Moment in Oddity - 1986 Concept Car (Suggested by: Michael Rogers)
So many of us watched The Jetsons cartoon back in the day as kids. The idea of flying cars was something we thought would already be happening in our current times. There was an interesting concept car that was debueded by Oldsmobile in partnership with the design firm Italdesign at the 1986 Turin Motor Show. This one-of-a-kind Oldsmobile Incas was the brain-child of Giorgetto Giugiaro (jor-JET-toh jew-JAHR-oh), an Italian automotive designer who was named Car Designer of the Century in 1999. Car consumers who wanted more of an aircraft cockpit type feel, would have been very excited about the Oldsmobile Incas concept car. Instead of having a conventional round steering wheel, this car featured a two-handled aircraft styled yoke. Everything that you would normally find on a traditional dashboard were located on the yoke handlebars. There were multiple buttons and dials found on the yoke for things like the climate control, radio, automatic transmission, windshield wipers, horn, lighting, and cruise control. The only exception to the button ladened design, were the turn signals, which were found on a traditional stalk sticking out from the left side of the yoke. To enhance the cockpit feel, the vehicle also sported gull wind/scissor hybrid doors. In addition to the Incas' unique steering yoke and doors, the vehicle also was equipped with a quad-turbocharged engine and all-wheel driving specs. Although this concept car was not made for mass production, its fighter-jet style canopy, gull wing doors, and aircraft style steering wheel certainly made it odd.
Zener Cards, the CIA and Psychic Phenomenon
Anyone who has followed and listened to History Goes Bump for any amount of time knows that we consider ourselves open-minded skeptics when it comes to paranormal activity. Particularly the kind of activity connected to psychics. When science gets involved in the paranormal, it lends it some credibility. Parapsychology became a part of college curriculum and at that same time, scientists and government agencies also started paying attention to psychic phenomenon. Intelligence organizations even tried to use it to spy on other countries. On this episode, we are going to look at one of the main tools used to test psi abilities - Zener Cards - and wind our way through the history of parapsychology and some of the famous names connected to this and operations like Project Stargate.
Years of researching stories and then conducting our own investigations has left us both leaning more towards believers than skeptics. But when it came to psychic phenomenon, I had been pretty hardcore skeptic. Then I met Kelly and a few of you listeners who have abilities and then even experienced my own bits of synchronicity and premonitions and sensitivities, and I really had to reevaluate what I thought about psychic phenomenon. And I have become a true believer that there really is something to this sixth sense. And just like how having the government talking about UFOs and UAPs and aliens has made it "okay" to believe that we humans are not alone in this universe, its the government's admissions about research into psychic phenomenon that has made that something that is more openly talked about as well. The term MKULTRA just rolls off people's tongues today like they are talking about a typical historical event. Delving into the human brain and mind has been an important thing to not only our intelligence services, but the intelligence servies of many countries. I picked up this book that looked really interesting to me and it blew my mind to read about the history of research and testing of psychic abilities. That book was written by Annie Jacobsen and is titled "Phenomena: The Secret History of the U.S. Government's Investigations Into Extrasensory Perception and Psychokinesis." Jacobsen isn't just any author. She's a Pulitzer Prize nominated author. She isn't considered a quack and she comes at the topic just like we come at paranormal activity, with an open-minded skepticism. This episode was inspired by this book and our own personal experiences. We want to begin with talking about Zener cards because these are a symbol of the legitimacy that the scientific community and the government have given to psychic phenomenon.
Karl E. Zener was born in 1903 and considered a visionary in the field of extra-sensory perception or ESP. His higher learner began at the University of Chicago and ended with a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1924. He was a fellow with the United States National Research Council at the University of Berlin for a year after that and then he taught as a professor at Princeton University for a year.
And then everything changed when he took up what would be a lifelong post with Duke University. It was here that he met J.B. Rhine and the two became colleagues in the pursuit of studying ESP. J.B. Rhine had been born in 1895 and came to this place through a different process. While Zener was classically educated in psychology, Rhine had studied botany and received his PhD in that in 1925. He had a stint as a Marine for a bit before that. Rhine had studied at the University of Chicago and author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had come through on a tour and given a lecture at the university in 1922. Rhine and his wife had attended and were mesmerized as Doyle talked about the scientific proof of communication with the dead. Rhine later wrote, "This mere possibility was the most exhilarating thought I had had in years." Rhine held onto this fascination and studied for a year at Harvard under Professor William McDougall for a year. When McDougall left to go to Duke University in 1927, Rhine followed him so that he could work under him. And thus was born parapsychology.
So Rhine and Zener started working together and devising ways to test ESP. Early tests used a standard deck of cards, but then the men decided to design their own set of cards, which Rhine dubbed Zener cards in honor of his colleague. These were a deck of 25 cards with five sets of just five symbols. The cards had an abstract blue pattern on the back and the symbols were printed on the front in black on a white background. These shapes were a circle, a cross or plus sign, three wavy lines, a square and a five-pointed star.
These Zener cards are still used today for testing and Annie Jacobsen mentions them often in her book. How these experiments were conducted is that the researcher would shuffle the deck and pick one card, then observe the card for a minute, ask the psychic what symbol was on the card and then record the answer. While these early tests in the 1930s were just done in a standard room, in the 1950s, a Faraday cage was used. This takes us to Hammond Castle in Gloucester, Massachusetts. This is a medieval-style seaside castle built by Jack Hammond. Hammond was a well-respected inventor (he invented the radio-controlled torpedo) and very rich man who was a member of the Round Table Foundation. This foundation was funded by Joyce Borden - yes of the dairy family - Alice Astor and Marcella du Pont and started by Dr. Andrija Puharich. The purpose of the foundation was to explore ESP. Puharich had been a medical doctor who was always fascinated with mind-to-mind communication. His goal was to merge medicine and mysticism and eventually he would get really into mushrooms and how they could expand the mind. Puharich wrote, " Watch long trails of birds in migration, the unerring return of the homing pigeon, the struggle of the fish going upstrem to spawn, the orderly movement of armies of ants, the pecuniary nature of the bee. The answer to these many questions, I am convinced, lie in the nature of the nervous system. A sensitivity to forces, some of which we already know, and most of which are unknown. I have wondered at the clairvoyance of the mind that can break loose from the shackles of conformity and 'facts' and can give us the philosophy of Plato, the universe of Newton, the spirit of Christ, and the psychological insight of Henry Thoreau, Walt Whitman, William James and Kalil Gibran. The deep study of this problem is my life's work." When Puharich and Hammond started working together, they decided to build a Faraday cage in Hammond Castle to conduct their experiments. Hammond knew about this kind of cage because he had been good friends with Nikola Tesla.Tesla had told Hammond that he thought ESP traveled on extremely low frequency (ELF) waves. To give you an idea of what these are, they are generated by thunder and lightning storms. A Faraday cage shields anyone inside of it from all electro-magnetic waves except ELF waves. The thought was that the cage would enhance psychic abilities.
The cage they built was from floor to ceiling, made entirely of metal and it was lined with copper mesh. Hammond Castle today has recreated this cage and has artifacts from the experiments conducted there. Their first experiments were with an Irish psychic named Eileen Garrett, whom may be familiar to some of you listeners as she frequently worked with Hans Holzer. At the end of their experiments, Hammond concluded that ESP was not transmitted over electromagnetic frequencies, since Garrett could still communicate with the science team telepathically while she was in the cage. Basically, Garrett proved to be the real deal and ELF waves should be the focus. (Troy Taylor excerpt) The experiments with Zener cards conducted by these two men and by Rhine and Zener were very successful, with one Duke divinity graduate student named Hubert Pearce making 25 consecutive correct guesses, which was a full run of the Zener deck. (pg. 199 Putnam) But over time these experiments were discredited because people pointed out that cards were used by magicians for playing tricks and could be manipulated and that shuffling cards was a poor way of getting a random distribution of symbols. Scientists claimed that what Rhine was doing wasn't science and that he was just a scientist who deeply believed in some quasi-science and that he had a bias. It's always interesting how bias is accused of only going one way. Surely scientists who give ESP no chance are biased in their beliefs as well. The stats for Zener cards goes something like this: Probability predicts these test results for a test of 25 questions with five possible answers if chance is operating: 79.3% of people will get between 3 and 7 correct, 10.9% will get 8 or more correct, one person in 73,700 will get 15 or more correct, one person in 5.16 billion will get 20 or more correct, and one person in 298 quadrillion will get all 25 correct.
Regardless of what other scientists thought, an entity that was very interested in the results that Rhine, Zener and Puharich got, was the United States Department of Defense. Jacobsen saw declassified documents that revealed that the Army started working with Rhine's Duke University Parapsychology Laboratory in 1952. They weren't as interested in how these abilities worked as they were in how to enhance and control the psi abilities.
These early studies with the military were with dogs and then homing pigeons and finally cats. Meanwhile, Dr. Puharich was giving briefings at the Pentagon to the Advisory Group on Psychological Warfare and Unconventional Warfare. During the Cold War, our military and intelligence services had discovered that the Soviet Union was working heavily with psychic phenomenon. They were trying to find ways to not only counter whatever the Soviets were doing, but to also wage their own psychic war. To enhance ESP, the CIA was looking to find hallucinogenic mushrooms and the code name for this was MKULTRA Subproject 58. When Puharich became disillusioned with the military and CIA and went to his Round Table Foundation work, the FBI began spying on him. Puharich would later come back to the CIA for a government research contract when he happened upon an Israeli paratrooper who demonstrated some amazing psychic abilities, Uri Geller. Uri Geller is a conundrum. He was able to bend spoons and start stopped watches with his mind, read the contents of sealed envelopes, see things while blindfolded and control the thoughts of others. These are all tricks that are performed by mentalists and magicians. Why wouldn't Geller just claim to be someone like Houdini? Why was he persistent in claiming he had psi abilities? Was it because he was the real deal? For me, I had always thought Geller was just a very charismatic mentalist. But after discovering in Jacobsen's book how much Geller was used by the military and intelligence services and what he was able to do for them, I found myself wondering if Geller really had some abilities. Geller came onto the scientific scene when Parapsychologists Hal Puthoff and Russell Targ studied him at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI). This testing was spurred by Puharich going to the CIA and telling them about Geller. The CIA wanted him tested thoroughly and the SRI is who they trusted to do the testing. The CIA was also trying to distant themselves from Puharich. This went all the way to the top. The decision to do the testing was made by CIA director Richard Helms.
SRI was founded in 1946 to do research and development for commercial businesses and government agencies. They did a ton of stuff that had nothing to do with psi research, like developing technicolor, robots and even inkjet printing. In 1972, Puthoff and Targ were interested in investigating remote viewing and they not only worked with Geller, but also a writer/artist named Ingo Swann and military intelligence officer Joseph McMoneagle. The US intelligence community funded their research until the mid-1980s.
Uri Geller was born in Tel Aviv in 1946 and his abilities first appeared when he was seven, according to his mother. His father gave him a watch and it immediately stopped working when he put it on. His parents replaced it a little later and this watch to, stopped working when he put it on. As a teenager, he was sent away to boarding school and it was there that he started bending spoons and keys. He befriended a man who was a martial arts instructor and showed him his abilities. This man taught him martial arts and one day Uri said to him, "Yoav, I can read your mind and I know you are an Israeli spy." The man was shocked that a 14-year-old had blown his cover. Geller joined the military with the hope of working for Mossad one day himself. He was injured during the Six-Day War and was reassigned to a government run youth camp where he entertained the kids with his telepathy. Through this, he got his first paid performance at one of the kid's schools. Then he was off and running in night clubs. When people asked how he did his tricks, he always maintained that they were real. Legal scholar Amnon Rubinstein met Geller shortly after hosting a show on psychics. He was very skeptical of the ability and Geller asked him to pick a number between 1 and 100,000. Rubinstein chose a number and said it aloud. Geller opened his palm and there written in black ink was the very number Rubinstein had said. He believed that Geller had put the number in his mind. Rubinstein started testing Geller in his home and he became a true believer. He said, "He could somehow plant a thought right in our mind. To me, this is so much more significant than spoon bending. This is a single phenomenon that casts doubt on many of the foundations of our rational world." Puharich had tested Geller for a few weeks before bringing him to America and declassified documents reveal that Puharich told the CIA that he and an Israeli officer had witnessed Geller "breaking a gold ring held in another person's clenched fist; concentrating on a pair of bimetal-type thermometers, and selectively making the temperature rise 6 to 8 degrees Fahrenheit on one or the other instrument; starting broken clocks and watches solely by concentration; moving the hands of a watch forward or backward without any physical contact with the watch and telepathy with 90% accuracy in telepathy tests where Dr. Puharich would think of a 3-digit number."
In 1972, Geller arrived at SRI and he would join forces with Ingo-Swann in testing. The results were dubbed the Swann-Geller Phenomenon and started twenty years of classified government research into ESP and psychokinesis. Geller was tested with dice and had statistically significant results. Each of eight times he was asked what number was facing up on the dice in a box, he got the right answer. He did the same thing with objects placed in film canisters and got all twelve without error.
(pg. 147) CIA officer Kit Green seemed to believe in Geller's ability. Other scientists involved in the experiments claimed that they were conducted in a slipshod way and not held to proper scientific standards. But again, we are talking parapsychology, which is really hard to prove scientifically. We commend them for trying at least. And one of the things they say a lot is that the parapsychologists were biased because they believed in paranormal stuff, but the same could be said the other way. The scientists were biased to not believe.
Ingo Swann was skilled at psychokinesis and Puthoff and Targ brought him to a magnetometer to see if he could make the readouts change. The readouts did show fluctuations, but the man who built the machine said that the results were in no way unexpected outside of normal parameters. Swann would coin the term "remote viewing" and he first demonstrated it at the American Society for Psychical Research in New York doing ceiling tray tests. These were high up in the room and so Swann would have to leave his body to see what was in the tray. And he would do just that, over and over, drawing what he saw in the trays.
Swann started remote viewing using coordinates, meaning that he would be given a set of coordinates and tell the researchers what was there. (pg.155) Pat Price was another man with psychic abilities brought in to try remote viewing. He was a former police officer in Burbank, California and had been a Scientologist. He would become a main figure in the CIA's psychic research and was probably their best and most accurate psychic. Price also tried the coordinates thing and Puthoff gave him the coordinates that Swann had been working with. (Pg. 157)
This remote viewing project by the CIA was called "Project Stargate. It ran for two decades before being shut down in 1995. A statistician named Dr. Jessica Utts evaluated the declassified data and concluded that the subjects scored roughly 5% to 15% above chance. Which isn't nothing. The CIA concluded that the data defied randomness, but because it was inconsistent and unreliable, psychic powers wouldn't be of much use to military intelligence operations.
The project did have a big success that is not easily explained away. In 1976, a young administrative assistant named Rosemary Smith was recruited by the project director Dale Graff. She was able to psychically locate a lost Soviet spy plane. (pg. 212)
Rhine and other scientists weren't ever able to explain ESP and other forms of psychic phenomenon. That continues today, but that doesn't mean that these effects and abilities are not happening. All of this research and these experiments definitely proved that something unexplainable was and is happening. Is this paranormal? That is for you to decide!

