|
ETZEL CARDEÑA,
STEVEN JAY LYNN, AND STANLEY KRIPPNER
INTRODUCTION
Evolution.. . is a change from an indefinite,
incoherent homogeneity, to a definite coherent heterogeneity. (Spencer,
1862/1991)
Tales of strange, extraordinary, and
unexplained experiences and encounters with the "unknown" have long
fascinated artists, scientists, and the lay audience. The period of the
19th-century European Romanticism was a time of deep interest in alterations of
consciousness; such works as George Eliot's The Lifted Veil featured
reputed parapsychological phenomena as a central part of their plot. In the
20th century, the Surrealist movement paid special attention to automatic
writing and drawing, altered states of consciousness, and dreams. As evidence
of more recent popular interest in anomalous phenomena, one need look no
further than to the enormous international popularity of such television
programs as The Twilight Zone or The X-Files during the second half of the
20th century. At the beginning of the 21st century, popular interest in such
topics as near-death experiences, purported parapsychological phenomena, and
mystical events has remained very strong. This can be understood, in part,
because many anomalous experiences seem to hold great significance for
those who have them or even for those who just vicariously partake of them.
In contrast to the public
fascination with these phenomena, traditional psychology has long neglected or
even derided them. Indeed, anomalous experiences are examples of what
postmodernists refer to as "the other"---those phenomena that have
fallen between the cracks of contemporary mainstream psychology. However, we
believe that psychology has achieved enough maturity and breadth that it can
take a serious look at unusual but important experiences.
Before we proceed further, it is
important to clarify how we use the term anomalous experience. The
English word anomalous derives from the Greek anomalos, meaning irregular,
uneven, or unequal, in contrast to homalos, which means the same or common. An
anomalous experience is irregular in that it differs from common experiences,
is uneven in that it is not the same as experiences that are even and ordinary.
Typically, it is also unequal in that it does not draw the same attention, at
least in academia, as that given to regular experiences.
We define an anomalous experience as
an uncommon experience (e.g., synesthesia) or one that, although it may he
experienced by a substantial amount of the population (e.g., experiences
interpreted as telepathic), is believed to deviate from ordinary experience or
from the usually accepted explanations of reality. The focus of this book is on
experiences, not on testing the consensual validity of such experiences. For
instance, the possibility of verified parapsychological phenomena is briefly
mentioned in chapter 7 under explanatory theories, but the focus is on the
experiences people have, not on the external phenomena to which they may refer,
nor on "unusual people" (see, for example, Dingwall, 1962).
Although there is some overlap, we
distinguish anomalous experiences from altered states of consciousness (e.g.,
Tart, 1969). Whereas some of the former do occur during an alteration of
consciousness (e.g., neardeath experiences; see Greyson, this volume, chap.
)0), anomalous experiences such as synesthesia (Marks, this volume, chap. 4)
may be part of the ordinary state of consciousness of the individual. We also
distinguish experience from procedures such as hypnosis or meditation, which
may or may not produce a major alteration in consciousness.
We also contrast anomalous, a term
that does not have any necessary implication of psychopathology, with abnormal,
a term that usually denotes pathology. Notwithstanding the presence of
anomalous experiences in case studies of disturbed individuals, surveys of
nonclinical samples have found little relationship between these experiences
and psychopathology (e.g., Greeley, 1975; Spans, Cross, Dickson, &
Duhreuil, 1993). This is the case even in hallucinations, often used as a
landmark of psychopathology (see Bentall, this volume, chap. 3). The
relationship between psychopathology and belief systems that involve anomalous
experiences is more complex because of the multidimensional structure of
beliefs (Krippner & Winkler, 1996). Nonetheless, the various contributions
to this volume make clear that holding such unusual beliefs as the reality of
alien abduction is not an indicator per se of psychopathology (see Appelle,
Lynn, & Newman, this volume, chap. 8).
Other disciplines have also used the terms anomalous, anomalies, and
anomalistic, but only to refer to seemingly unexplainable events (i.e., a
demonstrable occurrence) rather than experiences (i.e., a psychological event
that may or may not be associated with a demonstrable consensual occurrence).
For instance, parapsychologists often use these terms to denote an event in
which there is purported access to unavailable information, such as a dream
report of an airplane disaster that coincided with an actual event (e.g.,
Thalbourne, 1982). In an important article, the sociologist Marcello Truzzi
(1971) wrote that anomalous phenomena "contradict commonsense or
institutionalized (scientific or religious) knowledge"; they are
"anomalous to our generally accepted cultural storehouse of truths"
(p. 637). Similarly, the anthropologist Roger Wescott (1977) suggested that the
word anomalistic he used as a prefix to the name of any discipline dealing with
so-called paranormal topics. Some of these topics, for instance the possibility
of the existence of Bigfoot, do not necessarily involve anomalous experiences.
INDIVIDUAL AND CULTURAL IMPORTANCE
A striking aspect of some anomalous
experiences is that, even when single and transitory, they are reported to have
an enormous impact on the experient. An individual may undergo a change in
values after a neardeath or an anomalous healing experience (see this volume,
Greyson, chap. 10; Krippner & Achterberg, chap. 11), or mystics may
describe experiences that will also influence many people (Wulff, this volume,
chap. 12). The attribution of personal meaning to anomalous experiences has
been addressed by such writers as James McClenon (1994b), who referred to them
as "wondrous events" (suggesting that they stimulated the development
of religious ideologies). Daniel A. Helminiak (1984) called them "extraordinary
experiences" (depending on whether they further the experient's "authentic
growth"), and Rhea A. White (1995) referred to them as "exceptional
human experiences" (noting their transformational potential in people's
lives).
To determine that an experience is
uncommon or anomalous, we have to consider the cultural framework in which the
evaluation of the experience occurs. Many years ago, Ruth Benedict (1934)
reminded us that what is normal (or pathological) in one culture may not be so
in a different one. In a similar vein, in his book Anomalies of Personality,
the Russian psychologist Boris Bratus (1988/1990), basing his argument on
statistical averages, proposed that what is anomalous in one culture may be the
norm in another culture (p. 4). He used the term anomalous in the sense of a
personality characteristic that deviates markedly from a cultural norm.
Summarizing
a number of surveys conducted in the United States, MacDonald (1994) concluded
that age, education, gender, race, religion, and socioeconomic status influence
the likelihood of reporting various paranormal experiences, and he attributed
the differences to the "shaping of individual realities" (p. 36).
MacDonald conjectured that "the reality of human experience is socially
constructed and is therefore subject to variation depending on the social
context" (p..36). The sociologist James McClenon's (1994a) review of the
literature on altered states of consciousness and anomalous experience
persuaded him that such traits as absorption, dissociation, fantasy proneness,
and hypnotic susceptibility need to be considered to understand these states
(see also Cardeña, 1996). McClenon considered these traits to he "normal
human capacities which have not been thoroughly studied in non-clinical populations"
(p. 129). The contributors to this book point out that psychology has made
progress in understanding these variables and their relationship to anomalous
experiences. The focus of this book is psychological, but we should not forget
that neurological pathologies, such as temporal lobe abnormalities or head injuries,
can give rise to unusual phenomena (Cardeña, 1997; George, 1995).
A BRIEF HISTORY
The study of anomalous
experiences is currently a marginal area of concern for psychology, but it has
not always been so neglected. Some of the topics covered in this book,
including mystical and psi-related experiences, have figured in the history of
psychodynamic psychiatry (see Ellenberger, 1970). In this Introduction, we
give an overview of the psychological study of anomalous experiences, which
has, at times, also included the study of anomalous events, cognitive
misattributions, and related topics.
The first systematic inquiry into
various anomalous experiences can he traced to the founding of the Society for
Psychical Research (SPR) in London in 1882. Various notable scientists and
philosophers gathered "to investigate that large body of debatable
phenomena ... without prejudice or prepossession of any kind, and in the same
spirit of exact and unimpassioned inquiry which has enabled Science to solve
so many problems" (Society for Psychical Research, 1882-1883, p. 2).
Although the goals of the Society centered on testing claims of such purported
psi phenomena as telepathy and clairvoyance (see Targ, Schlitz, & Irwin,
this volume, chap. 7), it was also interested in the study of personality,
dissociative phenomena, hypnosis, preconscious cognition, and related topics
(Gurney, Myers, & Podmore, 1886). A few years after the founding of the SPR,
a similar organization, led by William James and others, was established in the
United States.
In contrast to the British and
American Societies for Psychical Research, which are open to the general
public, the Parapsychological Association, founded in 1957 and an affiliate of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science since 1969, consists of
professional members from different countries. This association is committed
to looking for scientific explanations of anomalous events and experiences. (For
a brief history of the scientific approach to parapsychological phenomena, see
Rush, 1986.)
Within the realms of clinical and
general psychology, William James (1890/1923) provided a comprehensive survey
of the "Science of Mental Life, both of its phenomena and of their
conditions" (p. 1). With his vast erudition and incomparable prose, James
discussed anomalous phenomena in chapters dealing with more classical topics
such as memory or the self. Our book follows the spirit of James's
"radical empiricism," which includes the totality of human experience
within the boundaries of scientific investigation. Our title, of course, pays
homage to James's (1902/1958) classic volume, The Varieties of Religious
Experience.
Besides James, F. W. H. Myers
(1903/1961) attempted a bold integration of such areas as personality, sleep,
and hypnosis, and other members of the scientific vanguard studied anomalous
experiences. H. Sidgwick, Johnson, Myers, Podmore, and Sidgwick (1894) analyzed
some 17,000 responses to the question "Have you ever ... had a vivid
impression of seeing, or being touched, or of hearing a voice; which
impression, so far as you could discover, was not due to any external
cause?" Affirmative answers were obtained from about 1 in 10 respondents
and were categorized as sensory hallucinations (visual hallucinations were more
common than auditory or tactile), ordinary sense perceptions, dreams, and what
today would be considered eidetic imagery. It is striking how well the results
of this study have withstood the test of time (see Bentall, this volume, chap.
3). Another landmark in the study of anomalous experiences was an inquiry into
reputed psi-related phenomena, Phantasms of the Living (Gurney et al.,
1886).
Theodore Flournoy (1901/1994), a
psychology professor at the University of Geneva, wrote an in-depth case study
of a medium who spoke in different voices, wrote in different
handwriting styles, and used different names. Rather than positing deception or
accepting the medium's claim of contact with the "spirit world,"
Flournoy made a case for multiple personality and produced a sophisticated
interpretation of the psychodynamic foundations of the imaginary languages
involved. A friend of Flournoy, Carl G. Jung (1902/1970), conducted a landmark
study with another medium. Using a word-association test he had developed, Jung
traced the origins of the names the medium gave him of her own "spirit
guides" and of the "forces" that guide the universe. Jung
terminated his work when the medium, Jung's young and enamored cousin,
exhausted her flights of fancy. Later it was found that at least part of her
mediumistic performances had fraudulent aspects (Ellenberger, 1970). Jung would
later use his analytic psychology to explain UFO sightings and other unusual
events (Jung, 1959).
The French
clinical tradition at the turn of the 19th century was engaged in developing a
general psychology of cognition, emotion, and experience that would be informed
by abnormal conditions. For instance, Alfred Binet, mostly known to psychologists
as the suffix of the StanfordBinet IQ test, wrote an important treatise on the
dissociation of identity, On Double Consciousness (see Robinson, 1998).
Another eminent French psychologist, Theodule A. Ribot, authored scientific
studies on Diseases of the Will and The Diseases of Personality
(see Robinson, 1998). The most lasting contributions to this area can be
traced, however, to the landmark works of Pierre Janet, who researched and
theorized on, among other topics, pathological and nonpathological forms of
dissociation, hypnosis, memory, and the sense of time (see Van der Hart,
1998).
From the Germanic and Austrian
traditions, clinicians also made important contributions to the study and
conceptualization of anomalous experiences. Sigmund Freud's goal was to build
a psychoanalytic theory that would "shed light upon unusual, abnormal, or
pathological manifestations of the mind" (Freud, 1936/1984, p. 447), and
we cannot fail to mention Karl Jaspers's undervalued General Psychopathology
(1923/1963 ). Jaspers also aimed to understand abnormal and anomalous
events, and his detailed descriptive analysis of experience provided an
alternative to traditional psychodynamic and diagnostic classifications of
psychopathology.
With regard to unusual beliefs or
explanations, a student of Wilhelm Wundt, the Danish psychologist Alfred
Lehmann, published a book titled Superstition and Magic (1898). In it, he
focused on observational errors, such as the misinterpretation of optical
effects, that were responsible for false belief systems. Lehmann granted that
some extraordinary phenomena could not he explained away by errors of
observation and would have to wait for a scientific explanation.
A few years later, the psychologist
Joseph Jastrow collected a series of his essays in a book titled Fact and Fable
in Psychology (1900). These essays provided conventional scientific
explanations to anomalous beliefs. He pointed out how experience is reified,
belief systems often influence interpretations of experience, and speculation
takes precedence over authentication. In a later book, Wish and Wisdom,
Jastrow (1935) posited that "wishful thinking" interferes with
rationality, and he systematically applied this hypothesis to a number of
anomalous experiences.
The decades-long dominance of
behaviorism, launched by J. B. Watson's (1913) call to arms against the study
of consciousness within psychology, explains why the more comprehensive
program for psychology proposed by James and others did not progress for a
number of decades. Even B. E Skinner's less restrictive behaviorism did not
study introspective reports on their own terms, but only as "verbal
behaviors." The ascent of modern cognitive psychology as a dominant force
in the 1950s and 1960s provided a valid framework to study mental processes
(Gardner, 1985), but the study of subjective experiences, especially anomalous
ones, had to wait even longer.
The first modern, systematic attempt
to explain anomalous experience was The Psychology o f Anomalous Experience,
written by Canadian psychologist Graham Reed (1972, 1988). Reed studied
unusual experiences from a cognitive---experiential perspective. He discussed
anomalies of attention, imagery and perception, recall, recognition, experience
of self, judgment and belief, qualities of consciousness, and flow of
consciousness. Although a slim volume, Reed's work deserves careful attention.
Leonard Zusne and Warren H. Jones
(1980, 1989) treaded a similar path to that of Jastrow in their book
Anomalistic Psychology, the second edition of which was subtitled A Study of
Magical Thinking. They contended that "magical thinking is wholly or
partly at the root of any explanation of behavioral and experiential phenomena
that violates some law of nature or suggests, without supporting evidence, the
existence of principles, forces, or entities unknown to science" (Zusne
& Jones, 1989, p. 13). To them, anomalous psychological phenomena are
"those behaviors and experiences that seem to violate natural laws"
(p. ix). Zusne and Jones (1989) presented a useful example of the relative
aspect of some beliefs. When comparing bleeding from peptic ulcers and from
stigmata, they wrote, "The difference between the psychophysiologically
normal and the psychophysiologically anomalistic is only a matter of
statistical incidence and the cultural context within which the event
happens" (p. 34).
Two recent books have analyzed
various forms of faulty thinking that may give rise to the belief in unusual
events. Thomas Gilovich (1993) discussed cognitive (e.g., misperception and
misinterpretation of random data), motivational (e.g., "seeing what we
want to see"), and social (e.g., biasing effects of second-hand
information) determinants of questionable beliefs in anomalous events. Theodore
Schick and Lewis Vaughn (1995) discussed a number of ways in which valuable
information can be ignored or misrepresented while questionable forms of
evidence such as tradition or the authority of the person making a
pronouncement can be overvalued. They proposed a formula in which claims need
to be clearly stated, the evidence for the claims must be looked at carefully,
and any alternative hypotheses must be considered and rated according to
certain criteria of adequacy. To their credit, Schick and Vaughn (199.5)
concluded that their "considerations should not be taken as the final word
on the matters investigated here" (p. 281), and they pointed out that at
least one parapsychology researcher had met some of the challenges from his
harshest critics (p. 231). Ray Hyman (Hyman & Honorton, 1986), a noted
critic of parapsychology research, agreed that some data obtained under
controlled conditions "cannot reasonably be explained by selective
reporting or multiple analysis ... (and) the final verdict awaits the outcome
of future ... experiments" (pp. 352-353).
THE PRESENT INVESTIGATION
We decided to compile this volume
because we share a fascination with these phenomena, and we believe that
current empirical and conceptuat developments in psychology can prevent it from
falling prey to either naive scrutiny or automatic rejection. Like many readers
of this book, we were partly drawn to a life of science and the study of
psychology by the "big" questions that some anomalous experiences
pose about the nature of reality and human consciousness: What is the
relationship between our conscious experience and what we call the physical
world? How does healing occur? What are the boundaries between dreaming and
waking life? Is there credible evidence that thoughts affect the material world
or can be transferred by extrasensory means? Does consciousness persist after
death? What do mystical experiences tell us about the nature of reality?
Science may not have come very far
in addressing the ontological status of these questions, but readers of the
book will discover that psychology has much to offer in terms of proposing
appropriate ways to obtain and evaluate evidence, characterize variables
associated with these phenomena, and describe and investigate anomalous
experiences. In turn, some anomalous experiences may have much to offer science
in terms of clarifying its current boundaries and identifying how psychology,
the neurosciences, and the social sciences can join hands to explain the
"dome of many-coloured glass" of life, to borrow Lord Percy Bysshe
Shelley's beautiful image.
REFERENCES
American Psychiatric Association. (1994). Diagnostic and statistical
manual of mental disorders (4th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
Benedict, R. (19.34). Patterns of culture. New
York: Houghton Mifflin.
Bratus, B. B. (1990). Anomalies of
personality: From the deviant to the norm (A. Mikheyev, S. Mikheyev, &
Y. Filippov, Trans.; H. Davis, Ed.). Orlando, FL: Paul M. Deutsch Press.
(Original work published 1988)
Broughton, R. (1991).
Parapsychology. The controversial science. New York: Ballantine.
Cardeña, E. (1996)."Just floating on the sky": A comparison of shamanic and hypnotic phenomenology. In R. Quekelbherge & D. Eigner (Eds.), 6th jahrbuch fur transkuhurelle medizin and psychotherapie [6th yearbook of crosscultural medicine and
psychotherapy] (pp. 367-.380). Berlin: Verlag fur Wissenschaft and Bildung.
Cardeña, E. (1997). The etiologies
of dissociation. In S. Powers & S. Krippner (Eds.), Broken images, broken
selves (pp. 61-87). New York: Brunner/Mazel.
Cardeña, E. (in press). "You
are not your body": Commentary on the motivation for self-injury in
psychiatric patients. Psychiatry.
Deikman, A. J. (1966).
Deautomatization and the mystic experience. Psychiatry, 29, 324-338.
Dingwall, E. (1962). Very peculiar
people: Portrait studies in the queer, the abnormal,and the uncanny. New Hyde Park, NY: University Books.
Ellenberger, H. F. (1970). The
discovery of the unconscious. New York: Basic Books.
Flournoy, T (1994). From India to the planet Mars: A case study in multiple personality with imaginary languages. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. (Original work
published 1901)
Freud, S. (1984). A
disturbance of memory on the Acropolis. In A. Richards (Ed.), Volume II. On metapsychology
(pp. 44.3-456). Middlesex, England: Pelican. (Original work published 1936)
Gallagher, C., Kumar, V. K., & Pekala, R. J. (1994). The Anomalous Experiences
Inventory: Reliability and validity. Journal of Parapsychology, 58,
402-428.
Gardner, H. (1985). The mind's new science. New
York: Basic Books.
George, L. (1995). Alternative realities:
The paranormal, the mystic and the transcendent in human experience. New
York: Facts on File.
Gilovich, T (1993). How we know what isn't so. New York: Free Press.
Greeley, A. M. (1975). The
sociology of the paranormal: A reconnaissance. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
Gurney, E., Myers, E W H., &
Podmore, F (1886). Phantasms of the living (2 vols.). London: Trübner.
Helminiak, D. A. (1984). Neurology,
psychology, and extraordinary religious experiences. Journal of Religion and
Health, 23, 33-46.
Hunt, H. (1995). The nature of
consciousness. New Haven, CT Yale University Press.
Hyman, R., & Honorton, C.
(1986). A joint communiqué. The psi ganzfeld controversy. Journal of
Parapsychology, 50, 351-364.
James, W. (192.3). The principles of
psychology. New
York: Holt. (Original work published 1890)
James, W (1958). The varieties of religious
experience: A study in human nature. New York: New American Library. (Original
work published 1902)
Jaspers, K. (1963). General psychopathology (J.
Hoenig & M. Hamilton, Trans.). Manchester, UK: University Press. (Original
work published 192.3)
Jastrow, J. (1900). Fact and fable
in psychology. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Jastrow, J. (19.35). Wish and wisdom.
New York: Appleton-Century.
Jung, C. G. (1959). Flying saucers:
A modern myth of things seen in the skies. New York: Harcourt
Brace.
Jung, C. G. (1970).
On the psychology and pathology of so-called occult phenomena. In The
collected works of C. G. Jung (Vol. 1, pp. 6-91). Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press. (Original work published 1902)
Krippner, S., &
Winkler, M. (1996). The "need to believe." In G. Stein (Ed.), The
encyclopedia of the paranormal (pp. 441-454). Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books.
Lehmann, A. (1898). Aberglaube and
zauberei [Superstition and magici. Stuttgart, Germany: Enkc.
Lynn, S. J., & Rhue, J. W
(Eds.). (1994). Dissociation: Clinical, theoretical, and research
perspectives. New York: Guilford Press.
MacDonald, W L. (1994). The popularity
of paranormal experiences in the: United States. Journal of American
Culture, 1, 35-42.
McClenon, J. (1994a). Surveys of
anomalous experiences: A cross-cultural analysis. Journal of the American
Society for Psychical Research, 88, 117-135.
McClenon, J. (1994b). Wondrous
events: Foundations of religious beliefs. Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press.
Michelson, L., & Ray, W. J.
(Eds.). (1996). Handbook of dissociation. New York: Plenum.
Myers, F W. H. (1961). Human
personality and its survival of bodily death. New York: University Books.
(Original work published 190.3)
Pasricha, S., & Stevenson, l.
(1986). Near-death experiences in India. Jour al of Nervous and Mental
Disease, 174, 165-170. Pope, K. S., & Singer, J. L. (Eds.). (1978). The stream
of consciousness. New York:Plenum.
Powers, S., & Krippner, S.
(Eds.). (1997). Broken images, broken selves. New York: Brunner/Mazel.
Reed, G. (1972). The psychology of
anomalous experience. London: Hurchinson University Library.
Reed, 0. (1988). The psychology of
anomalous experience (rev. ed.). Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books.
Robinson, D. N. (1998). Dissociation and the foundations of
cognitive psychology in nineteenth century France. Psychological Hypnosis, 7,
15-20.
Rose, S. (1976). The conscious brain (rev.
ed.), Middlesex, England: Penguin. Rush, J. H. (1986). Parapsychology: A
historical perspective. In H. L. Edge, R. L.
Morris, J.
Palmer, & J. H. Rush (Eds.), Foundations of parapsychology (pp. 944). New
York: Rourledge Kegan Paul.
Sacks, O. (1995). An anthropologist
on Mars. New York: Knopf.
Schick, T., & Vaughn, L. (1995).
How to think about weird things. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield.
Sidgwick, H.,
Johnson, A., Myers, F W. H., Podmore, F, & Sidgwick, E. (1894). Report on
the census of hallucinations. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research,
10, 25-422.
Siegel, R. K. (1989). Intoxication. New York: Dutton.
Society for Psychical Research.
(1882-1883). Objects of the society. Proceedings of the Society for Psychical
Research, 1, 1-4.
Spanos, N. P., Cross,
P. A., Dickson, K., & Duhreuil, S. C. (1993). Close encounters: An
examination of UFO experiences. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 102, 624-632.
Spencer, H. (1991).
Divine idea, first principles and the conditions essential to human happiness.
Albuquerque, NM: American Institute for Psychological Research. (Original
work published 1902)
Stevenson, I. (199.5). Six modern
apparitional experiences. Journal for Scientific Exploration, 9,
.3.51-366.
Tart, C. T. (Ed.). (1969). Altered
states of consciousness. New York: Wiley.
Thalbourne, M. (1982). A glossary
of terms used in parapsychology. London: Heinemann.
Truzzi, M. (1971). Definition and
dimensions of the occult: Toward a sociological perspective. Journal of Popular
Culture, 5, 635-646.
Van der Hart, O. (1998). Pierre Janet's major works on
hysteria and hypnosis. Psychological Hypnosis, 7, 18-24.
Watson, J. B. (1913). Psychology as
the behaviorist views it. Psychological Review, 20, 158-177.
Wescott, R. (1977).
Paranthropology: A nativity celebration and a communion commentary. In J. K.
Long (Ed.), Extrasensory ecology: Parapsychology and anthropology
(pp. 331-346). Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press.
White, R. A. (1995). Exceptional
human experiences and the experiential paradigm. ReVision, 18, 18-25.
Zusne, L., & Jones, W. H.
(1980). Anomalistic
psychology. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlhaum.
Zusne, L., & Jones, W. H.
(1989). Anomalistic
psychology: A study of magical thinking (2nd ed.). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. |