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If we are still talking about skinwalker ranch here, if security guards who worked there were conditioned to expect to see strange things by telling them to be sure to record any strange things they see, then that sets expectations, and some people can be more influenced by such expectations than others.
originally posted by: KellyPrettyBear
a reply to: Phage
As I CLEARLY stated, I'm saying there is a clue there.
If one person sees something massive, detailed and fascinating, point blank.
And another person, shoulder to shoulder sees NOTHING,
then that is a glaring difference.
This is a pretty common occurrence and it has no credible explanation.
I'm not saying what the difference is...
Just that it's worth investigating; it would be foolish not to do so.
Kev
The research reported here suggests that cultural expectations shape the way people pay attention to their sensory experience. These different patterns of attention may be responsible for differing experiences of hallucinations...
Both the ethnographic and clinical literatures agree that hallucinations are common in the nonclinical population.8,9 The form of hallucination in the clinical and nonclinical population are, however, relatively distinct, and there seem to be, broadly speaking, 3 dominant patterns...
Persons with psychosis often hallucinate many times each day...
By contrast, hallucinations experienced in the general population are likely to be brief, not unpleasant and not experienced frequently. Depending on the way the question is asked, 10%–15% or more of the population report them.
This is not the 'the wrong kind of E115', it's not ANY kind of E115! It's a commercial emulsive product which doesn't contain any element 115, that Bob Lazar was trying to con Bob Bigelow with saying it was E115, according to Jacques Vallee, who should be in a good position to know such things, having been a consultant for Bob Bigelow.
originally posted by: MysterX
Now it seems the Lazar bashing ammunition is not that E115 is possible or actually exists, now it's 'the wrong kind of E115'...
originally posted by: mirageman
Truth is if Bob's story was real he has absolutely nothing but a story. Who's trying to prove him a fake? Oh!
Jacques Vallee noted Bob Bigelow sussed him out pretty quickly pretending he had the mysterious stable version of E115 but it was in fact industrial emulsifier.
See Forbidden Science 4
I noticed his coughing too, and it did seem more like a "tell" to me, than a natural cough response.
originally posted by: inert
youtube link
If you watch, pretty much normal conversation until 29 minutes into it when George turns the topic to Skin Walker Ranch and UFOs. Now, suddenly lots of coughing and clearing the throat. I'm no body language expert, but you might draw some conclusions from that.
Or he thinks he "knows" some things. He seems 100% sure that aliens have visited Earth, but extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence and he is so immersed in paranormal thinking that I wouldn't trust that what he thinks he "knows" is "knowledge" in the scientific sense. I don't find Bigelow's unsubstantiated alien claims any more credible than the claims of Jesse Marcel who thought he could see "alien writing" on this wreckage and said he was convinced it wasn't from Earth (From "The Roswell Report" by the US Air Force):
Second Interview
He goes on to talk about the afterlife, consciousness, paranormal activity, and if they are all connected. He's apparently got a Bigelow Institute for Consciousness Studies (BICS). It is interesting stuff. I hope that he gets more comfortable talking about these topics and starts to lay out some of the stuff he knows. No idea if NDA's are holding him back or if TTSA has weakened some resistance to hold this information closely so that he's now opening up, but he clearly knows more than he's currently willing to disclose.
Whether aliens have visited Earth or not I can't say, I don't know. I've never seen any scientifically valid evidence of that. What I can say is that I've seen lots of people like Bob Bigelow and Jesse Marcel who seem to base their beliefs on less than scientific criteria, and are not what I would call rational thinkers.
"Do you believe in aliens?" Logan asked. "I'm absolutely convinced and that's all there is to it," said Bigelow, founder and CEO of the commercial space company Bigelow Aerospace. "There has been and there is an existing presence, an E.T. presence."
It's unclear to me how you filter those factors out in this context:
originally posted by: KellyPrettyBear
a reply to: Arbitrageur
I've written some articles recently, about how 'priming the unconscious' is
an often used technique if you want someone to jump to unwarranted
conclusions. It's a common part of stage magic and traditional shamanism both.
I've well aware of most psychological factors when it comes to unusual
experiences; I'm not talking about those; I always strive to filter those
factors out when I research something.
I just posted an article saying 10-15% of the population has hallucinations, so if you prime the skinwalter "test subjects" I don't expect 100% of them to have hallucinations, that would be inconsistent with the available research. So of course with two "primed" human guinea pig test subjects standing "standing shoulder to shoulder', and "one person sees zero" while the adjacent person sees a hallucination they've been primed to see is not so unexpected, it's sort of what I'd expect.
originally posted by: KellyPrettyBear
a reply to: ConfusedBrit
Say what you want about Bigelow, but he also referenced the 'two
people standing shoulder to shoulder' and one person sees zero,
and the others sees some absolutely astonishing phenomenon,
sometimes at extreme close range; where simple misperception
is very unlikely to be the explanation.
There's a real clue there... what that clue is, is rather hard to say.
I don't really know enough about your personal experiences to comment intelligently on them.
In a case like my BTUFO case, I can tell you that very nearly NOTHING
that I expected (and had primed myself with on some level) happened
as I expected as it would. It could hardly be fantasy wish fulfillment,
when my 'fantasy' never occurred. Frankly all of my life's 'supranormal
seeming experiences/experiments have followed that script. I've never
found even ONE happy self-delusion.. all of them have been rather brutal
for the most part; not entirely, but generally brutal, pointing me in directions
that I had never wanted to go.
I took a course taught by Robert Hazen and I found him to be an absolutely brilliant man, so I'm a fan of his.
originally posted by: Erno86
"At this place (Calvert Cliffs), you get a sense of the immensity of time and the constancy of change."
quote: Robert M. Hazen
Frankly, any poor area, with much suffering and death, near Native Americans would have served just as well as SWR. (MUFON Omega study).
In 'yoga' the goal is to strengthen all aspects of the mind, not just the 'westernized' part of it.