- File Size: 13732 KB
- Print Length: 401 pages
- Publisher: Deepak Chopra; 1 edition (July 16, 2013)
- Publication Date: July 16, 2013
- Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
- Language: English
- ASIN: B00B3GMOIQ
- Text-to-Speech:
Enabled
- Word Wise: Enabled
- Lending: Not Enabled
-
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#275,309 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
- #152 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Religion & Spirituality > Occult > Parapsychology
- #187 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Religion & Spirituality > Occult > Alchemy
- #206 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Religion & Spirituality > Religious Studies & Reference > Science & Religion
| Digital List Price: | $13.01 |
| Print List Price: | $15.00 |
| Kindle Price: |
$10.45
Save $4.55 (30%) |
| includes VAT* |
Supernormal: Science, Yoga, and the Evidence for Extraordinary Psychic Abilities Kindle Edition
|
Price
|
New from | Used from |
|
Audio CD, Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
"Please retry"
|
$20.39 | $32.62 |
Kindle Feature Spotlight
Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
-
Apple
-
Android
-
Windows Phone
-
Android
|
Download to your computer
|
Kindle Cloud Reader
|
Customers who bought this item also bought
Sponsored products related to this item (What's this?)
-
Bioplasticity: Hypnosis Mind Body HealingJoseph SansoneGround breaking well researched book documenting hypnosis mind body healing. Includes basic self hypnosis instruction.Kindle Edition$8.49 -
Astrology Uncovered: A Guide To Horoscopes And Zodiac SignsJulia SteysonThis book will surprise and shock you! Discover in detail the secrets of your horoscope and how it connects with the stars.Kindle Edition$4.77 -
The Highly Sensitive: How to Stop Emotional Overload, Relieve Anxiety, and Eliminat...Judy DyerAre you highly sensitive? Do you notice things others don’t? You’ll love this spiritual novel because it has strategies you can try instantly!Pre-order NowKindle Edition$4.99 -
Is Your Dream Really Worth It?: Discover Your Passion, Purpose, and PlanTony Shavers IIIThis book takes you on a path of self-exploration to investigate what you're passionate about and helps you unlock your infinite potential.Kindle Edition$7.99 -
The Zodiac Signs: The Zodiac Signs In Great DetailsHanne KleinThe zodiac signs present a fascinating trip through the signs. Where you’ll discover your special mission and your compatible zodiac signs.Kindle Edition$2.99 -
The Art of Mysticism: Practical Guide to Mysticism & Spiritual MeditationsGabriyell SaromThe step-by-step practical guide to Mysticism & meditation.Revealing the astonishing & legitimate path of the secret mystic yogi.Just ReleasedKindle Edition$4.99 -
Reality Unveiled: The Hidden Keys of Existence That Will Transform Your Life (and t...Ziad MasriA book that takes you on a profound journey into the heart of existence, revealing a hidden reality that will transform your life forever.Kindle Edition$0.99
Sponsored Products are advertisements for products sold by merchants on Amazon.com. When you click on a Sponsored Product ad, you will be taken to an Amazon detail page where you can learn more about the product and purchase it.
To learn more about Amazon Sponsored Products, click here.
Product details
Would you like to tell us about a lower price?
|
Related Video Shorts (0)
Upload your video
Be the first video
Your name hereSponsored products related to this item (What's this?)
-
Bioplasticity: Hypnosis Mind Body HealingJoseph SansoneGround breaking well researched book documenting hypnosis mind body healing. Includes basic self hypnosis instruction.Kindle Edition$8.49 -
Ten Years Gone (Private Investigator Adam Lapid Historical Mystery, Thriller, and S...Jonathan DunskyA thrilling historical mystery with a shocking ending. You will love it! Get it now!Kindle Edition$3.99 -
The Art of Mysticism: Practical Guide to Mysticism & Spiritual MeditationsGabriyell SaromThe step-by-step practical guide to Mysticism & magical meditations.Revealing the astonishing & legitimate path of the secret magician.Just ReleasedKindle Edition$4.99 -
Tantra, Yoga of Ecstasy: The Sadhaka's Guide to Kundalini and the Left-Hand PathLeigh HurleyRitual, practice, meditation, philosophy and psychology for the serious student of Tantra.Kindle Edition$7.99 -
Namarupa: The Magic of Tantra Mantra (The Sadhaka's Guide)Phillip HurleyNamarupa is an initiation into mantra yoga, with detailed Sanskrit pronunciation, alphabet and calligraphy guides, and mantras for raising kundalini.Kindle Edition$7.99 -
Hygge Home: Keep Your Home Life Simple with Danish Living conceptsThomas NielsonDiscover the secret of what makes the Danish people so happy and how you can use it too.Just ReleasedKindle Edition$2.99 -
Humans are not from Earth: a scientific evaluation of the evidence (2nd Edition)Ellis SilverConcrete evidence, expert testimonies and mindblowing science that prove we evolved on another world. New, expanded edition. Kindle, KU & paperback.Kindle Edition$4.99
Sponsored Products are advertisements for products sold by merchants on Amazon.com. When you click on a Sponsored Product ad, you will be taken to an Amazon detail page where you can learn more about the product and purchase it.
To learn more about Amazon Sponsored Products, click here.
Customer reviews
Read reviews that mention
Top customer reviews
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The yogic emphasis doesn’t change the book much from the pop psych literature review of parapsychology studies it would otherwise be, except to necessitate background information on yoga and siddhis. However, this emphasis may or may not have opened up a huge additional readership. Outside of a fringe, siddhis aren’t much in vogue among yoga practitioners these days. Among modern day yogis and yoginis, there are some who believe in them and some who think they’re throwbacks to an era of superstition, malnutrition, and wishful thinking. However, even among the former, siddhis are generally considered a distraction. The advice of most of the great yogis has been to not get lost in the pursuit of such powers because chasing siddhis can derail one from one’s ultimate objective (e.g. liberation.) Still, if even a small fraction of yoga practitioners take an interest, that’s a fairly large readership.
So what exactly is the controversy? Obviously, there are many divergent demographics with differing views on the topic. For hardcore skeptics, parapsychology is right up there with alien abduction, bigfoot /yeti sightings, and the anatomy of the Loch Ness monster with respect to being a legitimate topic for scientific study. On the other hand, there are believers who are offended by the mere notion of studying such phenomena with science, and who say such investigations are an assault on their beliefs.
But that’s not a very interesting controversy—i.e. there are some people who won’t believe in such abilities no matter what the evidence, and others who will believe in them no matter what science has to say. So let’s chop off the hardcore skeptics and hardcore believers and ask what the controversy is as it pertains to those of us who consider evidence when drawing conclusions.
The root of the controversy can be stated rather quickly and clearly. Here it is: the effect size is small but statistically significant. What does that mean? Say this study asks a subject to determine which of five randomly selected shapes has been chosen using nothing but his / her mind. Using pure guessing, one would expect to be right 20% (i.e. 1/5th) of the time. If a person happened to get 32% right in a given trial, that means nothing because small samples don’t give one a convergence towards a mean value. (i.e. Intuitively, you know that if you flip a coin 10 times and get 7 heads, it doesn’t necessarily mean anything. If you repeat that 10-flip set 10,000 times, and still get 70% heads, then you probably have a trick coin or something else odd is going on.) So the issue is that even when experimenters repeat the experiment over and over again such that the average value should converge on 20%, it doesn’t. It stays at, say, 30% (exact effects vary but it’s on this order.)
At this point the reader might be thinking of all the factors that could result in this effect (i.e. cheating [insider or outsider], subconscious observation of facial expressions, random selection that is biased, etc.) Well, so have the scientists. In any study, one wants to account for alternative explanations to the utmost. Over the years, researchers like Radin have put all manner of protections in place from quantum random number generators to booths with extreme sound-proofing and Faraday cages (prevents radio signals from transiting.) Still they get this small positive effect that can’t be explained by alternative explanations.
There is also the issue of the filing drawer problem, which Radin devotes considerable space to discussing. It’s the idea that when drawing conclusions from many similar studies, one must accept that there may be many unpublished studies that sit in file drawers because they didn’t produced negative results. These filed / unpublished studies could negate the outcome of the body of studies of that nature. While this remains an open criticism, there is mathematics for determining how many negative studies would have to be turned up to make the results insignificant. Radin argues that the numbers calculated strain credulity.
So this “small but statistically significant effect” is generally agreed upon by all, excepting conspiracy theorists. Now we get to the controversy, which is how to explain this effect. Skeptics run the gamut from hot-blooded haters who claim that it’s all just a scam perpetrated by hoaxers with tenure, to more diplomatic challengers who provide thoughtful, plausible, and non-nefarious explanations for what they believe are false results. Said objections include file drawer problems, statistical “crud factor” (an observed effect in which large sample size studies can show a significant correlations between any two random variables—i.e. everything is correlated with everything else to some degree), and outlier effects.
The latter is a particularly revealing controversy. Say your study results in this 30% instead of 20% effect, and there’s one subject in the study who (over many trials) got the shape right 80% of the time. If you’re a skeptic, you call that an outlier and you want to cut it out of the study because it may be causing part, most, or all of the effect you see. Your assumption is that that this outlier could be anything from a data entry error to an outright cheater, but it’s obviously not a gifted psychic. If you’re a believer, not only do you want to keep that result, you want to find that person and study them to find out if the result was a one-time fluke, or if you have some rare, gifted person.
The book is arranged into three parts. The first part offers background on yoga and siddhis. The second part is the heart of the book and it presents an overview of results from studies of precognition, telepathy, psychokinesis (both of animate and inanimate objects), clairvoyance, and the effect of meditation on these abilities (which also shows a small positive effect, i.e. the general population outdoes probability by a little bit and experienced meditators outperform the general population by a little bit.) The last section is just a couple chapters about the future of parapsychology.
I found this book to be interesting and thought-provoking. Radin comes across as a reasonable investigator who is willing to accept that there is a lot of duplicity going on out in the world, but yet when one uses the methods of science one obtains results that would be generally accepted as successful across the social sciences. At times he does go on anti-skeptic rants. On the other hand, one can imagine his frustration in dealing with individuals unwilling to pin down how much higher the bar must be for parapsychology results over results in more mainstream topics. I think Radin’s greatest mistake was in discussing levitation. Besides at a quantum level, the effects of gravity are well-understood and non-negotiable. While our lack of understanding of consciousness leaves wiggle room to at least consider some unusual happenings, levitation seems a non-starter. Fortunately, as it hasn’t been studied, Radin just presents a couple historical anecdotes and moves on (while—to be fair--acknowledging the fundamental risk in relying on anecdotes.)
I’d recommend this book. I can’t say it swayed my belief on the topic, which tends skeptical, but it did inform my confusion. (It should be pointed out that not all these abilities are equally reviled by science. Precognition is the most fundamentally opposed because it seems to violate the fundamental cause and effect nature of the universe at our scale and larger [as opposed to the quantum level were all sorts of weird happenings transpire.]) I do agree with Radin that there shouldn’t be taboos in science in which scientists are afraid to study a subject of interest because the prevailing notion is that it probably doesn’t have merit. If there weren’t scientists with the cojones to study “crazy stuff” we’d no doubt be far behind our current understanding of the world.
Radin then gives us a tour de force survey of Patanjali's views on yoga and the manner in which contemplative practices have been known for several millennia to produce psi abilities in those who are disciplined enough to undergo them. I found this to be one of the most interesting aspects of the book - a top notch scientist actually bridging the realms of spiritual and scientific endeavor into a single whole. This competent bridging of science and spirituality is something I've been waiting all my life to see and my feeling while reading was one of hope: that this book might be among the first of an emerging new genre.
As the book progresses, we get to hear about Radin's newer psi experiments and the very exciting findings he has been getting in the last several years. There is much to digest here in regard to what these findings mean about being human and about our potential to develop and understand ourselves in exciting and meaningful new ways. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in non-dogmatic spirituality. Anyone who appreciates both the method of science and the aim of religion stands to gain a great deal from Radin's "Supernormal."
Most recent customer reviews
Set up an Amazon Giveaway
What other items do customers buy after viewing this item?
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Feedback
|










