There's a question I'd like to raise, partly triggered by a current thread, Evidence of "time travel"? aka Time Slips, though it isn't exclusive to the realm of time-slips.
The question is this:
is it even possible to photograph the paranormal?
There are a number of reasons why I ask. Perhaps first is that I have a background in photography, it's something I've been doing since childhood, and perhaps lack of funds to buy shiny new toys meant instead I had to read about them. I used to read pretty much anything I could get my hands on regarding the art and science of photography. Later I did a college course on the subject, perhaps aiming to follow it as a career path, though I ended up working in a different area. At any rate I think I have at least a basic grounding in the subject by now.
However, I've yet to see a really convincing photograph of say a ghostly or other-worldly encounter. Also, most such photos involve retrospective 'discovery', that is they don't represent the result of someone seeing a ghost, and then photographing it. On the contrary, it seems either someone sees a ghost, but is unable to photograph it. Or conversely, no-one sees or is aware of anything unusual but afterwards a photo may look a bit odd, to some people.
On the other side of the issue, I remember visiting some ancient site in England, and was sitting quietly in the sunshine, reading a book, At some point I looked up and saw a procession of figures walking solemnly across the field in front of me. What I saw was quite likely appropriate for the original use of the site, some 4000 or so years earlier. Now I knew very well that what I was seeing wasn't seen with the eyes, it had somehow entered my mind but wouldn't be visible to other people, unless they were sharing my mental state at that time. This reminds me of say death-bed visions or shared-death experiences, where people may very clearly see and experience something, perhaps even enter a conversation with such a visitation. But it isn't something which could be photographed, it is seen with the mind. That's not to say it is made-up. There are shared experiences where more than one person witnesses the same events.
I'm left wondering whether photography has any role at all to play, except perhaps in recording the scene, the location where something occurred. But not the event itself.
Thoughts?
(This post was last modified: 2018-06-04, 09:27 AM by Typoz.)
The question is this:
is it even possible to photograph the paranormal?
There are a number of reasons why I ask. Perhaps first is that I have a background in photography, it's something I've been doing since childhood, and perhaps lack of funds to buy shiny new toys meant instead I had to read about them. I used to read pretty much anything I could get my hands on regarding the art and science of photography. Later I did a college course on the subject, perhaps aiming to follow it as a career path, though I ended up working in a different area. At any rate I think I have at least a basic grounding in the subject by now.
However, I've yet to see a really convincing photograph of say a ghostly or other-worldly encounter. Also, most such photos involve retrospective 'discovery', that is they don't represent the result of someone seeing a ghost, and then photographing it. On the contrary, it seems either someone sees a ghost, but is unable to photograph it. Or conversely, no-one sees or is aware of anything unusual but afterwards a photo may look a bit odd, to some people.
On the other side of the issue, I remember visiting some ancient site in England, and was sitting quietly in the sunshine, reading a book, At some point I looked up and saw a procession of figures walking solemnly across the field in front of me. What I saw was quite likely appropriate for the original use of the site, some 4000 or so years earlier. Now I knew very well that what I was seeing wasn't seen with the eyes, it had somehow entered my mind but wouldn't be visible to other people, unless they were sharing my mental state at that time. This reminds me of say death-bed visions or shared-death experiences, where people may very clearly see and experience something, perhaps even enter a conversation with such a visitation. But it isn't something which could be photographed, it is seen with the mind. That's not to say it is made-up. There are shared experiences where more than one person witnesses the same events.
I'm left wondering whether photography has any role at all to play, except perhaps in recording the scene, the location where something occurred. But not the event itself.
Thoughts?