Just thought I'd beat Chris to the draw for once. This link appeared on my Facebook news feed courtesy of the SPR.
Finnish research project probes stigma of the paranormal
I was somewhat surprised because I have this notion that Scandanavia is a bastion of materialism and orthodoxy. If so, this study bucks the trend somewhat.
Here's a taster.
Hell, I could have quoted the whole thing so, instead, I recommend reading the original article. Nice to see some academics confirming what some of us have been saying for years.
Finnish research project probes stigma of the paranormal
I was somewhat surprised because I have this notion that Scandanavia is a bastion of materialism and orthodoxy. If so, this study bucks the trend somewhat.
Here's a taster.
Quote:Professor Marja-Liisa Honkasalo talked about a recent research project called Mind and the Other, funded by the country’s most prestigious academic body, the Academy of Finland. A medical doctor and anthropologist, Honkasalo led the four-year study, which ended in late 2017. It investigated what the researchers called “uncanny” experiences – ones that defy common sense and a mainstream modern worldview.
...
Honkasalo says that the main question posed in the study was why these experiences are excluded from proper research on human mind or psychiatry or psychology – in other words, why they are not taken seriously.
"Such experiences are surprisingly common. Based on population research, more than half the people in the Western world have had at least one experience that might be called 'paranormal'."
...
Stigmatised by the uncanny
If such experiences are so common, why don’t we hear about them more in modern day Finland?
Honkasalo says that it was a bit astonishing to researchers in this study how strongly taboo they are.
...
“Because these authorities were not quite sure whether these are healthy or sane experiences, they always considered them to be on the sick side. They were categorised as sick people. After having tried to share these experiences, it caused a kind of itinerary of stigma for them and for their families. Also, quite tragic lives and fates.”
Some were given psychiatric diagnoses such as schizophrenia, and put on medication and even in mental institutions.
...
In their contribution to the study, folklorist Kaarina Koski of Helsinki University and historian Juuso Järvenpää of the University of Tampere note that compared to other cultures before and now, Western, and Nordic society in particular has a negative attitude towards phenomena seen as supernatural. These do not fit into the prevailing scientific worldview, nor do they sit with Lutheran doctrine that dominates the religious field in Finland.
Hell, I could have quoted the whole thing so, instead, I recommend reading the original article. Nice to see some academics confirming what some of us have been saying for years.
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
(This post was last modified: 2018-03-28, 05:38 AM by Kamarling.)
Freeman Dyson