THEOSOPHY
Theosophical Society,
Psychic Glossary
Healing
that takes place when the healer is not in direct contact with the person to be
healed.
A person,
not present during a sitting, on whose behalf readings are given. See also
Proxy Sitting.
Traditional
Chinese medical practice that involves sticking needles into specific locations
on the body. See also healing.
(a) Person who attempts to communicate information
to another in an ESP experiment. Cf. percipient.
(b) The subject in a psychokinesis
experiment.
(c) Person who is the focus of poltergeist
activity.
Akashic
Records
“Memories”
of all experiences since the beginning of time, believed by some mystical
doctrines to be stored permanently in a spiritual substance (Akasha). Alien
Abduction Experience Reported experiences of being abducted by alien creatures,
often into spacecraft. Abductees often experience lost time and suffer loss of
memory. When memories are recovered, often using hypnotic regression, abductees
may report that surgical operations were performed on them. See also temporal
lobe activity.
Alpha
Rhythm Electrical activity in the brain (about 10 cycles per second) associated
with a state of mental relaxation. See also EEG.
Altered
State of Consciousness (ASC) A term used to refer to any state of consciousness
that is different from “normal” states of waking or sleeping. ASCs include hypnosis, trance, ecstasy, psychedelic and
meditative experience. ASCs do not necessarily have
paranormal features.
Ancestor
Worship Religious practices involving the veneration of dead ancestors.
Benevolent
spiritual beings who help people in need. See also guardian angel.
A term
coined by F.A. Mesmer to refer to a putative force or
fluid capable of being transmitted from one person to another, producing
healing effects. See also Mesmerism.
Refers to
cases in which animal corpses (often cattle) have been found with bizarre
injuries that do not seem to have a normal explanation in terms of illness,
accident or action of predators. Cuts and injuries often appear to have been
carried out with surgical precision. Typically the corpse is drained of blood.
Certain body parts may be absent (e.g., genitals).
Paranormal
abilities exhibited by animals. Also known as “Anpsi”.
Religious
practices based on the belief that all living things and natural objects have
their individual spiritual essence or soul.
Announcing
Dream A dream believed to announce an individual’s rebirth. See also
reincarnation.
Anomalous
Experience A general term referring to unusual experiences that cannot be
explained in terms of current scientific knowledge. Cf. psi.
Anomalous
Phenomena Natural phenomena that cannot be explained in terms of current
scientific knowledge. See also Fortean
phenomena. Anoxia See cerebral anoxia.
Anpsi See
Animal Psi Apparition A visual appearance (cf.
hallucination), often of a person or scene, generally experienced in a waking
or hypnagogic / hypnopompic
state. See also crisis apparition, ghost, haunting.
A physical
object which appears in a way that cannot be explained (seeming to come from
nowhere). Apports are often associated with the seance room and physical mediumship.
Cf. deport. See also materialization,
teleportation.
In
parapsychology, false evidence of paranormal phenomena, due to some extraneous
normal influence. ASC See altered state
of consciousness.
A term
used by occultists, spiritualists and theosophists to refer to a supposed
“double” of the person’s physical body.
The astral body is believed to be separable from the physical body
during astral projection (out of body experience) and at death. See also Ka. Astral Projection A term used by occultists,
spiritualists and theosophists for the out of body experience. It is believed
to result when the astral body separates from the physical body.
A theory
and practice which attempts to identify the ways in
which
astronomical events are correlated with events on
earth
(e.g., with an individual’s personality and biography,
or with
social and political trends). See also Astrology
Directory
Atavism
Re-emergence of ancestral
characteristics; a genetic
throwback.
Augury
Divination.
A field of
energy believed by some to surround living creatures. Certain clairvoyants
claim to be able to see the aura (generally as a luminous, coloured
halo). See also Kirlian photography.
Automatic
Art See automatism.
The
ability to write intelligible messages without conscious control or knowledge
of what is being written. See also automatism, dissociation.
Physical activites (e.g., arm movements, writing, drawing, musical
performance) that occur without the automatist’s conscious control or
knowledge. Also known as motor automatism. See also automatic writing,
dissociation.
(a) Seeing one’s “double”. See also astral body.
(b) Looking back at one’s own body from a position
outside of the body. See also out of body experience.
Ancient
Egyptian concept of a person’s essence, believed to be be
immortal. Cf. Ka. See also Soul.
In Gaelic
belief, a female entity who heralds a death by groaning and screaming.
In Tibetan
Buddhism, an intermediate state of existence, usually referring to the state
between life and rebirth.
Term used
in card-guessing tests of clairvoyance, in which the top card of the deck is
placed to one side after each guess.
Procedure
in which a question is secretly written on a piece of paper which is folded or
sealed in an envelope, and handed to the psychic who attempts to answer the
question. Various trickery can be
employed by fraudulent psychics and mentalists.
Being (or
appearing to be) in two different places at the same time. See also autoscopy.
A general
term for techniques that involve giving a person information about their
current physiological state (e.g., heart rate, EEG). Biofeedback is used to
enable people to control consciously their physiological processes.
Psychokinetic
effects on biological processes. See also DMILS.
Conjuring
technique of concealing objects using black covers against a black background.
Also used by fraudulent mediums.
Magical
spells or rituals practiced with the intention of harming others. Cf. white
magic .
An
experimental control in which subjects are not informed of certain key features
of the experiment. Also used to refer to a procedure where a judge is asked to
compare targets and responses without knowing which responses were made to
which targets. See also double blind.
Blind Matching (BM) An identical procedure to open matching, except that
the key cards are unseen by the subject.
(a) A communication in which the sitter is asked
to look at a specific book and page in order to receive a significant message.
(b) An effect in which the psychic or mentalist
divines the words written on a particular page of a book.
A box or
curtained enclosure in which a physical medium is secured and from which
various phenomena may manifest (e.g., lights, objects moving, instruments
played). Certain stage magicians can simulate this procedure with great effect.
Response
made by a subject in a card-guessing or other ESP test.
A
Brazilian spiritist religion. See also Umbanda, Voodoo.
An
experimental test for ESP in which subjects guess the identity of a set of
cards (e.g., playing cards or Zener cards).
Cartomancy
Fortune telling using cards. See also tarot.
Cerebral Anoxia Lack of oxygen to the brain, often causing sensory
distortions and hallucinations. Sometimes used to explain features of the
near-death experience. Chance Random,
unpredictable influences on events.
Receiving
messages and inspiration from discarnate entities. See also medium. See also Medium Directory
entry Charm A spell or object possessing magic power. Christian Science A religious healing
movement founded by Mary Baker Eddy.
Rejects orthodox medical practice.
A coded
message left by a person who intends to communicate the cipher after death.
A group of
people who hold seances. See also mediumship.
The
paranormal obtaining of information by hearing sounds or voices. See also
clairvoyance, clairsentience.
An archaic
term that refers to the paranormal obtaining of information using faculties
other than vision or hearing. Cf.
clairaudience, clairvoyance, empathy, intuition.
A general
term that refers to the paranormal obtaining of information about an object or
event. In modern usage, this does not necessarily refer to obtaining information
visually. Cf. clairaudience, clairsentience, ESP, psi.
See Also Clairvoyance Definition Clairvoyant See clairvoyant medium.
Clairvoyant
Medium Or clairvoyant. A person who obtains information paranormally (often by
spirit communication) without the need to enter into a trance state. Cf. trance
medium.
A set of
cards used in a card-guessing test where each card appears a fixed number of
times. Statistical analysis of research data using a closed deck differs from
statistical analysis of data using an open deck.
The
occurrence, within a short space of time, of two or more meaningfully related
events and without any apparent causal connection between them. Coincidences
are sometimes bizarre and extraordinarily improbable. See also synchronicity.
A reading
given with no prior knowledge of the sitter. Often a mixture of very general
statements which could apply to anyone, together with inferences made from cues
presented by the sitter (e.g., physical appearance, clothes, tone of voice,
statements made). Cf. hot reading.
Collective Apparition An apparition seen simultaneously by more than one
person. Collective Unconscious Concept put
forward by C.G. Jung to refer to a level of unconscious thought and experience
shared collectively by humans.
In mediumship, a message purported to be from a discarnate
entity.
A
discarnate entity from whom the medium receives messages.
See also
drop-in communicator.
A person
who secretly provides information to a fraudulent psychic or mentalist.
Using
trickery to simulate paranormal effects, generally for the purpose of
entertainment. Contact Mind Reading A
technique simulating telepathy, in which the “mind reader” (who generally holds
a hand or arm) responds to slight muscle movements produced unconsciously by
the person whose mind is apparently being read. Also known as muscle reading, Cumberlandism or Hellstromism.
(a) In experimental parapsychology a procedure
undertaken in order to ensure that the experiment is conducted in a standard
fashion and so that results are not unduly influenced by extraneous factors.
See also control group, artefact.
(b) In spiritualism, a discarnate entity who
communicates with a trance medium and who generally controls the trance state.
A group of
people whose performance is compared with that of experimental subjects. Cf.
experimental group.
Circular
(or more elaborate) formations found in growing crops, most commonly in
An
association between two or more events or variables. Correlation Coefficient A mathematical of the
degree of association between two or more measures. Cosmic Consciousness A blissful experience in
which the person becomes aware of the whole universe as a living being. See
also altered state of consciousness, mystical experience. Coven A group of witches Crisis Apparition An
apparition in which a person is seen within a few hours of an important crisis
such as death, accident or sudden illness.
Cross-correspondence
(a) Separate items of information, received
independently by two or more mediums, which make sense only when pieced
together.
(b) THE cross-correspondences is a classic case of
highly complex cross-correspondences which continued from 1901 to 1932 among a
group of automatists associated with the Society for Psychical Research.
Knowledge
(acquired in normal ways) that may be revealed without the person remembering its
source. Such memories may falsely appear to be paranormal revelations.
Sometimes cryptomnesia is used as an explanation for
apparently paranormal experiences such as xenoglossy
or past-life memories.
Crystal
Gazing Staring into a reflecting surface (e.g., mirror, glass, crystal, liquid)
in order to obtain paranormal information.
Also known as scrying. See also
divination. Cumberlandism
See contact mind reading.
Words
spoken or written in order to influence others paranormally, causing them harm.
See also spell, hex.
A guardian
spirit who communicates inspiration and advice.
See also
guardian angel.
Generally
understood to be the extinction of an organism’s life. Many doctrines assert
some form of mental or spiritual survival of physical death. See also deathbed
experience, haunting, mediumship, near-death
experience, reincarnation. Deathbed
Experience A dying person’s awareness of the presence of dead friends or
relatives. See also near-death experience.
A decrease
in performance on a psi test when the test is
repeated. Cf. incline effect. Deja Experience See deja vu.
A person’s
feeling that current events have been experienced before.
A term
used to refer to any kind of anomalous experience.
The
paranormal fading or disappearance of a physical object.
See also
deport.
Demonic
Possession Possession by evil spirits. See also
exorcism.
The
paranormal movement of objects out of a secure enclosed space. Cf. apport. See also dematerialization, teleportation.
Experimental
techniques for investigating psychokinesis, in which
a subject attempts to influence the fall of dice.
A voice
heard in a seance which does not seem to emanate from
any person. The voice may seem to come out of thin air, or from a trumpet used
specifically for this purpose. Cf.
indirect voice.
A spirit or
non-material entity. Often used to refer to the personality of a deceased
individual. See also channeling, communication, mediumship,
possession, survival.
Responses
on a psi test that correspond systematically to
targets other than the intended one (e.g., those before or after).
Activity
performed outside of normal conscious awareness, or mental processes that
suggest the existence of separate centres of consciousness.
Practices
involving the interpretation of signs or symbols that seek to obtain oracular
knowledge of events. Examples of divinatory practices are geomancy, tarot, I Ching, sortilege, and reading tea leaves.
A forked
rod (or sometimes a pair of L-shaped rods) used in dowsing.
“Direct
Mental Interaction with Living Systems”.
Psychokinetic influences on physiological processes. See also Bio-PK.
A mirror
image or double of a person. See also astral body.
A
duplicate of one’s own body. See also astral body Double Blind An experimental
procedure in which neither the subject nor experimenter is aware of key
features of the experiment. Down Through
Technique (DT) An experimental test for clairvoyance in which the person
guesses the order of a stacked series of target symbols (e.g., cards) from top
to bottom. Cf. up through technique.
The
paranormal detection of underground water or mineral deposits (or lost persons
and objects) using a divining rod or pendulum.
Dream See
paranormal dream.
Drop-in Communicator
An uninvited communicator who ‘drops in’ at a sitting.
Earthquake
Effect A phenomenon produced by the physical medium D.D. Home, involving the
room shaking as if there was an earthquake.
An altered
state of consciousness in which the person experiences great rapture and loss
of self-control. Cf. trance.
A
semi-fluid substance exuded by a physical medium from which materializations
may form. EEG (Electro-encephalography)
A method of recording variations of electrical activity in the cortex of the
brain.
Electronic
Voice Phenomena (EVP) See Raudive voices.
A spirit
associated with one of the classical four elements (fire, earth, air and
water). See also animism.
Paranormal
extension of the physical body, reported in some mystics and physical mediums.
Someone
who shows considerable empathy, especially of the apparently psychic type.
The
ability to understand the experience or emotional state of another person or
animal. Often used to refer to an apparently psychic ability to experience
another person’s sensations, pain or emotions. Cf. clairsentience, intuition.
Entity See
discarnate entity.
ESP See
Extrasensory Perception. ESP Cards See Zener Cards.
Etheric
Body Similar to astral body.
Alleged
ability of some people to harm others by looking at them.
Electronic
Voice Phenomena. See Raudive voices.
The
summoning of (often evil) spirits using a magical incantation or ritual. Cf.
invocation.
A
religious or quasi-religious rite to drive out evil spirits. See also
possession. Experiment A test carried
out under controlled conditions.
Experimental Group A group of subjects who undergo a specific
experimental procedure. Often results from this group are compared with those
of a control group.
Experimental
Parapsychology Parapsychological research involving
experimental methods rather than survey techniques or the investigation of
spontaneous cases.
Experimenter
The person who conducts the experiment.
Experimenter Effect Influence that the experimenter’s personality or behaviour may have on the results of an experiment. Extradimensional
Originating outside our normal space-time reality. Cf. extraterrestrial.
Extrasensory
Perception (ESP) Paranormal acquisition of information. Includes clairvoyance,
telepathy and precognition. See also psi.
Originating
beyond planet Earth. Not normally considered to be extradimensional.
Small,
human-like mythical being. May be benevolent or malevolent.
Healing
that is associated with prayer or belief in Divine power.
An
experience in which a person believes he or she has woken up, but actually is
still dreaming.
A wire
mesh enclosure that provides a shield to radio waves.
The giving
of information to subjects about their performance on a test. See also
biofeedback.
Walking on
red-hot coals, without pain or damage to the feet.
A term,
coined in 1947, to refer to unknown disk-like aerial objects, often believed to
be extraterrestrial spacecraft. The term
has now been largely superseded by “UFO”.
Focal Person Person who is at the centre of
poltergeist activity. Forced-Choice Test
An ESP test in which the subject guesses from a predetermined list of
alternative targets. Fortean
Phenomena Strange phenomena, especially those which challenge conventional
scientific knowledge. Named after the American researcher and writer Charles
Fort. Fortean phenomena include those generally
considered paranormal, but also bizarre non-paranormal events such as monsters
and prodigies, extraordinary coincidences, and unusual rains.
Various
practices which aim to divine future events. See also divination.
The
deliberate faking of paranormal phenomenena,
generally for the purpose of financial gain, psychological manipulation, or
notoriety. Faking for the purpose of entertainment (e.g., by stage magicians
and mentalists) is not normally classed as fraud.
An ESP
test in which the subject responds freely (does not choose from a fixed list of
targets). For example, the subject may write down or draw their impressions, or
may talk freely into a tape recorder. In order to assess the accuracy of the
responses, they are compared with various targets (including the actual target)
by a judge. See also preferential matching.
A
technique for investigating ESP in which the person experiences an absence of
patterned stimulation. This generally involves the subject wearing halved
table-tennis balls over the eyes while listening to hiss (white noise) through
headphones.
General
Extrasensory Perception (GESP) ESP in which it is unclear whether the results
are due to clairvoyance, telepathy, precognition or retrocognition.
A system
of divination involving the interpretation of lines or figures.
GESP See
general extrasensory perception Ghost Popular term for an experience believed
to indicate the presence of the spirit of a deceased person. See also
apparition, haunting, poltergeist. Full definition Gimmick In conjuring, any
small concealed apparatus that is used to produce a magical effect. Also used
by fraudulent mediums.
Unintelligible
speech generally uttered in a dissociated or trance state. Also known as
“speaking in tongues”. See also xenoglossy.
Name given
to a subject in a psi test who does not believe in
the phenomenon. See also “sheep”, sheep-goat effect.
An angel
believed to protect the individual. See also guide.
Guide
A spirit
who is believed to assist a person’s spiritual
journey.
See also angel, guardian angel
A sensory experience
that does not correspond to physical reality. See also apparition.
Paranormal
phenomena such as apparitions, unexplained sounds, smells or other sensations
that are associated over a lengthy period of time with a specific location. Cf. poltergeist.
Healer
Someone who claims the power of healing.
Generally
indicates cures that cannot be explained in terms of accepted medical
principles. See also faith healing, psychic healing, spirit cures. Hellstromism See
contact mind reading.
(a) An evil spell or magical curse.
(b) To practice witchcraft.
Hit
A response
that accurately matches the target. Cf. miss.
A reading
given in which prior knowledge of the sitter has been obtained, often using
devious or fraudulent means. Cf. cold
reading.
An
Hawaiian religious practice involving clairvoyance, precognition, healing,
miracles and magic. Hyperacuity
See hyperaesthesia.
Hyperaesthesia Exceptionally acute sensory awareness. Hypnagogic Imagery Imagery occurring in the hypnagogic
state (occuring while dropping off to sleep).
Hypnopompic
Imagery Imagery occurring in the hypnopompic
state (occurring while waking up).
An ASC
involving a heightened degree of suggestibility. See also Mesmerism.
Hypnotism
See hypnosis.
Ancient
Chinese “Book of Changes”. It describes 64 hexagrams (patterns of 6 broken and
unbroken lines) which are used in a divinatory practice involving the throwing
of yarrow stalks or coins.
(a) An appearance that leads the person to draw
mistaken conclusions.
(b) In conjuring, a perceptual trick.
Imagery
The ability
to perceive images in the mind. These may be visual, auditory, tactile, etc.
Various beliefs
based on the assumption that some aspect of personal existence survives death.
An
increase in performance on a psi test when the test
is repeated. Cf. decline effect.
Incorruptibility Inexplicable lack of decay in a corpse. Indirect Voice Mediumistic phenomenon in
which the discarnate entity appears to speak using the vocal apparatus of the
medium. Often the voice will sound very
different from the medium’s normal voice. Cf. direct voice.
The
non-paranormal ability to grasp the elements of a situation or to draw
conclusions about complex events in ways that go beyond a purely rational or
intellectual analysis. Cf. clairsentience, empathy.
Summoning
benevolent spiritual beings. Cf. evocation.
Person who
compares targets and responses in an psi experiment.
Ancient
Egyptian term for the double or astral body. See also Ba.
Hindu and
Buddhist ethical doctrine of “as one sows, so shall one reap”. See also
reincarnation.
Reference cards used to indicate
each target alternative in
a
card-guessing test.
Kirlian
Photography A photographic method involving high frequency electric current,
discovered by S.D. & V. Kirlian in the
In Yogic
belief, a source of tremendous vital energy that may be stimulated by various
practices. Kundalini, or the “Serpent Power”, is believed to provide energy for
paranormal phenomena.
A healing
practice, in which the healer’s hands are placed on or near the body of the
sick person.
The
paranormal raising or suspension of an object or person.
Life after
Death See survival.
Flashback
memories of the whole of a person’s life, often associated with the near-death
experience.
Dreaming
in which the person is aware that the experience is a dream. Often associated
with feelings of aliveness and freedom, and with the ability to control dream
events.
(a) An early term for clairvoyance.
(b) Lucid dreaming.
Luminous
Phenomena The experience of strange lights or glows, often around objects or
people. See also aura.
The
supposed magical transformation of a person into the form of a wolf. See also
shape-shifting, therianthropy, werewolf.
Psychokinetic
effects that can be directly observed rather than only inferred from
statistical analysis. Cf. micro-PK.
(a) Practices that aim to use paranormal or
spiritual means to influence events. See also white magic, black magic.
(b) The art of conjuring.
Magician A
person who practices magic. Majority
Vote Technique An ESP procedure in which several subjects guess a target (or
one subject makes several guesses). The most frequent guess is used as the
response.
A sacred
sound or sacred syllables used in meditation. See also transcendental
meditation. Match An alternative term
for hit. Matching See preferential
matching, matching tests.
Card
guessing tests in which the subject uses key cards when making guesses. See
also blind matching, open matching, screen touch matching.
Materialization
The formation of a visible and tangible object or human shape during a seance. Cf. apport. Mean Chance Expectation (MCE) The most likely
chance score in a psi test. Medicine Man / Medicine Woman A witchdoctor
or shaman.
Mental or
physical-mental techniques which aim to produce spiritually desirable states of
consciousness. See also ASC, Yoga.
A person
believed to act as an intermediary between discarnate entities and the living.
See also clairvoyant medium, trance medium, mental mediumship,
physical mediumship.
Mediumship
Activity of a medium.
A branch
of conjuring involving the simulation of psi. Mental Mediumship
The paranormal obtaining of information by a medium. Cf. physical mediumship.
A system
of healing developed by F.A. Mesmer, involving the
induction of trance states and the supposed transfer of animal magnetism.
People in Mesmeric trance often showed paranormal abilities such as
clairvoyance. Message See communication.
Psychokinetic
ability to bend metal objects. A phenomenon popularised
by Uri Geller. Metamorphosis See
shape-shifting.
Metempsychosis
Another term for reincarnation.
Psychokinetic
effects that cannot be directly observed, but only inferred from the
statistical analysis of data. Cf.
macro-PK.
Mind
Reading See telepathy.
A
beneficial event attributed to supernatural or divine intervention.
Techniques
used by conjurers and mentalists to distract a person’s attention or confuse
their thinking.
A mismatch
between the target and response. Cf. hit.
Mnemonist A person who has learned techniques
that enable extraordinary feats of memory.
Morphic Resonance A term coined by Rupert
Sheldrake to refer to the way in which the “morphogenetic field” (underlying
form) of an object or organism may influence distant fields. Motor Automatism See Automatism Multiple
Personality A psychiatric condition in which the person manifests two or more
distinct and separate personalities at different times. Cf. possession.
Muscle
Reading See contact mind reading.
(a) A person who has mystical experiences.
(b) Used loosely to refer to psychics, mediums or
romantics.
Mystical
Experience ASCs involving experiences of ecstasy,
unity, timelessness, loss of self, divine revelation, etc.
Religious
or spiritual doctrines which argue that the human mind or soul can directly
experience the divine. See also mystical experience, transpersonal psychology.
See
near-death experience. Near-Death
Experience (NDE) Experiences of people after they have been pronounced
clinically dead, or been very close to death. Typical features of the NDE are
an OBE, life review, a tunnel experience, light, coming to a boundary (marking
death), seeing dead friends and relatives, experiencing a loving or divine
presence, and making a choice (or being told) to return. Occasionally NDEs can be frightening and distressing. NDEs often have profound effects on the person’s later
life. See also cerebral anoxia, survival.
Black
magic practices involving communicating with the dead.
(a) A communication in which the spirit forecasts
an item in a future day’s newspaper.
(b) An conjuring effect in which a magician or
mentalist predicts a future newspaper item.
The
hypothesis that experimental results are due to chance.
A system
of divination involving the interpretation of numbers.
See out of
body experience. Object Reading See psychometry.
The principle
that we should always prefer the simplest explanation of events.
Esoteric
systems of belief and practice that assume the existence of mysterious forces
and entities. Omen A sign that foretells
events. One-Ahead Principle In mentalism, a procedure for sequentially revealing
information where the revealing of one item gives the mentalist the next
answer. Also used by fraudulent clairvoyants.
OOBE See
out of body experience.
A series
of cards used in a card guessing test where each card is chosen randomly and
independently. This enables each target to be selected any number of times.
Statistical analysis of research data using an open deck differs from
statistical analysis of data using a closed deck.
A card
guessing procedure in which key cards are placed face up on the table. The
subject then places the unseen target cards in piles in front of each key card,
according to their guesses. See also blind matching.
(a) An answer to a question, believed to come from
the gods.
(b) a shrine at which these answers are given.
Orgone
Energy
A term used
by Wilhelm Reich to refer to a universal life force, associated with sexuality.
A board with
letters and numbers on which messages are spelled out by unconsciously moving
(with the fingers) a glass or planchette. See also
automatism.
In
conjuring and mentalism, a convincing explanation for
an apparent failure, or a convincing alternative ending to an effect that has
not worked as planned. Also used by fraudulent clairvoyants and mediums. Out of Body Experience (OBE, OOBE) A fully
conscious experience in which the person’s centre of awareness appears to be
outside of the physical body. See also autoscopy,
near-death experience.
The art of
assessing a person’s character and forecasting life events by examining
features of the hand. See also divination.
Beside or
beyond the normal. Inexplicable in terms of our ordinary understanding or
current scientific knowledge. Paranormal
Dream Dreams in which the dream imagery provides paranormal knowledge (e.g.,
ESP or precognition). See also announcing dream, lucid dreaming.
Term
coined by J.B. Rhine to refer to the experimental and quantitative study of
paranormal phenomena. Now generally used instead of “psychical research” to
refer to all scientific investigation of the paranormal. Cf. transpersonal psychology.
Mental
images that are believed to be memories of previous lives. See also
reincarnation, past-life regression.
Past-Life Regression A technique of hypnosis involving regressing people
to supposed previous lives. See also reincarnation.
An object
suspended by a thread. Movements of a pendulum are often used by dowsers to
locate objects or answer questions.
Person who
receives impressions in an ESP test. See also agent, subject.
Phantasm
An apparition.
An
approach to research that aims to describe and clarify a person’s own
experience and understanding of an event or phenomenon.
The
reading of character and mental ability from the shape of a person’s skull.
Physical Mediumship The production of paranormal physical phenomena
(lights, sounds, materialization, elongation, levitation, etc.) by a medium.
Physical mediumship often (but not always) involves a
state of trance. See also mental mediumship.
A
free-response ESP test in which the subject attempts to draw impressions of the
target. Pilot Study A preliminary study,
generally of modest scale. PK See psychokinesis Placebo An inactive treatment often given to
a control group.
A test for
PK in which the subject attempts to influence the place in which dice or other
objects land. See also dice test.
A small
platform on casters generally used with a ouija
board. Sometimes used with an attached pencil to produce automatic writing.
Plant Psi ESP exhibited by plants.
PMIR See psi-mediated instrumental response. Pocomania A
Jamaican spiritist religion. See also Voodoo.
German
word meaning “noisy or troublesome spirit”.
Poltergeist activity may include unexplained noises, movements of
objects, outbreaks of fire, floods, pricks or scratches to a person’s body.
Unlike hauntings, which are associated with specific locations, poltergeists
typically focus on a person (the focal person or poltergeist agent) who is
often a young child or adolescent. Many physical mediums experienced
poltergeist activity in their childhood.
Refers to
cases in which a person’s body is apparently taken over by another personality
or entity. Cf. multiple personality. See also demonic possession, discarnate
entity.
A sincere attempt
to communicate with a spiritual being or power.
Precognition
The paranormal awareness of future events. See also prediction, premonition,
prophecy.
A
statement that claims to foretell future events. Cf. premonition, precognition, prophecy.
Belief
that the personality or soul exists prior to birth.
Cf.
survival. See also reincarnation.
Preferential Matching Technique in which a judge ranks a subject’s free
responses in terms of their similarity to various possible targets.
An
experience believed to foretell future events. See also prediction,
precognition, prophecy.
A
subjective feeling that a person, animal or discarnate entity is present.
The
likelihood that results in a test were due to chance.
See also
significance.
Research
that aims to investigate factors affecting psi.
Cf. proof research.
Research
that aims to demonstrate the existence of psi.
Cf. process research.
(a) A prediction, usually resulting from a sense
of spiritual revelation.
(b) The ability to receive prophetic revelations.
Proxy
Sitting
A seance in which another person sits in on behalf of the
person receiving a communication.
Pseudo-Random Numbers Numbers generated by an
electronic calculator or computer using a complex mathematical algorithm that
simulates a random process. Although the numbers generated are essentially
unpredictable, they are not strictly random. See also random numbers, random
event generator.
A term
used to encompass all paranormal abilities. Includes both ESP and PK abilities.
Significantly
better than chance performance on a psi test. Psi-Mediated
Instrumental Response (PMIR) Theory put forward by Rex Stanford that psi activity is used to serve an organism’s needs.
Significantly
worse than chance performance on a psi test. Psi-missing is also
evidence for psi, because a target can only be missed
consistently if the person “knows” what it is.
Psyche Generally
refers to the mind.
Literally
“revealing mind”. A class of plants and drugs (e.g., peyote, psilocybin, LSD)
that can produce florid ASCs.
A person
who exhibits psi ability (also used as an adjective).
Psychical
Research Term coined in the late 19th century to refer to the
scientific study of the paranormal. Now largely superseded by “parapsychology”.
Forms of
healing using psychic powers. See also laying on of hands, psychic surgery.
Psychic
Photography General term used to refer to paranormal photographic images. See
also Kirlian photography, spirit photography, thoughtography.
Psychic
Surgery Actual or simulated surgical procedures carried out by healers.
The
paranormal influence of the mind on physical events and processes.
Obtaining
paranormal knowledge using a physical object as a focus. Also known as object
reading.
Belief
that pyramid shapes can produce paranormal effects.
Qualitative
Method A research method involving the collection of non-quantitative data
(e.g., observations, interviews, subjective reports, case studies). Cf.
quantitative method. Quantitative Method
A research method involving the collection and statistical analysis of numerical
data. Cf. qualitative method.
Theories
based on the assumption that living organisms emit some kind of radiation or
emanation that is capable of being detected using instruments or by dowsing.
See also aura, radionics.
Use of
instruments to detect radiation from living organisms. See also radiesthesia.
Refers to
events that are, in principle, haphazard and unpredictable. See also
chance. Random Event Generator (REG) An
electronic device which uses a random physical process (e.g., radioactive
decay) to generate random events or random numbers.
Random
Number Generator (RNG) See random event generator.
Numbers
generated in an unpredictable, haphazard sequence. Random Number Tables A printed table of
random numbers, usually made up of several rows and columns of
computer-generated numbers. To use the table a starting value is chosen by
randomly selecting a row and column (e.g., by throwing a dice). Successive numbers are then chosen by working
through the table using any previously chosen systematic rule. Suitable rules
might be (1) moving horizontally to the right, skipping alternate numbers, or
(2) moving vertically down, selecting every fifth number. The selected random
numbers may then be used, for example, to determine target sequences.
The name
given to unexplained knocking sounds associated with physical mediumship and poltergeist activity. Raudive Voices
Intelligible voices recorded on magnetic tape under conditions of silence or
white noise which are heard only when the tape is played. A phenomenon
discovered by Konstantin Raudive.
Information
given by a psychic or medium to a sitter. See also cold reading, hot reading.
In
Buddhism, the belief that there is some continuty of
mind from one life to the next. Buddhism, however, does not accept the
existence of the individual soul and therefore does not view rebirth as the
soul’s literal re-incarnation. Cf.
reincarnation. See also bardo. Receiver See percipient.
Recurrent
Spontaneous Psychokinesis (RSPK) A technical term for
poltergeist activity.
(a) a statistical technique that enables
predictions to be made from a set of data.
(b) a technique used in hypnosis, involving
suggesting to hypnotized persons that they are returning to an earlier time.
Sometimes the regression occurs spontaneously, without suggestion. See also
past-life regression.
The belief
that some aspect of a person’s being (e.g., consciousness, personality, or
soul) survives death and can be reborn in a new body at some future date.
Reincarnation is often seen as a repeating cycle of death and rebirth in which
future lives are influenced by past and present actions through the law of
karma. Cf. rebirth. Remote Viewing (RV)
An ESP procedure in which a percipient attempts to become aware psychically of
the experience of an agent who is at a distant, unknown target location. Response An action made by a subject in an
experiment. Response Bias Tendency of a
subject to prefer particular responses.
Retroactive Psychokinesis Paranormal influence
that an agent can have on an experiment after it has been completed. Retrocognition
Paranormal knowledge of past events.
Ritual Magic Magical activity involving rites and ceremonies. RSPK See recurrent spontaneous psychokinesis. Run A
set of trials in a psi test.
Santeria A
Cuban spiritist religion. See also Voodoo.
A person
inclined to discount the reality of the paranormal and to be critical of parapsychological research. Generally seeks rational or
scientific explanations for the phenomena studied by parapsychologists.
Number of
hits obtained by a subject in a psi test. Scoring The process of determining a
subject’s score. Screen Touch Matching
(STM) A card-guessing procedure in which the subject and experimenter sit on
opposite sides of a screen which has a small gap at the bottom. Key cards are
hung on the screen in front of the subject (the faces may be seen or
unseen). Underneath each key card is a
blank card that can be seen by both subject and experimenter. The experimenter
holds the target cards and the subject indicates the guess on each trial by
pointing to the corresponding blank card. The experimenter then places the card
in a pile on his or her side of the screen in a position corresponding to that
of the indicated blank card. See also blind matching, open matching.
Scrying See
crystal gazing.
Seance A
mediumistic session.
Second
Sight Another name for clairvoyance.
Sender Another name for agent.
Sensitive
Another name for a psychic. Sensory
deprivation Conditions of greatly restricted sensory input. See also ganzfeld.
Series A
sequence of runs in a psi experiment. Serpent Power See Kundalini.
A
witchdoctor or medicine (wo)man who communicates with
spirits while in trance and who has the power of healing. May also show other paranormal abilities.
Paranormal
ability to assume the form of another person, an animal or other entity. See
also lycanthropy, therianthropy, werewolf.
Name given
to a subject in a psi test who believes in the
phenomenon. See also “goat”, sheep-goat effect.
Sheep-Goat Effect Effect, discovered by the
parapsychologist Gertrude Schmeidler, in which
“sheep” score higher than mean chance expectation (MCE) on psi
tests, while “goats” score lower than MCE.
Name given
to paranormal powers associated with the practice of Yoga.
Significance
Results of an experiment are said to be statistically significant when they are
very unlikely to be due to chance (and hence, in a psi
test, are more likely to be due to psi). The chance
probability is reported as the “significance level”. To be considered
significant, the chance probability must generally be less than 1 in 20 (5%, or
0.05).
A dream
whose elements correspond closely with those in the dream of another person.
Sitter A
person who has a session with a medium.
Sitting A seance.
Sixth
sense Popular term for ESP.
Skeptic
See sceptic.
Writing
that appears on a slate during a seance. Often
produced by fraudulent mediums and mentalists.
An (often
frightening) state of seeming to being awake but unable to move. See also false
awakening.
(a) a person who performs physical activity while
asleep (e.g., sleep-walking).
(b) a person in a deep hypnotic state.
Sorcery
Black magic Sortilege Divination by lots.
The
spiritual element of a person, generally believed to be immortal. See also Ba, spirit, survival.
Extraterrestrial
entities, channeled by some mediums. See also discarnate entity.
Speaking
in Tongues See glossolalia SPE See subjective
paranormal experience. Spectre A ghost or apparition.
Written or
spoken words believed to have magical power.
(a) a discarnate entity.
(b) soul
(c) Divine essence.
Spirit
Communication See communication.
Healing
that is believed to result from the intervention of spirits.
Spiritism
See spiritualism.
Spirit
Photography Photographs of figures or faces, believed by some to be those of
deceased persons. These photographs are generally revealed as fraudulent.
Spiritualism
(Spiritism) Religious doctrines that advocate
communication betwen the living and the spirits of
the dead using a medium as intermediary.
Paranormal
phenomena that occur in everyday life, unsought and unexpected.
Spontaneous
Human Combustion (SHC) Refers to cases in which a badly burned human body has
been discovered in circumstances suggesting that the fire originated
spontaneously in or on the body of the victim.
Mathematical
techniques for analysing and interpreting numerical
data.
Unexplained
markings on a person’s body that correspond to the wounds of Christ.
Stimulus
See target.
A person
whose psi ability is being investigated. Subjective Paranormal Experience (SPE) Or
Subjective Psi Experience. An experience that the
person who has it believes to be paranormal.
Subjective Psi Experience (SPE) See subjective
paranormal experience. Subliminal
Perception Perceiving without conscious awareness. Super-ESP Hypothesis The suggestion that
people are capable of unlimited ESP. The super-ESP hypothesis is often
presented as an alternative to the survival hypothesis in explaining
mediumistic phenomena (the medium is believed to obtain information using
super-ESP powers and not directly from the spirit of a deceased person).
Supernatural
Paranormal Survey A method of data collection that involves interviewing (or
giving questionnaires to) a representative and often large group of people.
The belief
that some aspect of the person (e.g., consciousness, mind, personality, soul)
lives on after death of the body.
A term
used by C.G. Jung to refer to coincidental events that are meaningfully but not
causally connected.
Mysterious
movements of a table, usually occurring in a seance when
a group of people place their hands on the surface of the table. Often the
movements are interpreted as spirit communications. Also known as table-turning
or table-tipping.
Table-Turning
See table-tilting.
The object
or event which the subject attempts to perceive (ESP tests) or influence (PK
tests).
A special
deck of cards (usually 78) used in fortune telling.
Telekinesis
Paranormal movement of objects.
Paranormal
awareness of another person’s experience (thoughts, feelings, etc.). In
practice it is difficult to distinguish between telepathy and clairvoyance. See
also ESP.
Paranormal
transportation of objects to a distant place. See also apport,
deport.
Temporal
Lobe Activity Electrical activity in the temporal lobes of the brain. Often associated with strange sensations,
time distortions and hallucinations. Sometimes used as an explanation for
seemingly paranormal experiences such as apparitions and alien abduction
experiences.
The supposed
ability to change from human to animal form and back. See also lycanthropy,
shape-shifting, werewolf.
Magical
practices which aim to contact and communicate with the gods.
Paranormal
ability to produce images on photographic film (e.g., by concentrating on a
mental image). Most famously demonstrated by Ted Serios.
See also psychic photography. Thought
Transference See telepathy Trance A dissociated state of consciousness,
generally involving reduced awareness of surroundings and external events.
A person
who enters a state of trance in order to produce mediumistic phenomena.
Transcendental
Meditation A technique of meditation taught by Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi, involving the repetition of a sound (mantra). Transmigration of Souls See reincarnation.
Transpersonal
Psychology The study of experiences, beliefs and practices that suggest that
the sense of self can extend beyond our personal or individual reality. The
subject matter of transpersonal psychology overlaps to some extent with
parapsychology, but the two disciplines tend to have different approaches and
emphases. Parapsychology is primarily concerned to investigate evidence for and
against the reality of paranormal phenomena. Transpersonal psychology, on the
other hand, is more interested in investigating the transpersonal significance
of such phenomena (i.e., the ways in which they may give people a sense of
connectedness with a larger, more universal or spiritual reality). See also
mysticism.
Travelling
Clairvoyance
(a) An early term for the out of body experience.
(b) Clairvoyance exhibited when a subject travels
in imagination to another location.
In psi tests, a single attempt to demonstrate paranormal ability
(e.g., one attempt to guess a card or one attempt to influence the fall of the
dice).
A conical
tube (often luminous) used in seances to produce
direct voice communication.
Ufology The
study of UFOs.
A
Brazilian spiritist religion. See also Candomble, Voodoo.
Unidentified Flying Object (UFO) Unexplained sightings of lights or
objects in the sky, often taken to be evidence of extraterrestrial
visitations. Up Through Technique An
experimental test for clairvoyance in which the subject guesses the order of a
stacked series of target symbols (e.g., cards) from bottom to top. Cf. down
through technique.
Information
or experience that is confirmed by facts and events.
A dream
that corresponds to real events (past, present or future) that are unknown to
the dreamer. Vision A religious
apparition.
A spiritist and ancestor religion, originating in Africa, and
now found predominantly in Haiti, Jamaica and Cuba. Magical rites, trance states and possession
all play a major role in Voodoo. See also Candomble, Pocomania, Santeria, Umbanda,
zombie.
A person
who has been magically transformed into a wolf or other dangerous beast. See
also lycanthropy, therianthropy, shape-shifting.
Magical
spells or rituals to produce beneficial effects. Cf. black magic.
A
hiss-like sound, formed by combining all audible frequencies. See also ganzfeld.
System of
witchcraft, especially as practiced today in western countries.
Witch
Someone who practices witchcraft.
Witchcraft Folk magic. See also wicca. Witchdoctor A medicine wo(man)
or shaman.
The
ability to speak or write in a language that has not been learned. See also glossolalia.
Religious
philosophy originating in India. It advocates the use of physical and
psycho-spiritual techniques to lead the person to higher consciousness. See
also meditation, siddhis.
Set of 25
cards (5 each of circle, square, Greek cross, five-pointed star, three wavy
lines) designed by the perceptual psychologist Karl Zener
for use in card-guessing tests of ESP. Also known as ESP cards.
A corpse
that has been partly brought back to (soul-less) life by magic. See also
Voodoo.
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