EXPERIMENTS WITH URI GELLER
by Harold E. Puthoff, Ph.D., and Russell Targ,
Stanford Research Institute, Menlo Park, California.
During Uri Geller's visits to the Stanford Research Institute,
he took part in certain experiments that do not appear in either
of the foregoing two papers by Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ.
What follows is the narration to a half-hour film, shot at the
SRI laboratories, that contains these additional tests. The research
presented here was conducted during Geller's first visit to SRI
- a five-week period in late 1972. The film was sponsored jointly
by the Mind Science Foundation, the Science Unlimited Research
Foundation, and EDMA, all of San Antonio, Texas. It was first
shown publicly on March 9, 1973, at a physics colloquium at Columbia
University. Because a film itself cannot offer Proof of genuine
paranormal abilities, Puthoff and Targ made the following remark
at the end of the narration: "What we've demonstrated here
are experiments that we performed in the laboratory and should
not be interpreted as proof of psychic functioning." Since
the film also depicts some experiments that have been reported
in the previous two papers, the text of the film has been edited,
with the consent of the SRI researchers, to avoid repetition.
The following narrative is published for the first time, with
the permission of the researchers.
THROUGHOUT mankind's history there has existed a belief that certain
gifted individuals have been capable of producing physical effects
by means of some agency generally described as psychic or psychoenergetic.
Substantiation of such claims by accepted scientific methodology
has been slow in coming, but recent laboratory experiments, especially
in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia, and more recently in our
own laboratory, have indicated that sufficient evidence does exist
to warrant serious scientific investigation. It would appear
that experiments could be conducted with scientific rigor to uncover
not just a catalogue of interesting events, but rather a pattern
of cause-effect relationships of the type that lend themselves
to analysis and hypothesis in the forms with which we are familiar
in the physical sciences. The SRI considers this to be a valid
area for scientific inquiry.
As scientists we consider it important to examine various models.
describing the operation of these effects so that we can determine
the relationship between extraordinary human functioning and the
physical and psychological laws we presently understand. It is
not the purpose of our work at the SRI to add to the literature
another demonstration of the statistical appearance of these phenomena
in the laboratory, but rather we seek to achieve an understanding
more compatible with contemporary science, and more useful to
mankind.
Here we describe partial results of a five-week investigation
conducted at the Stanford Research Institute with Uri Geller.
It was set as an absolute that experiments, to be worthy, had
to be under institute control and not Geller's.
We conducted a double-blind experiment in which someone not associated
with the project came into the experimental room, placed an object
into a can chosen at random from ten aluminum cans. The randomizer
then left the area, and the experimenters entered the room with
Geller - neither the experimenters nor Geller knowing which can
contained the object. In one case, the target was a3/4-inch steel
ball bearing. The ten cans had been arranged neatly, and Geller's
task was to determine which of the ten held the steel ball bearing.
He was not permitted to touch the cans or the table. The experimental
protocol called for the experimenter to remove the cans one at
a time in response to Geller's instructions. Eventually, there
were just two cans left, and Geller indicated by gesture and in
writing which one of the remaining cans contained the target.
He was correct. It was only at the end of the experiment that
Geller touched the can that he believed contained the object.
The protocol included the possibility that he might touch a can
accidentally. In such a case, that would count as a miss.
After repetition of this experiment several times, using different
objects, Geller was finally able to walk into the room, look at
the cans lined up on the table, and just pick up the one that
contained the target. We have no hypothesis at this point as
to whether this is a heightened sensitivity of some normal sense,
or whether it is some paranormal sense.
In another case, one can contained room-temperature water. Again,
the can had been filled by an outside person who randomized the
position of the cans in a box. Then the box was rotated by a
second person so that there was no one person in the room who
knew the location of the target can. Geller entered the room
and had no difficulty picking out the can that contained the water.
We repeated this type of experiment fourteen times; five times
involving a target, which was a small permanent magnet, five times
also involving a steel ball bearing as the target. Twice the
target was water. Two additional trials were made - one with
a paper wrapped ball bearing, and one with a sugar cube. The
latter two targets were not located. Geller felt that he did
not have adequate confidence as to where they were, and he declined
to guess, and passed. On each of the other twelve targets -the
ball bearing, the magnet, and the water - he did make a guess
as to the target location and was correct in every instance.
The whole array of this run had an apriori probability of one
part in 10^12, or odds of a trillion to one.
In another double-blind experiment a die was placed in a metal
file box (both box and die being provided by the SRI). The box
was shaken up with neither the experimenter nor Geller knowing
which face landed up. Out of ten trials, in which he passed twice
and guessed eight times, the eight guesses were correct. It gave
us a probability of about one in a million. We again point out
that there were no errors when Geller made guesses.
We also performed two experiments in psychokinesis. In one test
a one-gram weight was placed on an electric scale. It was covered
by an aluminum can and by a glass cylinder to eliminate deflection
due to air currents. The first part of our protocol involved
our tapping the bell jar; next tapping the table; then kicking
the table; and finally jumping on the floor, with a record made
of what these artifacts looked like so that they could be distinguished
from actual signals. Geller's task was to try to influence the
scale merely by holding his hands above the bell jar (never touching
it) and concentrating. He was able to do this. Once our recording
device showed an apparent weight decrease of 1500 mg, and another
time an increase of800 mg. These two readings had not been observed
as possible artifacts. In fact, in no case were our intentional
artifact readings similar to the signals produced by Geller, nor
could anyone else duplicate the effects Geller produced.
We have no ready hypothesis about how these signals might have
been produced. It is of interest to note that Geller's ability
to influence the scale improved over the period of experimentation,
starting with 50 mg deflections and arriving at 1500 mg.
In another experiment Geller attempted to influence a magnetometer,
either directly or by generating a magnetic field. The full-scale
sensitivity of the instrument was 0.3 gauss. Throughout the experiment
Geller's hand did not come into contact with the instrument.
The magnetometer itself was used as a probe to go over his hands
and person to make sure that there were no magnetic objects in
his hands or on him.
Geller had no apparent difficulty in influencing the magnetometer.
He caused fluctuations - almost full-scale in certain cases -
whose direction was uncorrelated with the motion of his hands.
He was very interested in the experiments we were doing because
he had never taken part in laboratory work of this kind before.
Another experiment was performed; in retrospect we consider it
unsatisfactory as it did not meet our protocol. In this case
Geller's task was to deflect a compass needle, which he did.
Before and after the experiment he was gone over with a magnetometer
probe, and his hands were photographed from above and below during
and following the experiment, so we were sure there were no obvious
pieces of metal or magnets in his possession. However, according
to our protocol, if we could in any way debunk the experiment
and produce the effects by any other means, then that experiment
was considered null and void even if there were no indications
that anything untoward happened. In this particular experiment,
we found later that the type of compass needle deflections we
observed could be produced by a small piece of metal, so small,
in fact, that it could not be detected by the magnetometer. Therefore,
even though we had no evidence that Geller might have employed
this means, we still considered the experiment inconclusive and
an unsatisfactory type of experiment altogether.
There are a number of unconfirmed physical effects that need
further investigation. One of Geller's main attributes that had
been reported to us was that he was able to bend metal from a
distance without touching it. In the laboratory we did not find
him able to do so. In a more relaxed protocol, he was permitted
to touch the metal, in which case the metal did indeed bend.
However, it becomes clear in watching this demonstration on film
that simple photo-interpretation is insufficient to determine
whether the metal is bent by normal or paranormal means.
In the laboratory, these spoon-bending experiments were continually
filmed and video-taped. It is evident that some time during the
photographic period a stainless steel spoon became bent. However,
unlike what we had heard about Geller, it was always necessary
for him in the experimental situation to have physical contact
with the spoon or, for that matter, any other object that he bends.
It is not clear whether the spoon was bent because he has extraordinarily
strong fingers and good control of micromanipulatory movements
or whether, in fact, the spoon "turns to plastic" in
his hands, as he claims.
A number of the spoons were bent by one means or another during
the course of our experiments. There is no doubt that the spoons
were bent. The only doubt remains as to the manner of their bending.
Similarly, we have rings that were bent by Mr. Geller: a copper
ring and a brass ring that were manufactured at the SRI and measured
to require 150 pounds of force to bend them. These rings were
in Geller's hand at the time they were bent.
The following brief recap is a reminder of those experiments
we feel were best controlled. They are the perception experiments,
including the double-blind-
hidden-object experiments, and the double-blind-die-in-the-box
experiment. The two psychokinetic experiments - the depression
or raising of a weight on an electric scale and the deflection
of the magnetometer - also do not seem to admit of any ready counterhypothesis.
What we've demonstrated here are the experiments that we performed
in the laboratory and should not be interpreted as of psychic
functioning.
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