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Tech Bytes: They never saw it coming
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They never saw it coming

by Paul Jay, CBC News Online

After 28 years of studying ESP (extra-sensory perception) and telekinesis, the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (or PEAR) laboratory will shut down at the end of the month, The New York Times reported.

For almost three decades the lab was an embarassment for the university and an outrage to the scientific community. And lab founder Robert Jahn has decided to call it quits.

As he told the Times:

"For 28 years, weve done what we wanted to do, and theres no reason to stay and generate more of the same data," said the laboratorys founder, Robert G. Jahn, 76, former dean of Princetons engineering school and an emeritus professor. "If people dont believe us after all the results weve produced, then they never will."

Jahn was able to stay open mostly through private donations totalling more than $10 million US.

The Times also outlines a typical experiment, which is amusing in the absurdity of its conclusions:

In one of PEARs standard experiments, the study participant would sit in front of an electronic box the size of a toaster oven, which flashed a random series of numbers just above and just below 100. Staff members instructed the person to simply think high or think low and watch the display. After thousands of repetitions the equivalent of coin flips the researchers looked for differences between the machines output and random chance. Analyzing data from such trials, the PEAR team concluded that people could alter the behaviour of these machines very slightly, changing about 2 or 3 flips out of 10,000.

Oddly enough the decision to close shop comes just as researchers in Germany, Japan and the U.K., announced they have found a way to decode people's intentions through brain scans with 70 per cent accuracy.

We can't help but think of the staff at the lab and what will become of them. Perhaps they will bounce back in the private sector like their fictional counterparts Spengler, Stantz and Venkman. Speaking of Ghostbusters, we came across this lineup while looking up the movie on the Internet Movie Database. It's an appropriate epitaph for the Princeton program:

Dean Yeager: This university will no longer continue any funding of any kind for your group's activities.
Dr. Peter Venkman: But the kids love us.

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Maximilien Schirm

Waterloo

In the name of scientists everywhere: Thank you for ending this ridiculous research. It isn't science: If you cannot disprove the theory, it cannot be science. Science is based upon theories which can be disproved.

Posted February 14, 2007 03:14 PM

Shannon Lu

Science is based upon theories which can be PROVED or disproved. Yes, it's true. Perhaps what they are doing is not science. We are very far away from being able to prove a lot of things. I have yet to see the theory of evolution actually proven. Yet, science accepts this theory as fact. We are so selective and the rules do not seem to apply to all theories consistently... which would be a scientific thing to do, don't you think?

Posted February 21, 2007 04:25 PM

G.Wm.Kadnier, PhD

As a scientist, I often wonder how far we (as a scientific community) have drifted, from the basic tenets of 'Science'; If we continue to deride, dismiss out of hand, and demand a priori "proof" before we can even approach a subject of investigation, then we will go no farther in learning many of nature's secrets--

Too bad that PEAR has closed---it's one less set of research that we, as a society, have lost access to.

Posted September 12, 2007 11:09 PM

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