
receiver, and to store the data. The receiver and sender rooms are
25 meters apart, behind 4 doors, and sound-shielded to 100 dB.
We only use volunteer subjects claiming no special abilities,
typically for one or two sessions. The methodology and preliminary
study results will be reported in detail in August at the annual
Parapsychological Association convention. Some of our other plans
are reported in the 15 May 93 New Scientist cover article on
telepathy.
2.3: What is "Sensory Leakage"?
2.4: Who are the main psi researchers?
Rod bent into tube.
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2.6: Could psi be inhibited by the presence of skeptics?
2.7: Why don't the skeptics test the real psychics?
Paranormalist: Yes, I concede that Mr. Adams is a fake, but what about
Mr. Brown. The things that he does could never be
faked.
[Some months later]
Skeptic: Here is how Brown did it....
P: OK, I concede that Adams and Brown are fakes, but Mrs Carver is the
surely the real thing.
[Some months later]
S: Here is how Carver did it...
P: OK, maybe Adams, Brown and Carver were fakes, but what about Digby
and Ender?
S: I give up. There's no convincing some people.
P: [shouting] Digby and Ender are real psychics: the skeptics are
afraid to test them. They only test the fakes!
... our unit has recently conducted pilot replications of the
ganzfeld telepathy studies reported by Bem & Honorton. In 76
sessions we obtained 25 direct hits, which is quite close to the 33%
meta-analytic hit rate previously reported by Honorton et al..
The Left Hemisphere
The Web Wanderer
Bill Latura <blatura@xnet.com>