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| Abductions And Hypnosis |
| Could Abduction Memories Be Created By Hypnotic Suggestion? |
Highly extraordinary experiences and "memories" while
under hypnosis..
One of the most persistent of the many controversies
surrounding hypnosis is its use in facilitating the
recall or (re)experience of events which are distinctly
out of the range of what most people think of as usual
human experiences. For the present discussion, we might
divide these extraordinary experience into three
overlapping types:
Experiences which seem extraordinary because what is
remembered (while under hypnosis) as having
previously happened seems to defy commonly accepted
canons of plausibility, such as the controversial
UFO abduction phenomenon,
Experiences which, perceived as happening during
hypnosis, seem to defy commonly accepted canons of
plausibility, or would require a drastic theoretical
revision to accept, such as psychic phenomena,
Experiences which seem extraordinary because they
have an unusually powerful or lasting effect on the
individual, such as certain deeply religious or
mystical experiences,
2.8.1. Bizarre remembrances under hypnosis
The veracity of events recalled under hypnosis is
considered by most experts today to be problematic to
determine. Hypnosis facilitates the recall of details in
good subjects, and also facilitates the manufacture of
details during recall that were not necessarily present
previously. This in fact is characteristic of recall in
general, which has been demonstrated to be far from a
permanent and unchanging record, but more a dynamic and
adaptive process; a shape-shifting moiré pattern of
sorts, conforming to inner needs and ongoing mental
activity, more than a videotape recording of the precise
details of perceptual events.
There is also some evidence that hypnosis may
additionally aid in providing 'state-specific' context
to aid in the recall of information and experience of
which the individual is otherwise normally unaware.
Which of these complex and incompletely understood
processes is dominant in the recall of someone's
extraordinary memories of seemingly implausible events
is extremely difficult if not impossible to determine
from the hypnotic session alone.
Neither claims of unimpeachable veracity under hypnosis
(the 'hypnosis as truth serum' idea) nor those of
hypnosis being completely unreliable in facilitating
recall ('false memory') stand up to close scrutiny as a
general principle applicable to all cases of
controversial hypnotic recall. The best evidence
available seems to indicate that hypnotic methods can
sometimes be valuable in a number of ways, both to the
individual's psychological health and in helping to
gather factual information, but that they should not be
relied upon by themselves or given special preference
over other kinds of testimony for such things as legal
evidence, nor considered to be accessing anything like a
perfectly faithful permanent record of past perceptual
events.
This section closes with an illustrative philosophical
excerpt from a recent book investigating perception,
memory, and consciousness, based on years of observation
of synesthesia (cross-sensory perception); "The Man Who
Tasted Shapes: A Bizarre Medical Mystery Offers
Revolutionary Insights into Reasoning, Emotions, and
Consciousness," Richard E. Cytowic, MD, Jeremy
Tarcher/Putnam Publishing 1993, ISBN 0-87477-738-0:
"While pointing out the overlap between emotion and
memory, I want to emphasize that memory is not
simply a fixed lookup table. It too is a creative
process during which the state of the brain's
electrical fields change. The sensory cortices
generate a distinct pattern for each act of
recognition and recall, with no two ever exactly the
same. They are close enough to cause the illusion
that we understand and have seen the event before,
although this is never quite true. Each time we
recall something it comes tainted with the
circumstances of the recall. When it is recalled
again, it carries with it a new kind of baggage, and
so on. So each act of recognition and recall is a
fresh creative process and not merely a retrieval of
some fixed item from storage."
"Furthermore, persons, objects, and events are not
perceived in their entirety but only by those
aspects which are, have been, or can be experienced
and acted upon by an observer..."
"... All that we can know about anything outside
ourselves is what the brain creates from raw sensory
fragments, which were actively sought by the limbic
brain in the first place as salient chunks of
information..."
"... Put in a more familiar context, artists and
creative writers look at the world in a certain way.
It is the same world that everyone else sees, but
seen differently. Contemporary people often call
artists weird because they do not seem to be seeing
the same things that the majority sees. It is
critical to realize that the sensory gateways that
feed into the brain establish their own conditions
for the creation of images and knowledge. Artistic
giants knew full well that their visions were not
shared by most people. Even when persecuted or
abandoned because of their vision artists persist.
That is all the can do because their visions are
their reality, and for many of us they subsequently
become our reality when we experience their art."
(copyright (c) Richard E. Cytowic, MD)
Cueing the subject. Intentional and unintentional
leading of the subject.
Milton Erickson, for example, described an experiment
with hearing impaired 'lip readers.' He discovered that
they actually read a much richer panorama of cues than
simply the moving lips. The lip reading subjects would
sit with their backs to a blackboard on which there were
various geometric designs. The designs were then covered
with sheets of paper. In front of the lip readers sat a
group of non-hearing-impaired participants, who were
instructed to look at the blackboard and say and do
nothing. Someone else removed the paper covering the
geometric symbols, one at a time. The lip readers were
instructed to write down anything that they read from
the participants in front of them who were observing the
geometric figures.
The lip readers were able to "read" the names of the
geometric figures apparently from their partner's faces,
with varying degrees of accuracy. One subject, a
diagnosed paranoid psychotic, who believed they heard
other people's thoughts about them, was reported as
having perfect accuracy.
Erickson applied this insight to his hypnotic technique,
by recognizing the significance of messages he himself
didn't realize he was giving. A similar analysis has
frequently been applied to anecdotal reports of cases of
apparent telepathy, but where 'cold reading', or the
skill of gathering information surreptitiously through
subtle but conventional sensory clues, appears to be a
likely factor.
Someone might actually suggest that the paranoid
psychotic patient in this particular experiment, and
some or all of the other hearing-impaired patients, were
actually employing some telepathic faculty to some
degree. But most interpretations would probably focus on
the use of subtle clues that the participants observing
the blackboard were unaware of providing. The nature of
hypnotic communication ('rapport') is such that the
participants are particularly well attuned to the
nuances of each other's movement, speech and expression.
This, combined with the lip readers' existing capacity
for attending to subtle body language, contributes to
the appearance of an even more extraordinary, even
paranormal, information transfer, and makes it more
difficult to sort out the precise mechanisms of
information transfer involved.
Modern psychological reviews might also focus on the
hypothesis that the paranoid psychotic subject was
likely dissociating their perception of what they were
reading from their awareness of its source (rather than
the obvious appearance of receiving it from an
extrasensory source). This resembles the dissociation
theory of how trance mediumistic (trance channeling)
behaviors and some religious experiences (such as
hearing the voice of God) may occur, at least in some
cases. The concept of cognitive dissociation is a
central one to many modern psychological descriptions of
hypnotic and peripheral phenomena, as we will see in
more detail later. In particular, we will see that
dissociation provides an extremely useful description,
but not necessarily an adequate explanation of all of
the data.
Today, most psychologists, and virtually all of those
investigators known as parapsychologists, are aware of
the complexity of human perception under even
conventional circumstances. They would generally tend
not to consider a psi hypothesis to be demonstrated in
this sort of situation, given the apparently
demonstrated correlation of exceptional body language
reading skills and high hit rates. This is of course
entirely different from demonstrating that a psi faculty
is not operating. Just that the experimental situation
in this particular case does not provide evidence of
psi.
But there are other experimental results, with protocols
more specifically designed to rule out subtle
conventional sensory communication. These give us reason
to at least consider and test a psi hypothesis, with an
eye toward ruling out subtle body reading effects, in
hypnotic situations. It appears from some results that
under certain kinds of conditions hypnosis may at least
be slightly conducive to anomalous information transfer,
even when subtle cues are eliminated.
One well known difficulty of even this result, though,
is that it is not clear whether hypnosis is facilitating
some elusive 'ESP' faculty in some general way, or more
specifically improving the percipient's ability to
perform on the particular kinds of tests in use. In
other words, the dramatic interpretation of hypnosis as
an altered state in which paranormal capacities are
provided or enhanced may not be the best or only
explanation, even if the psi hypothesis itself were to
receive growing experimental support. There is also the
crucially important matter of just exactly what it is
about the process of hypnotic induction and its effects
on the subject that changes hit rates in certain
laboratory psi tests.
Sources of unusual phenomenon reported during hypnosis.
In another section, we briefly review T.X. Barber's work
demonstrating that most if not all of the unusual
phenomena reported during hypnosis are also seen under
other conditions. He and his colleague Sheryl Wilson in
their work on the theory of the 'Fantasy Prone
Personality' also provide us with another link between
psi and hypnosis, the observation that there are
distinct similarities in personality variables between
people who are excellent hypnotic subjects, and those
who report large numbers of psychic experiences.
It should be emphasized here that this theory does not
support the once popular notion that good hypnotic
subjects are simply gullible or neurotic, or otherwise
mentally ill; as no correlation with any of these
personality variables has ever been determined. Rather,
the FPP theory paints a picture of natural visionary
individuals with a rich inner life and often
extraordinary psychosomatic responses, but who are
perfectly well able to distinguish their vivid fantasy
life from reality, just as most of us can distinguish a
dream from a memory of actual events, most of the time.
In other words, among the factors that the FPP does NOT
correlate with well at all is any diminished capacity
for reality testing. This should be born in mind
particularly because of the popular connotations of the
term 'fantasy-prone,' and the questionable veracity of
recollections occurring under hypnotic procedures. A
report from an FPP subject is not inherently either more
or less reliable than one from other subjects, in or out
of hypnosis. Their rich mental life does not necessarily
intrude on their external perceptions, except under
various very unususal kinds of conditions, such as
spontaneous hallucination triggered by hypnotic
suggestion.
Additionally, there is the complex psychological
question of whether the individual interprets their
experience as 'real' or 'imagined.' When an LSD user
comes down from their trip, they don't generally
continue to believe that their face was melting or that
the sky actually changed to fluorescent green during
their experience, they distinguish it as an 'altered
state.' However, during the trip, the altered perception
may be quite convincing.
In hypnotic extraordinary experiences, we find both
cases where the individual believes that their
perceptions were due to an altered state, even though it
seemed real at the time, and those where they believe
something quite bizarre actually happened, not the
result of an unusual perceptual state. And the two types
of cases are not at all easy to distinguish by any means
other than relying on the report of the subject.
It has also been observed that even a polygraph is of
extremely limited value in distinguishing whether a
bizarre occurrence actually happened to an individual or
was hallucinated or 'confabulated.' In many cases, the
individual believes that a hallucinated or hypnoti |
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