The Great PSI Shift

Here’s a brief extract from  The Great Psi Shift, the working title for a work-in-progress by Australian futurist Marcus Anthony. The paragraphs I included come from a chapter in which Marcus examines mainstream science’s reluctance to acknowledge the reality of extra-sensory perception.

He focuses here on the published work of the well known and popular physicist Michio Kaku. Not having read the book in question by Kaku, I was surprised by how unaware he is about telepathy. Of course, as they say, everybody is dumb about something…even brilliant minds like Kaku. But his lack of interest in psychic awareness is pretty astonishing for someone who is mapping our the future of our minds.

For me, this revelation was similar to finding out how the s0-called forward thinking folks at TED are heavily biased against allowing anyone to make presentations with a favorable view on telepathy, precognition or other aspects of paranormal phenomena. Go figure.

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Lazy and unimaginative?

While I prefer not to make judgments about thinkers (after all, we all see the world through our own culture, experience and education) occasionally I feel compelled to highlight some of the unimaginative, sloppy or just plain lazy thinking that sometimes passes for intelligent discourse on this important subject.

Michio Kaku is a chronic offender in this area, which is rather surprising given that his entire career is devoted to imagining science-based futures. Here’s what he says about telepathy in The Future of the Mind.

“True telepathy, found in science-fiction and fantasy novels, is not possible without outside assistance. As we know, the brain is electrical. In general, anytime an electron is accelerated, it gives off electromagnetic radiation. The same holds true for electrons oscillating inside the brain, which broadcasts radio waves. But these signals are too faint to be detected by others, and even if we could perceive these radio waves, it would be difficult to make sense of them. Evolution has not given us the ability to decipher this collection of random radio signals, but computers can.”

The question that I want answered here is why Kaku has not bothered to do even a simple Google search on the evidence for telepathy? If he had, he would know that there is – in the very least – a compelling body of evidence for its existence, stretching over a century. This is the lazy part of his work.

Part of the answer to my previous question lies in the title of Kaku’s book: The future of the mind. Note the use of the singular term of “future”, as opposed to “futures”. For Kaku there is only one future of the mind, and it is based on simple, linear extrapolation of current data and models of thinking.

Now let’s get on to Kaku’s lack of imagination, which is astounding.

Research gleaned from parapsychology (which we examined in chapter 5) strongly suggests that the extended mind operates beyond our commonly accepted models of space and time (but not necessarily quantum physics). Knowing is immediate regardless of distance, and there are EEG correlation experiments which suggest that projected thought may even travel backwards through time (which in itself does not violate relativity theory). This suggests that the mechanism is not one of the four known forces of nature (including radio waves).

As an imaginative futurist, Kaku should, at the very least, be able to question the assumptions of the current dominant paradigm and mainstream scientific worldview. He should be aware enough of the large body of research into the area, and he should be willing to consider alternatives to current conservative thinking. And his Ivy league-educated future mind should be able to consider the possibility that consciousness beyond the skull may not operate with the assistance of radio waves. But alas, these things appear to be beyond his capacities – or his motivations.

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It could be considered a synchronicity that Kaku equates the possibility of telepathy with radio waves, considering that radios are old technology, and his approach to telepathy is an old way of looking at reality. Yet, it’s also the mainstream way to this day.

Marcus’s introduction to his book can be found here.

 

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6 Responses to The Great PSI Shift

  1. Thanks for posting this, Trish and Rob.

    BTW, Mike, you might like a book by Will Storr called “Heretics: Adventures with the Enemies of Science.” It is written by a skeptic who hammers people on both sides of the fence. He’s very fair, I think. I don’t think scepticism is incompatible with spirituality at all, as long as it is not dogmatic materialism in disguise – which it usually is. You can find a review here: https://www.mind-futures.com/skepticism-with-vulnerability/

  2. Since I have had telepathic experiences and also experienced strong resistance to such events as “real” within my immediately family – both from “thinking” types who repress any intuitive experience, perhaps out of fear of not understanding what they don’t know – I am wondering if these people are control freaks who cannot bear the idea that they are not in control of everything. Maybe they are afraid that some people “know” what they don’t. I may not be expressing my idea here very well. The control freak syndrome as a mechanism to deny experience just popped into my mind when reading your post. Any thoughts?

    • Rob and Trish says:

      I get it, Adele. It’s a field of exploration where they don’t have any experience, and so it’s out of their control. Actually, they may have had experiences, but repressed them because of their orientation.

      There’s also a sense that they don’t want others to explore the so-called paranormal, either because they fear what’s ‘out there,’ or they just don’t understand it. If telepathy, precognition and other aspects of PSI were real, then they would have to re-think their entire belief systems. In other words, they lose control of their own thought processes and conclusions about what is real. Scary!

      Somehow, for Kaku, it’s okay to suggest that some UFOs are truly mysterious phenomena. But telepathy, for him, doesn’t exist. He doesn’t want to go there. Too ‘fringy.’

  3. Some people, of course, simply don’t want to accept such things as ESP, for all sorts of reasons. If they don’t want to hear they won’t.

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