This problem seems to be very common with mediumistic communications with the deceased. An example from the work of one of the most famous and most investigated mediums, Leonora Piper:
This account is very much in line with the following hypothesis: The reading, writing and understanding of words, especially names, must be a neural process, the function of certain brain structures. Naturally they no longer support the spirit or soul after it has left the body. Accordingly, when out of the body in other spiritual realms, the spirit would have great difficulty in naming names. This is because absent the neural brain structures the consciousness or awareness or idea of the identity of a unique person can no longer automatically be associated with the sound of the persons name and the shapes and identifications of the letters making up the name.
The spirit would be aware of and identify another spirit through direct psychic perception, telepathy or other paranormal modalities - sense their essence so to speak, and have no need for names.
This example was apparently an account by a discarnate person of his initial experience of being greeted after his physical death, communicated through Leonora Piper. Piper was still mostly in body and had fully functioning linguistic neural processing, but the being she was receiving the communication from did not, causing the name difficulty.
This simple hypothesis would seem to explain one of the more puzzling characteristics of the communications coming through psychic mediums - their often great difficulty in getting names correctly.
The occurrence of very numerous cases of this problem in mediumistic communications with the dead would seem to be strong evidence of the truth of the hypothesis - they fit it to a T. The hypothesis presumes the survival of some aspects of the former human personality, in order for the communication to occur. By extension perhaps the confirmation of the prediction of this hypothesis could be considered yet another piece of evidence for survival.
This would also appear to be another fairly strong piece of evidence against "super-psi" as an explanation for mediumistic communications with the deceased. Why would the subconscious mind of a medium choose to fake a phenomenon that would be later explained as an expected artifact of the nature of the physical brain, spirits, and the psychic communication chain?
(This post was last modified: 2020-10-19, 02:49 AM by nbtruthman.)
Quote:"From the 1922 book “Past and Present with Mrs. Piper” by Anne Manning Robbins, a friend of Leonora Piper - on page 49 of the book we start to read an interesting sketch of life after death, told in trance on May 24, 1904 by Leonora Piper through automatic writing (which the book states was used almost exclusively by Piper between 1903 and 1908, rather than verbal trance speaking). The source dictated as if it were some deceased spirit:
"And the feeling of ecstasy is beyond description, and no spirit that ever returned to earth could begin to describe it for the understanding of the mortal mind. And then I was surrounded by friends, by acquaintances, by old war veterans, by my intimate friends whom I know, members of my family and all, surrounded by them, welcoming me. Why, I felt as though I should be enveloped by them, the delight was so great, but when I tried to call them by name I was at a loss to do so. They had to tell me who they were. I knew their faces, not one failed to me. I knew them and understood them well. I saw them and recognized them, but to call them by name, believe me, I could not. And when I tried to speak I found instead of it being an effort and difficult for me to speak, I found that my thoughts were understood, actually understood, and their thoughts were returned to me. There was a perfect communion between us.""
This account is very much in line with the following hypothesis: The reading, writing and understanding of words, especially names, must be a neural process, the function of certain brain structures. Naturally they no longer support the spirit or soul after it has left the body. Accordingly, when out of the body in other spiritual realms, the spirit would have great difficulty in naming names. This is because absent the neural brain structures the consciousness or awareness or idea of the identity of a unique person can no longer automatically be associated with the sound of the persons name and the shapes and identifications of the letters making up the name.
The spirit would be aware of and identify another spirit through direct psychic perception, telepathy or other paranormal modalities - sense their essence so to speak, and have no need for names.
This example was apparently an account by a discarnate person of his initial experience of being greeted after his physical death, communicated through Leonora Piper. Piper was still mostly in body and had fully functioning linguistic neural processing, but the being she was receiving the communication from did not, causing the name difficulty.
This simple hypothesis would seem to explain one of the more puzzling characteristics of the communications coming through psychic mediums - their often great difficulty in getting names correctly.
The occurrence of very numerous cases of this problem in mediumistic communications with the dead would seem to be strong evidence of the truth of the hypothesis - they fit it to a T. The hypothesis presumes the survival of some aspects of the former human personality, in order for the communication to occur. By extension perhaps the confirmation of the prediction of this hypothesis could be considered yet another piece of evidence for survival.
This would also appear to be another fairly strong piece of evidence against "super-psi" as an explanation for mediumistic communications with the deceased. Why would the subconscious mind of a medium choose to fake a phenomenon that would be later explained as an expected artifact of the nature of the physical brain, spirits, and the psychic communication chain?