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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!das-news.harvard.edu!husc-news.harvard.edu!husc10!stern6
- From: stern6@husc10.harvard.edu (Michael Stern)
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Subject: Harvard University Gazette endorces alien abductee research
- Message-ID: <stern6.712548706@husc10>
- Date: 31 Jul 92 02:11:46 GMT
- Article-I.D.: husc10.stern6.712548706
- Lines: 174
- Nntp-Posting-Host: husc10.harvard.edu
-
- The Harvard University Gazette is a publication largely internal to
- Harvard. It prints information about seminars, research and whatnot,
- along with spotlights on interesting professors and areas of study.
-
- In the most recent issue (July 24, 1992) a full page is devoted to John
- Mack, an MD affiliated with Harvard who believes that aliens routinely
-
- abduct midwestern housewives and perform strange experiments on them.
-
- The article is extremely generous to Mack; in fact, it could scarcely
- be more so.
-
- I would like to write a full response to the Gazette, and was wondering
- if anybody reading this post could point me to relevant sources of
- information about the 'abductions' and 'visitors' and so on.
-
- The article follows, in its entirety.
-
- --
-
- Accounting for Stories of Alien Abduction
- Psychiatrist John Mack shares his convictons [sic] that these reports are
- 'authentic and disturbing mysteries'
-
- By Deane W. Lord
- Gazette Staff
-
- From Ancient Greece to the present, humankind has asked, Is there life
- beyond planet Earth? And, if so, what form does it take?
- Last month some 100 researchers and mental health professionals gathered
- in Cambridge to explore the possibility of extraterrestrial life and to
- examine and compare the experiences of abductees--men and women who claim to
- have been kidnapped by alien beings, taken aboard spacecraft, and eventually
- released.
- The four-day closed meeting drew some of the most ardent and long-term
- researchers who presented short papers on their work. Chief among them was
- conference co-organizer Medical School Psychiatry Professor John Mack, who
- became involved with the UFO question two and a half years ago. Though he
- began as a total skeptic, he admitted, he now believes that the experiences
- of abductees "are an extremely important phenomenon"-and that "we can't begin
- to understand them without a shift in our world view."
- He believes that mental dualism in the West--"we're here, you're
- there"--will prevent many from being open minded about the possibility of
- alien abductions. These experiences are shattering our world view [by
- suggesting] that we may be connected with other beings beyond ourselves....
- The proposition attacks the arrogance of our ideas and makes a mockery of our
- technology.
- Estimates vary as to how many individuals have had abduction experiences.
- According to a Roper Organization poll, one out of every 50 American adults--
- some 3.7 million people indicate that they have had an encounter with an
- unidentified flying object or an alien being.
- "It is possible that hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of people
- in this country alone have undergone abduction experiences," said Mack.
- Because of the stigma attached to revealing such experiences, he believes
- many people remain underground, too ashamed or alarmed to admit the
- experience.
- "The more prominent the person, the more likely he or she will be
- reluctant to come forward as they have more to lose," he said. "Often, once
- they seek help, abductees prefer to be diagnosed as crazy."
- A well-known psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, Mack reports that of the 60
- cases he has worked on he has found, -to his surprise, that after a battery
- of psychological tests, "no psychiatric or psychosocial explanation for these
- reports is evident. These people are not mentally ill." He has spent
- countless therapeutic hours with these individuals only to find that what
- struck him was the "ordinariness" of the population, including a restaurant
- owner, several secretaries, a prison guard, college students, a university
- administrator, and several homemakers.
- "The majority of abductees do not appear to be deluded, confabulating,
- lying, self-dramatizing, or suffering from a clear mental illness," he
- maintained. He has encountered only one person who showed psychotic features.
- The central finding of most researchers, including Mack, is that there is
- one archetypal abduction experience and that most abduction memories contain
- very limited variations on a standard scenario. A typical encounter would
- begin with uneasy feelings of foreboding, a fear-inducing appearance of small
- alien beings, transport to a spacecraft, examination and other procedures
- performed on a special table, various tests and tasks given, the introduction
- of more favorable feelings toward the aliens, and finally a return to
- pre-abduction activities and states of consciousness.
- For most of the abductees, the experience is fearful and many repress the
- details. Often, hypnosis brings back the traumatic episode and helps the
- abductee recover memories of the entire event, Mack and others have found.
- "Particularly impressive to me has been the intense resistance and
- disturbing affect, especially fear, as memories of traumatic abduction
- experiences begin to emerge under hypnosis or through conscious recall," said
- Mack. He and others find it hard to explain the marks left on some bodies
- from red triangles on the chest to incisions on arms and legs. Several have
- had implants in their ears and noses but, upon study, physicists and
- biochemists find no unearthly material.
- "Any adequate theory of alien abductions, even a useful hypothesis, must
- account for a broad range of puzzling phenomena," said Mack.
- In his inventory of occurrences, he includes narrative consistency. "The
- stories that abductees tell vary in their details, but they have a hard edge
- of narrative consistency," he found. He dismisses the argument that abductees
- influence one another and believes that "what more often happens is that when
- abductees communicate with each other about their abductions or watch
- television or film versions of abductions, they fill in details of what they
- have already experienced and are trying to clarify."
- Even though many abductions occur independent of UFO sightings, a close
- association between UFO encounters and abduction experiences has been
- consistently observed, noted Mack.
- Mack believes a convincing theory must be found for the bizarre physical
- effects, such as termination of pregnancy, sexual liaisons, incisions, and
- implants that abductees report.
- A way also must be found to account for the abduction reports of children
- as young as 2. These are, Mack said, "emotionally intense and seemingly
- authentic, detailed experiences [from young people] whose exposure to outside
- sources of information has been limited."
- The abduction phenomenon, said Mack, "confronts us with an authentic and
- disturbing mystery. There is no way, I believe, that we can even make sense,
- let alone provide a convincing explanation, of this matter within the
- framework of our existing views of what is real or possible. Our
- psychological theories do not include a way of accounting for the
- simultaneous occurrence among thousands of people, unacquainted with each
- other, including small children, of complex, elaborate, and sometimes
- overwhelmingly powerful experiences that resemble one another in minute
- detail, accompanied by equally peculiar physical phenomena."
- Mack also thinks that the current understanding of physical reality
- "whereby a population of beings from some other space/time realm can enter
- our world with such limited detection and affect so many people" defies our
- accepted notions of scientific reality.
- Like others, Mack believes the phenomenon is worthy of more inquiry. "The
- phenomenon may deliver to us a kind of fourth blow to our collective egoism,
- following those of Copernicus, Darwin, and Freud. We may be led to realize
- that we are not physically at the center of the universe, . . . we are not
- even the preeminent or dominant intelligence in the cosmos in control of our
- psychological and physical existences.
- "It appears that we can be 'invaded' or taken over, if not literally by
- other creatures, then by some other form of being or consciousness that seems
- able to do with us what it will for a purpose we cannot yet fathom."
-
- Sidebar:
-
- Research on human lives, with purpose and idealism
-
- About three years ago, a colleague asked John Mack to meet writer Budd
- Hopkins, the author of Intruders, a book recently made into a television
- movie on the experiences of abductees.
- Mack was highly skeptical; "there was no way I could understand the
- phenomena," he recalled.
- But Mack did meet with Hopkins, and became fascinated by the stories he
- heard. The conversation ultimately led Mack into abductee research; from 1990
- to January of this year, he interviewed 34 adults and children who claim to
- have encountered aliens, and will write a book about the phenomenon.
- His work with abductees impressed him "with the powerful dimension of
- personal growth that accompanies the traumatic experiences. An intense
- concern for the planet's survival and a powerful ecological consciousness
- seem to develop for many abductees. For me and other investigators, abduction
- research has had a shattering impact on our views of the nature of the
- cosmos."
- He is most proud of his work at Cambridge Hospital's psychiatry
- department, which he founded in 1962. He won a 1977 Pulitzer Prize for his
- biography of Lawrence of Arabia, A Prince of Our Disorder: The Life of T.E.
- Lawrence (Little, Brown and Co.). He has also published extensively in the
- areas of psychobiography and the psychosocial effects of the nuclear arms
- race.
- As an investigator of the psychology of the nuclear arms race, Mack, 62,
- founded the Center for Psychology and Social Change, a Cambridge-based
- research organization devoted to the psychosocial study of human violence,
- conflict, and images of the enemy. The center has recently enlarged its focus
- to include the preservation of the environment.
- Mack received his M.D. from Harvard in 1955, and graduated from the
- Boston Psychoanalytic Institute in 1967 and was certified as a child analyst
- in 1969. He graduated from Oberlin College, phi beta kappa.
- He has been a professor of psychiatry at the Cambridge Hospital, an
- affiliate of the the Medical School [sic], since 1972 and was head of the
- Department of Psychiatry there from 1973 to 1977. A faculty member of the
- Boston Psychoanalytic Society, he is also currently president of the
- International Society for Political Psychology.
-
- ******************************************************************************
- Michael Stern * "I love children, especially when they cry,
- * for then someone takes them away."
- stern6@husc.harvard.edu * -Nancy Mitford
- ******************************************************************************
-