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- PARANET EDITORIAL: THE SNOBS AMONG US
- by Jim Speiser
-
-
- As I have stated before on many occasions, the idea that abduction
- experiences represent objectively real encounters with extraterrestrials
- represents an hypothesis, one that must be evaluated and weighed against
- other hypotheses or alternative "explanations." In terms of true scientif-
- ic objectivity, no one hypothesis has any more weight than any other un-
- less it can be shown to be more consistent with our knowledge and with all
- the pertinent facts. A psychological explanation is no more valid than any
- other simply by virtue of having been proposed by a more mainstream psych-
- ologist; it must prove itself on the weight of the evidence. Occam's ra-
- zor, however, dictates that more mundane, less extravagant explanations
- must be evaluated and discarded before we can fully accept the more outre'
- scenarios into the hallowed halls of "knowledge." You have to start some-
- where.
-
- Abduction specialists such as Budd Hopkins have long paid much lip-
- service to their efforts to investigate the more subjective explanations
- such as delusion or fantasy, and so I am curious as to how he and they
- will react to the article in the Winter 1987/88 edition of the Skeptical
- Inquirer, entitled "The Aliens Among Us: Hypnotic Regression Revisited,"
- by University of Kentucky psychologist Robert A. Baker. While the article
- is flawed in many respects, it compensates by offering the hypothesis
- outlined in the following extract:
-
- <<
- If these abductees were given...intensive diagnostic testing it
- is highly likely that many similarities would emerge--particularly
- an unusual personality pattern that Wilson and Barber (1983) have
- categorized as "fantasy-prone." In an important but much neglected
- article, they report in some detail their discovery of a group of
- excellent hypnotic subjects with unusual fantasy abilities. In their
- words:
-
- Although this study provided a broader understanding of the kind
- of life experiences that may underlie the ability to be an ex-
- cellent hypnotic subject, it has also led to a serendipitous
- finding that has wide implications for all of psychology -- it
- has shown that there exists a small group of individuals (pos-
- sibly 4% of the population) who fantasize a large part of the
- time, who typically "see," "hear," "smell," and "touch" and
- fully experience what they fantasize; and who can be labeled
- fantasy-prone personalities.
-
-
- << Wilson and Barber also stress that such individuals experience a
- reduction in orientation to time, place, and person that is charac-
- teristic of hypnosis or trance during their daily lives whenever
- they are deeply involved in a fantasy. They also have experiences
- during their daily ongoing lives that resemble the classical hypno-
- tic phenomena. In other words, the behavior we would normally call
- "hypnotic" is exhibited by these fantasy-prone types (FPs) all the
- time. In Wilson and Barber's words: "When we give them 'hypnotic
- suggestions,' such as for visual and auditory hallucinations, nega-
- tive hallucinations, age regression, limb rigidity, anesthesia, and
- sensory hallucinations, we are asking them to do for us the kind of
- thing they can do independently of us in their daily lives."
-
- << The reason we do not run into these types more often is that
- they have learned long ago to be highly secretive and private about
- their fantasy lives. Whenever the FPs do encounter a hypnosis situa-
- tion it provides them with a social situation in which they are en-
- couraged to do, and are rewarded for doing, what they usually do on-
- ly in secrecy and in private. Wilson and Barber also emphasize that
- regression and the reliving of previous experiences is something
- that virtually all the FPs do naturally in their daily lives. When
- they recall the past, they relive it to a surprisingly vivid extent,
- and they all have vivid memories of their experiences extending back
- to their early years.
- >>
-
- While there are many aspects of the abduction syndrome left unex-
- plained by this scenario, it appears to be a description of a personality
- type that is consistent with some of the more famous "abductees," such as
- Whitley Streiber. While researching his two books, Budd Hopkins retained
- the expertise of psychologist Aphrodite Clamar, who administered psycho-
- logical evaluation tests to nine abduction percipients, all of whom proved
- to be normal, sane individuals. The point Baker makes, however, is that
- these FPs ARE ALSO SANE, and would no doubt pass such a test. He further
- claims that there are more stringent tests designed to weed out such FPs,
- and I maintain that, in the interest of true scientific objectivity, it is
- incumbent upon researchers such as Hopkins to arrange to have such a test
- administered to another group of abduction claimants. We have been provid-
- ed with an earthly alternative; we owe it to the public, to the skeptics,
- to other researchers, and to the claimants themselves (who Hopkins claims
- are actually quite fearful of the ETH) to investigate fully this new pos-
- sibility.
-
- There is another, admittedly more selfish and spiteful reason to
- objectively evaluate the "FPH." Baker, typical of many CSICOP "hit-men,"
- has succumbed to snobbery and unabashedly claims the intellectual high
- ground in his article. He was doing just fine until his "Consequences and
- Summary" section. Some quotes typify his attitude: "Need we be concerned
- about an invasion of little gray kidnappers? Amused, yes. Concerned, no."
- "Should we take Streiber, Hopkins, Kinder, et al. seriously? Not really."
- "Tolerance IS the mark of a civilized mind." Well, BLESS you, Prof. Baker.
- You seem to forget, however, that YOUR hypothesis has not been tested,
- either, and consequently you have as yet no legitimate claim to being
- "right." And as I stated before, your article is flawed. It doesn't take
- into account the physical evidence, such as scarring, landing traces, and
- "exoglyphic exemplars." It relies heavily on generalizations and quoting
- of previous studies which only tangentially impact the abduction scenario.
- And it weakly waves off the marked similarities between abduction ac-
- counts.
-
- If testing of the FPH should provide a clear indication that a psych-
- ological explanation is warranted, I fully expect abduction researchers to
- acknowledge that their hypothesizing of alien intervention stands on weak-
- ened legs. If, however, the results of such testing show no such correla-
- tion, I would appreciate it if Prof. Baker and other debunkers would
- propose solutions in a more detached, even-handed, level-headed manner
- more becoming of the TRULY civilized. Failing this, I would appreciate it
- if they would kindly shutup.