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Mysticism&Religion

“Animal telepathy. Humbug or reality?”

The Hörzu, one of Germany’s top TV magazines apparently can’t keep away from it – after this unspeakably uncritical three-part “miracle healing” series including personal experience reports from its author (I wrote about these here, there and there, but as of yet in German only), issue 35 now contains an article (also online) in which an editor may report how she wanted to fall for an animal telepath – she worded it differently, of course – after her cat with a pseudo-aristocratic name, nicknamed “Katerchen” (=little tomcat), had run away after they had moved. (All quotes are my translation from the article.)

“Katerchen, are you alright?”

All this combined with the advertisement for the involved “animal telepath and psychologist” Dr. Rosemarie Marquardt and a book from the “pioneer of animal telepathy” Penelope Smith, where she had taken a course.

Not just imagination? “Everyone has the right to doubt that. It appears incredible to people that you can communicate with animals. But that’s only buried abilities that anyone can regain”, Marquardt says.

Yeah, sure. Fits the tenor of the introductory paragraph:

Speaking with animals is a dream of mankind. Animal telepathy shows one possible way. Humbug or reality? A self-experiment

It is reality, unfortunately, that people are sold a lot of humbug… Direct communication, also and especially in a non-verbal fashion as is also important between people, is one thing – but saying that telepathy is involved in that is (not only) in my opinion nothing but mystic bullshit. Somehow, though, it doesn’t surprise me that some people like to amalgamate these things. In a journalistic aspect, this article is a very weak effort, at any rate. Well, what could one expect especially after the “miracle healing” series from the Hörzu, anyway? The article continues:

This works even over a long distance, a photo is sufficient, she says.

And for this, that mystic bullshit is certainly required, for you want to have something to offer to the desperate owners. :roll:

And thus we have the “pleasure” to get to know that the author’s cat alledgedly told the “telepath” that he “didn’t run away, just wanted to see to his old district” and got injured, to a animal shelter and to a new family. And alledgedly sent images …

… that show an old house, with high trees, his favorite place in a bay window, a kitchen with door to a terrace, behind that a garden with bushes and nice hiding places.

Including a black dog nearby. Alledgedly “exactly sketching” the former residence, even though the author says she never mentioned these things.

Now, we don’t know how extensive these two ladies have talked, if the “telepath” said/wrote all this immediately or during a conversation that actually took place, apparently; one can only speculate over its exact course. We are only told that a photo of the cat in the new apartment (second floor) was mailed – who knows, maybe the “telepath” didn’t know that and interpreted the green area with bushes in the background accordingly… at any rate it is very doubtful that she said only correct and no wrong things without any feedback from the author.

It is known that psychologically experienced “telepaths” and “fortune tellers” often have that much knowledge of human nature that they can tell a lot from the most inconspicuous details – race of the cat, living room accessories (both visible in the photo), demeanor of the client, … – (known as cold reading), enough of which being correct to lead, in combination with the effect known as confirmation bias1 and a clever conduct of talks with vague statements that the customers themselves confirm directly or indirectly, to an extremely convincing reception by those willing to believe.

The leader of the school for osteopathic horse therapy in Overath met Marquardt through the treatment of a young mare. She confirmed her extraordinary abilities, but warns: “Animal telepathy is currently en vogue. Often, however, it is dealt with irresponsibly.“

Irresponsible – I think that’s a good word for telling despaired pet owners who’d clutch at any straw about pretended telepathic contacts with their disappeared darlings. Comforting lies still are lies – though certainly many “telepaths” also suffer from self-deception instead of lying intentionally. (All this seen independently from successes with direct contact with the animals.)

If animal telepathy really exists – then what causes it? Empathy? Intuitive knowledge about others through observation? There are approaches for scientific, neurologic explanatians, no doubt.

These explanations aren’t given, though. Well, that’s Hörzu. Explanations for what exactly, anyway? Looking at pets to guess their well-being or illnesses, somewhat getting their feelings? No problem, see above. But for telepathy?? They’d like that, no doubt. There may be pseudoscientific explanation attempts – morphic fields and similar stuff, for instance –, but no real scientific ones. At least I know not a single properly conducted scientific study or experiment that didn’t end negative for parapsychology fans.

Well then, if the subscription service doesn’t mess it up, this was my last Hörzu anyway.


Link tips:

Skeptic’s Dictionary: telepathy, parapsychology, ESP.

  1. i.e. you tend to recognize things confirming your opinion stronger and ignore contradicting things []

If you shake your head, do you lose brain cells?

shaking head Another special edition of “replying” to search requests, this time again about mysticism (and thus a little different from the usual)…

For those who don’t know yet: These search phrases, highlighted in grey, led people here, and I neither shortened nor extended them nor made them up, I just translated the German ones.

if you shake your head do you lose brain cells
I think the connection is a different one: If you got to shake your head due to the insanity of some people, e.g. those who consider lawn sprinkler rainbows a government conspiracy with water additives, see the LHC as a world conspiracy to lure satanic Nephilim from the planet Nibiru (German with English video), and many more – then certainly the loss of brain cells is involved.

why are we made believe there are no aliens
Asking this way usually shows that the asking persons tend to believe anything that conspiracy theorists come up with without thinking for themselves – for instance, about the very low possibility of alien visits1 due to the large distance and especially just at this point in time, why such a big event should be held secret at all, how this should work in an excessive bureaucracy with numerous government employees, etc.

what specifications to do black magic to need a girl
I need no black nor white magic to need a girl. :mrgreen: Or what do you want – make some gay man love women? But specifications are rather found in datasheets and the like, what does that have to do with magic? Express yourself clearly, man!

Oh, I forget – belief in magic and clear thinking don’t match.

pray away curses with money
That used to be called selling of indulgences; nowadays, there are also several fraudsters who e.g. tell people on the street about cursed relatives or offer stuff like that elsewhere.

pray away with the moon
Now that’s those mystics who combine dubious religiousness with dubious mysticism to achieve the strongest effects. Effects meaning impressing gullible customers and money on their own accounts, that is.

moon calendar permanent wave
Can you still read the calendar properly if its bent in waves?

nostradamus particle accelerator
That’s where his scribblings and especially the stuff that modern fortune-telling crackpots and scaremongers want to interpret into it2 should be put and collided – then they’d have an actual use!

do dragons die if we don’t believe in them anymore?
Does intelligence die if you can’t really believe in it anymore, looking at all these search queries? Hmm, that’s somehow to be feared…

in the show evidence dowsing
In which show? Oh those inexact search terms… Well, never mind, putting “dowsing” and “evidence” in one sentence is only feasible if you say e.g.: “Dowsing is the evidence for the existance of irrational mysticism dreamers.”

lotto through will
Well, without the will to play lotto, you won’t have a chance to win. Or as the advertising already put it: “You can only win if you play!”

numerology what do we have to learn
That numerology is just crap and anyone can arbitrarily fabricate any correlation between letters, numbers and meanings and that this doesn’t get better if you’re uninspiredly taking antique “formulae” instead of taking the effort to come up with some of your own.

Phew, that’s enough for now. In the end, let’s just undress for the healer and let the healer dominatrix know, then we’ll make our astrology porn!
:eyebrow:


Photo © Jenny Solomon – Fotolia.com

  1. the way the question is formulated, I actually assume that it’s about aliens on earth []
  2. works better to do so in hindsight… []

Links and video of the Week (2008/33)

Herbs for superstition

Mullein Nothing against medicinal herbs, they can actually help. (Though certainly not against anything that’s been claimed throughout the centuries.) And nothing against some stock keeping if you know how to use the herbs and use them regularly, though nowadays it’s probably not necessary that everybody keeps large stocks. And nothing against seasoning herbs either, of course.

But do you need to carry large amounts of plants like the mullein on this photo to churches for some superstition like a herb consecration on Assumption Day(German), just to put them somewhere on the wall or elsewhere in your home afterwards and hope for all kinds of things?

Well, it’s somewhat consistent, since many twigs, branches and little trees are cut off to decorate the streets earlier in the church year on Corpus Christi(?). And people tend to hope for a lot from many things that’d look quite strange even to them if they’d really think about it. But back to the feast at hand:

“By tradition, the herb bundle is composed of vitally necessary and healing plants such as bread grain and medicinal and seasoning herbs”, Josef Stadler, county advisor for landscape conservation and horticulture in Pfaffenhofen. At the center, there’s usually the mullein, also called [translated from its German names:] king’s candle, weather candle, Mother of God candle.

(All quotes are my translations of the aforementioned German article.)

And for what purpose? (Emphasis mine.)

“According to old folk religion, the consecrated herb bundle has a high reputation. Extraordinary healing powers and effects are attributed to it.

And that just because some specially dressed man moves his hands in an idiosyncratic way and maybe sprays some water? And the number of the herbs is said to be important, even though they can’t decide on how many – 7, 9, 12, 14, 24, 72 or even 99, varying by region? (German Wikipedia) And you have to jump in circles three times on one leg and shout Ommm… sitting cross-legged afterwards? Oh, no, that stuff in the last sentence is no part of this mysticism.

In earlier times, people threw some of the consecrated herbs into the open hearth’s fire to ward off appoaching thunderstorms.

Oh, and they actually noticed that this wouldn’t work? Surprising. Or was this only stopped because open hearths have become quite rare nowadays?