Question:
What is parapsychology?
2006-12-18 19:57:35 UTC
And do I get more points for being the first question?
Eleven answers:
Joy M
2006-12-18 19:59:30 UTC
It's the study of paranormal events. A good example would be the study of ghosts and hauntings. It can also be called paranormal psychology.
catzpaw
2006-12-19 11:43:12 UTC
Parapsychology is the study of certain types of paranormal phenomena. The term is based on the Greek para (beside/beyond), psyche (soul/mind), and logos (account/explanation) and was coined by psychologist Max Dessoir in or before 1889. Its first appearance was in an article by Dessoir in the June 1889 issue of the German publication Sphinx.[1] J. B. Rhine later popularized "parapsychology" as a replacement for the earlier term "psychical research", during a shift in methodologies which brought experimental methods to the study of psychic phenomena.[1]



In contemporary parapsychology, the term refers to the study of psi, a Greek letter (Ψ, ψ) indicating psychic phenomena.[2][3][4]



The scientific reality of parapsychological phenomena and the validity of scientific parapsychological research is a matter of frequent dispute and criticism. It is regarded by critics as a pseudoscience, but proponents claim that parapsychology research results are scientifically rigorous. Despite criticisms, a number of academic institutions now conduct research on the topic, employing laboratory methodologies and statistical techniques, such as meta-analysis. The Parapsychological Association has been a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science for over 20 years.



You could get more information from the link below...
eri
2006-12-19 04:10:13 UTC
You're not the first question; just the first in 5 days. Parapsychology is the study of the paranormal - but since there's no paranormal to study, basically you can't find a job or get anything published. It's a pseudoscience at best.
jamaica
2006-12-19 04:15:41 UTC
Parapsychology is the scientific study of paranormal phenomena. The "paranormal" (beside or beyond the normal) refers to unusual experiences that do not seem to be explainable in terms of our everyday understanding or known scientific principles. Paranormal experiences often seem weird, uncanny, or unnatural. Typically they are quite rare but there are a few exceptional "stars" who have regular paranormal experiences and may show seemingly consistent paranormal ability.
mashustik94
2006-12-19 04:00:28 UTC
Parapsychology is the study of certain types of paranormal phenomena.
Albania
2006-12-19 04:00:08 UTC
Parapsychology is the study of certain types of paranormal phenomena.
2006-12-19 05:59:29 UTC
eri told you correctly; it is bunk pseudo-science. You do not get the most points for an ill posed question that wastes my time. Parapsychology indeed!! As if we did not have enough problems with regular psychology.
cheasy123
2006-12-19 04:00:04 UTC
Psychical Research, also parapsychology, scientific investigation of alleged phenomena and events that appear to be unaccounted for by conventional physical, biological, or psychological theories. Parapsychologists study two kinds of so-called psi phenomena: extrasensory perception (ESP), or the acquiring of information through nonsensory means; and psychokinesis (PK), or the ability to affect objects at a distance by means other than known physical forces. Psychical research also investigates the survival of personality after death and deals with related topics such as trance mediumship, hauntings, apparitions, poltergeists (involuntary PK), and out-of-body experiences. The name of this field of investigation is taken from the Society of Psychical Research, founded in England in 1882 and in the U.S. in 1884; both groups continue to publish their findings today.



HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT

Among the early achievements of the British group was the investigation of hypnotism (see Hypnosis), a field later claimed by medicine and psychology. The society also investigated phenomena produced at spiritualistic séances and the claims of spiritualism. Psi phenomena to be investigated were classified as either physical or mental. The physical effects, or PK, include the movement of physical objects or an influence upon material processes by the apparent direct action of mind over matter. The mental manifestations, or ESP, include telepathy, which is the direct transmission of messages, emotions, or other subjective states from one person to another without the use of any sensory channel of communication; clairvoyance, meaning direct responses to a physical object or event without any sensory contact; and precognition, or a noninferential response to a future event.



One of the first specific investigations in the field was the examination, by the British chemist and physicist Sir William Crookes, of the phenomena produced at séances held by the Scottish medium Daniel Dunglas Home. Home, a physical medium, generally used some type of lighting during his séances, and the validity of the paranormal phenomena he produced has never been successfully impugned. The contents of verbal utterances by mental mediums were also studied. Significant early research involved the American medium Leonore E. Piper, whose apparent psychical gifts were discovered by the American philosopher and psychologist William James. Other lines of investigation dealt with psychic experiences that seemed to occur spontaneously in everyday life, and involved the controlled testing of persons with apparently outstanding ESP abilities.
gotjkg
2006-12-19 04:00:49 UTC
Pronunciation: "pa-r&-(")sI-'kä-l&-jE

Function: noun

Etymology: International Scientific Vocabulary

: a field of study concerned with the investigation of evidence for paranormal psychological phenomena (as telepathy, clairvoyance, and psychokinesis)
tas
2006-12-19 09:35:25 UTC
study of unexplained mental phenomena: the study of supposed mental phenomena that cannot be explained by known psychological or scientific principles, for example extrasensory perception and telepathy
jimppanzee
2006-12-19 03:59:57 UTC
study of mental phenomena not explainable


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...