pedigree, thank you! Ever since reading the book I've wanted to see this. I'm still watching it now (I love having two monitors for one desktop
rondele wrote on Jun 30th, 2009 at 9:45am:Hi Beau-
This thread has motivated me to re-read Gary Schwartz's book The Afterlife Experiments, subtitled Breakthrough Scientific Evidence of Life After Death.
Schwartz approached this book from the point of view of a skeptic, and that was good because his experiments were highly controlled and designed to eliminate, as much as he could, the possibility of fraud or deception or coincidence.
It makes the outcome of his experiments all that much more compelling.
Bruce knows Gary and respects his methodology.
Book was published in 2002. John Edward and other well known mediums participated in the experiments. If you get a chance you might want to pick it up, fascinating reading.
R
I'm glad you brought this up because I've been meaning to ask you all about it.
I read this book during the winter and enjoyed it.
I made the mistake (IMO because my faith is fragile and I was beaten down at the time in that regard) of reading some skeptic's website that attacks Schwartz and this book.
They claim that it's all bogus because of those studies back in the day where they gave a bunch of people personality tests and asked them to rate their results from 1 to 5, 5 being best.
The average result was over 4 out of 5. Turns out, the experiments merely made up a single, generic report based on horoscopes (or something like that).
That was the skeptic's response to what Schwartz was doing.
This bugged the crap out of me (from my admitted weakness of faith and my worry in that regard), but I want to know if what I eventually thought about makes sense to you guys:
Isn't this an apples to oranges comparison?
I mean I think cold readers could compare to that study in the sense of being generic and people seeing what they want to see and saying the reader is legit, but in Schwartz's book, they clearly had these mediums giving out SPECIFIC information that, generically speaking, WOULD NOT apply to the vast majority of people.
I recall things like "Did you ever consider raising cattle?" be asked by a medium to someone. And they were right. Now now many lay persons would score that as an accurate hit?
Or another that involved goats on a mountain? There were several times where, IMO, it couldn't have been a cold read without a VERY VERY LUCKY coincidence being the answer.
So to me, the skeptic's claims are misleading garbage. Especially once I read for myself what the "personality result" that those experimenters provided. It's ridiculously generic and covers all sorts of things that generally apply to nearly everyone.
The fact is, a lot of times mediums spit stuff out that, if they're faking, would be career suicide in terms of how risky it is. Unless it's real.
Thoughts?