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A scientific approach to the paranormal

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    Eight years ago, I was haunted
    by an evil spirit.
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    I was 25 at the time,
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    and I was living in a tiny house
    behind someone else's house
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    in Los Angeles.
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    It was this guest house.
    It had kind of been dilapidated,
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    not taken care of for a long time,
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    and one night, I was sitting there
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    and I got this really spooky feeling,
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    kind of a feeling
    like you're being watched,
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    but no one was there except my two dogs,
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    and they were just chewing their feet.
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    And I looked around.
    No one was there.
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    And I thought, okay,
    it's just my imagination.
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    But the feeling just kept getting worse,
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    and I started to feel
    this pressure in my chest,
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    sort of like the feeling
    when you get bad news,
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    but it started to sink lower and lower
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    and almost hurt.
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    And over the course of that week,
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    this feeling got worse and worse,
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    and I started to become convinced
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    that something was there
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    in my little guest house, haunting me.
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    And I started to hear these sounds,
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    this "whooosh,"
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    kind of whisper,
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    like something passing through me.
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    And I called my best friend Claire,
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    and I said,
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    "I know this is gonna sound crazy,
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    but, um...
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    I think there's a ghost in my house.
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    I need to get rid of it."
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    And she said --
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    she's very open-minded, and she said,
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    "I don't think you're crazy.
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    I think you just need
    to do a cleansing ritual."
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    (Laughter)
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    "So get some sage and burn it,
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    and tell it to go away."
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    So I said, "Okay,"
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    and I went and I bought sage,
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    and I had never done this before,
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    so I set the sage on fire,
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    waved it about, and said, "Go away!
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    "This is my house! I live here.
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    You don't live here!"
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    But the feeling stayed.
    Nothing got better.
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    And then I started to think,
    okay, well now this thing's
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    probably just laughing at me,
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    because it hasn't left,
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    and I probably just look like
    this impotent, powerless thing
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    that couldn't get it to go away.
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    And so every day I'd come home
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    and you guys, this feeling got so bad
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    that -- I mean, I'm laughing at it now --
    but I would sit there in bed
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    and I would cry every night.
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    And the feeling on my chest
    got worse and worse.
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    It was physically painful.
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    And I even went to a psychiatrist
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    and tried to get her
    to prescribe me medicine,
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    and she wouldn't just because
    I don't have schizophrenia, okay.
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    (Laughter)
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    So finally I got on the Internet,
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    and I googled hauntings.
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    And I came upon this forum
    of ghost-hunters,
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    but these were a special
    kind of ghost hunters.
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    They were skeptics.
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    And so they believed that every case
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    of ghosts that they
    had investigated so far
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    had been explained away by science.
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    And I was like, "Okay, smart guys,
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    this is what's happening to me,
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    and if you have an explanation for me,
    I would love to hear it."
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    And one of them said,
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    "Okay.
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    Um, have you heard of
    carbon monoxide poisoning?"
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    And I said, "Yeah.
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    Like, gas poisoning?"
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    So carbon monoxide poisoning
    is when you have a gas leak
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    leaking into your home,
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    and I looked it up,
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    and the symptoms
    of carbon monoxide poisoning
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    include a pressure on your chest,
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    auditory hallucinations --
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    whoosh --
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    and an unexplained feeling of dread.
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    So that night, I called the gas company.
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    I said, "I have an emergency.
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    I need you to come out.
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    I don't want to get into the story now,
    but I need you to come out."
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    (Laughter)
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    They came out. I said,
    "I suspect a gas leak."
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    They brought their
    carbon monoxide detector,
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    and the man said,
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    "It's a really good thing
    that you called us tonight,
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    because you could
    have been dead very soon."
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    Thirty-seven percent of Americans
    believe in haunted houses,
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    and I wonder how many of them
    have been in one
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    and how many of them
    have been in danger.
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    So that haunting story
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    has led me to my job.
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    I'm an investigator, and I'm
    an investigator in two senses.
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    I'm an investigative journalist,
    and I'm also an investigator
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    of the claims of the paranormal
    and claims of the spiritual.
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    And that means a few things.
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    Sometimes that means that I'm
    pretending to need an exorcism
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    so I can get -- yes, that's right! --
    so I can go to an exorcist
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    and see if he's using gimmicks
    or psychological tricks
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    to try to convince someone
    that they're possessed.
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    Sometimes that means
    I'm going undercover in a fringe group
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    which I report on
    for a podcast that I co-host.
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    And I've done over 70 investigations
    like this with my co-host, Ross,
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    and I would love to tell you
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    that nine times out of 10, science wins,
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    saves the day, it's all explained.
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    That's not true. The truth is,
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    10 times out of 10, science wins,
    it saves the day.
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    (Applause)
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    And that doesn't mean there's
    no such thing as a mystery.
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    Of course there are mysteries,
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    but a mystery is a mystery.
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    It is not a ghost.
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    Now, I believe there are
    two kinds of truth,
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    and it's taken me a while to get
    to this place, but I think this is right,
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    so here me out.
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    I think there is outer truth
    and there's inner truth.
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    So if you say to me,
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    "There was a man named Jesus
    and he once existed,"
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    that's outer truth. Right?
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    And we can go and we can look
    at the historical record.
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    We can determine whether
    that seems to be true.
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    And I would argue,
    it does seem to be true.
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    If you say, "Jesus rose from the dead,"
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    ooh, trickier.
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    (Laughter)
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    I would say that's an outer truth claim,
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    because he physically rose or he didn't.
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    I'm not going to get into
    whether he rose or he didn't,
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    but I would say that's
    an outer truth claim.
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    It happened or it didn't happen.
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    But if you say,
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    "I don't care whether
    he rose from the dead.
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    It's symbolically important to me,
    and that metaphor is so meaningful,
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    so purposeful to me, and I'm
    not going to try to persuade you of it,"
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    now you've moved it from
    outer truth to inner truth,
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    from science to art.
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    And I think we have a tendency
    to not be clear about this,
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    to try to move our inner truths
    to outer truths,
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    or to not be fair about it to each other,
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    and when people are telling us
    their inner truths,
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    to try to make them defend them
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    by outer truth standards.
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    So I'm talking here about outer truth,
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    about objective things,
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    and there was an objective reality
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    in my haunted house. Right?
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    Now that I've told you about the gas leak,
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    I doubt a single person here
    would be like,
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    "I still think there was a ghost too,"
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    because as soon as we have
    these scientific explanations,
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    we know to give up the ghost.
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    We use these things as stopgaps
    for things that we can't explain.
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    We don't believe them because of evidence.
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    We believe them because
    of a lack of evidence.
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    So there was a group in Los Angeles
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    called the Independent
    Investigations Group,
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    or the IIG,
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    and they do great work.
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    They'll give a 10,000 dollar prize
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    to anyone who can show
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    under scientific conditions
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    that they have a paranormal ability.
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    No one's done it yet,
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    but they've had a couple people
    who claim that they were clairaudients,
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    which means that they can
    hear voices either from the great beyond
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    or they can read minds,
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    and they had one person
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    who was very sincere
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    who believed that he could read minds.
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    And a lot of these people --
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    (Laughter) --
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    That wasn't a laugh line, but okay.
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    A lot of these people
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    really are sincere,
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    and I believe this guy was.
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    He really thought he had this power.
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    So they set up a test with him,
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    and this is the way it always works.
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    The group says, "Okay, we have a protocol,
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    we have a way to scientifically test this.
    Do you agree with it?"
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    The person says yes. Then they test it.
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    It's very important that both sides agree.
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    They did that.
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    They tested him.
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    They said, "Okay, you know what?
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    You weren't able to predict
    what Lisa was thinking.
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    It matched up about
    the same as chance.
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    Looks like you don't have the power."
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    And that gave them the opportunity
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    to compassionately sit down with him
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    and have a very difficult discussion,
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    which basically amounted to,
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    "Hey, we know you're sincere,
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    and what that means is,
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    you do hear something in your head."
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    And that's a tough thing to face.
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    But that day, that guy got to
    make the very difficult decision,
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    but really the life-changing decision
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    about whether to go get help.
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    But that really could be
    the first day of the rest of your life,
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    because when we challenge these beliefs,
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    we're actually helping people
    to make these connections
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    that maybe before seemed like
    otherworldly explanations,
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    help draw us into reality
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    and maybe change our lives for the better.
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    Now, on the other hand,
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    maybe on time it'll turn out to be true.
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    Maybe we'll find out there are ghosts,
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    and holy shit, it will be the best thing!
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    And every time I do
    one of these investigations,
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    I still get so excited,
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    and I'm like 75 into them,
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    and still I swear on number 76,
    I'm going to be like, this is the one.
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    (Laughter)
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    Maybe I'm just eternally optimistic,
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    but I hope I never lose this hope,
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    and I invite you to take
    this same attitude
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    when people share
    their outer beliefs with you.
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    When talking about testable claims,
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    respect them enough to ask
    these good questions.
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    Challenge and see how you can
    examine them together,
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    because there's this idea
    that you can't respect a belief
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    and still challenge it,
    but that's not true.
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    When we jiggle the lock,
    when we test the claim,
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    we're saying, okay, I respect you,
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    I'm listening to what you're saying,
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    I'm going to test it out with you.
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    Like, we've all had that experience
    where you're telling someone something,
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    and they're like, "Oh,
    that's really interesting, yeah."
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    You know you're being had,
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    but when someone says, "Really? Huh.
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    Sounds a little sketchy to me,
    but okay, I'm listening,"
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    you at least know you're being
    engaged, you're being respected.
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    And that's the kind of attitude
    we should have with these claims.
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    That's showing someone
    that you care what they're saying.
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    That's respect.
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    Now, yes, most of these searches
    will come up empty,
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    but that's how all of science works.
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    Every cure for cancer so far
    has not panned out,
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    but we don't stop looking
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    for two reasons:
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    because number one, the answer matters.
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    Whether it's looking at the afterlife
    or the paranormal or the cure for cancer,
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    it all amounts to the same question:
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    how long will we be here?
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    And two, because looking for the truth,
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    being open-minded,
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    and being willing to be wrong
    and to change your whole worldview
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    is awe-inspiring.
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    I still get excited at ghost stories
    every single time.
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    I still consider that every
    group I join might be right,
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    and I hope I never lose that hope.
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    Let's all never lose that hope,
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    because searching for what's out there
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    helps us understand what's in here.
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    And also, please have
    a carbon monoxide detector in your home.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A scientific approach to the paranormal
Speaker:
Carrie Poppy
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:37
  • The English transcript was updated on 3/15/2017. The subtitle structure was changed to reflect the new edit of the talk video.

English subtitles

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