Monday, June 19, 2017

Blog 24



Blog 24/ (Slides 10-12): PRE-CALL AS A LEARNED SKILL – Affords new union of psi to science, or psychology to space-time.
                                                                                        



     Three factors therefore suggest that pre-call learning should be feasible.  First is the general correlation between frequency and mentality, as observed from close observation of spontaneous psi anecdotes.  Second is the pre-call diagram which suggests that heightened interest in future occurrences should make them more accessible.
    And third is the future half of the Minkowski diagram, for space-time.  From which so many eminent physicists have concluded that future events are just waiting for us ‘to come across them’ as our lives proceed.  Though never with any further pragmatic investigation of this possibility !
    Given such, it can only be sensible to assemble more expertise from other more conventional learning feats before starting, since “learning to learn” may be taken as one definition of intelligence.
    Despite his well-known contention that ‘the common distinction between past, present future is just an illusion’, about the only pragmatic effort Einstein ever seems to have made in this direction, was around 1928.  This happened when he enquired of Swiss child psychologist J.Piaget whether our personal sense of time was innate (i.e. inborn) or learned.
   Whereupon - after numerous observations on the very young -  Piaget then concluded that the latter is more likely to be true.  So that our personal sense of time is probably “learned from our parents through enculturation and language.  …..One could almost say that the child begins as a little relativist, but then grows up as a Newtonian absolutist.”
    In similar vein one may note that Amazon tribes cut off from the modern world - as also the original inhabitants of Australia - often have no words to distinguish between past and future, and so lack our clear distinction between the two.  Whereas  the Indo-European language family – through which western science has progressed so rapidly - is especially rich  in tensed refinements, so enforcing commonly held (but often untested) notions about time.     
    In this context S. Freud once concluded that “ the processes (of the unconscious are timeless…..in fact bear no relation to time at all.”  While his onetime colleague C.J. Jung went even further: “there is in the subconscious something like an a priori knowledge, which lacks any causal basis.”
    All of which suggests that pre-call may reasonably be expected to be a highly censored faculty.  One can expect that it might best manifest whenever the conscious mental Censor is relaxed (as in sleep) or otherwise off-guard.  Another conclusion with which close observation of its spontaneous everyday occurrences also agrees.  


 
    In my own case direct pragmatic action along these lines then shows quite clearly that pre-call can indeed be learned.   For by simply deciding to develop a greater interest - while always wary of the internal Censor - a strong increase in spontaneous psi manifestations can be attained. 
    Though,  since these can be rather  upsetting to one’s sense of temporal equilibrium, it’s best to concentrate on strictly numerate exercises.  Which are one step removed from everyday activities.  
    My audience or readers are of course by no means expected to accept what I report here out of hand.   Instead they’re invited to “Try it and See!” (as Galileo first said) and reach their own conclusions thereby.  While I’ll now furnish sufficient detail in the next few paragraphs to enable such tests to be tried out.
    To learn numerate pre-call – say with the very simple exercise of ‘guessing’ (sic) playing-cards –  therefore firstly requires strong and continuous application of phenomenology.  A discipline founded by Edmund Husserl over 100 years ago, phenomenology can be defined as a heightened form of self-awareness  Or  ‘examination and description of internal states (of mind)’.
     To which one must add deliberate reproduction of the desired ‘low-noise’ mind-state which gives positive pre-call results.  And, even more importantly, deliberate suppression of those opposite or ‘high-noise’ mind-states - wherein mistakes are more likely to occur.
   As yet of course there exist no words which might communicate the essence of these opposed mind-states to the wholly inexperienced.  They can however be circumscribed with familiar adjectives conveying something of their quality. 
    So that ‘calm, cool, relaxed, happy, empty-minded’ are all useful descriptions of that desired ‘low-noise’ mind-state which gives positive pre-call results.  Whereas ‘worried, hurried, rushed, nervous, pressurised,’ apply to its ‘high-noise’ opposite.

    Given such – again say for the simplest pre-call exercise of learning to ‘guess’ ordinary playing-cards correctly – the pre-call procedure is mainly one of trial-and-error repeated on a sufficient and regular basis.  And, as I’ve mentioned earlier, more detailed instructions on how to do this are  available in my recent ebook Future, Memory and Time (2016 – Edn 2).
   Further the sensible improvement rate you might aim for – escalating from near- average results initially – would be about 1% per 1,000 trials or 5 hours effort.  This is a rate in line with other more conventional learning feats.
   Otherwise the main requirement for learned pre-call are interest, motivation and above all strong and continuous application of will-power.   For, as psychologists have lately begun to realise, will-power is quite a limited resource in our everyday routines. 
    So that you could hardly undertake deliberate pre-call throughout a full working day.  About 1 or at most 2 hours daily will be quite enough.
   Successful pre-call can then result in new harmony between psychology and physics, a new psycho-physical attitude more in conformity with those otherwise puzzling implications from the future of Minkowski space-time.

   I’ve recommended ‘guessing’ (sic) playing-cards here as the simplest pre-call exercise.   It should suffice for anyone wishing to validate (or falsify) my general conclusions on the psychology of space-time.   But once success is attained in this simplest mode, there are many others in which pre-call can be found to operate.  
    For these others the procedures are much the same as with the initial card pre-call exercise, while realising that one must largely ‘start all over again’ for each new learning feat. 
    Or, ‘learning to learn’ from more familiar routines once again, one can note that good competence on the piano will not immediately guarantee similar performance on the violin.  At best one could expect to be a little better than one who is totally inexperienced musically. 
    And so it is also when one starts out on new pre-call learning feats. 
    Though long experienced in some half-dozen varied pre-call routines,  I will only stress 2 here.   First is my conclusion that a quantum generator can be pre-called much as with croupier-thrown roulette, mechanical randomisers. and electronic RNGs.  This quantum conclusion replicates a finding reported by Helmut Schmidt from the Rhine Laboratory almost 50 years ago.
    If such can then be confirmed by others, it would falsify the Copenhagen Dictum underlying those various aspects of  ‘quantum weirdness’ so prevalent currently.    
     Second I’ll highlight an intriguing little pre-call exercise which I still carry out almost every day.   This has to do with moving vehicles,  And their drivers can all be described as ‘randomly numbered people’ – because of their vehicle’s licence-plate that’s designed for everyone to see. 
     So that to be able to pre-call what vehicle number you will  encounter – say at the next static traffic-light 2 minutes ahead in time and I miles further on in space – is by far the most convincing proof of  space-time’s reality.
    Unfortunately this mode no longer applies in modern Britain, because random-digit licence-plates were there abandoned years ago.   But in most countries elsewhere randomised licence plates still hold. 
     And again my readers and audience are invited to “Try and See!” at their own convenience, this being the easiest and most informative pre-call exercise of all.




 
   What all this affords is therefore a sixth example of ‘naïve impressions replaced by scientific knowledge’ – though only for pre-call adepts so far.  For naïve impressions hold that random future events could never possibly be predicted: pre-call conversely clarifies that at least many of them can.
   And the result is a new psycho-physical isomorph (= same shape) between psychology and physics – as the next diagram shows.  This was the objective when quantum pioneer W.Pauli allied with psychologist C.G.Jung for their nebulous notion of Synchronicity.
     It further resolves that problem noted by Paul Davies when he deplored the ‘glaring mismatch’ between subjective and objective time.   Likewise concluding ‘Einstein’s unfinished revolution’ to at least a first degree. 


 
   In this section I’ll report on a first collaborative attempt by me to partially pre-call UK Lotto, at the kind invitation of Dr. David Vernon, senior lecturer in psychology at Canterbury University.
   When considering this first ever Lotto attempt by myself, it’s important to remember M.Gell-Mann’s observation that first experiments are “often messy” and seldom perfect.
    As for example with two I’ve already mentioned:  Eddington’s first proof of Einstein’s General Relativity Theory (GRT - 1919)  and the Hafele-Keating ‘flying clocks’ experiment (1971).  To which one may add the first experimental flight of the Wright Brothers (1903) which lasted for 120 feet -  just slightly longer than one wing of a Jumbo jet nowadays. 
   In any case UK Lotto has two weekly draws (8.30pm every Wednesday and Saturday) – when 6 out of a total 59 numbered balls tumble out of a mechanical randomising device. (With the 7th bonus ball here ignored.)
    Our agreed procedure was that I should text just 3 pre-call selections (even though there are 6 possible outcomes)  to Dr. Vernon around 12.30 pm each Wednesday.  And then inspect the actual Lotto results after 8.30pm that same night.
  Saturday draws were not included, and texting  was replaced by Gmail after Day 12.
      This was therefore an experiment extending into future space-time by 600 kilometres and 8 hrs.   600 km was the spatial interval between my usual location in Galway and London where the draws take place.  While 8 hrs was the temporal interval between my pre-call decisions (around 12.30pm) and my observation of the later outcomes (after 8.30 pm when balls tumble out.)  
      We regarded this experiment as tightly fool-proof because the timed texts – of both sender and receiver – would always be available for inspection in the mobile-phone (and later Gmail) records.   While even the records of any superfluous texts – wherein I might have texted wrong choices which could be excised later by both parties – would likewise still remain.
    Results are shown in abbreviated form here.  With + denoting just one success out of 3 attempts for any particular day.   And ++ denotes 2 successes (again out of 3 possible) on Day 6 alone.
     Being very much ignorant of probability calculations at this level, I was at first reliant on two 2nd-yr psychology students whose estimates proved highly unreliable.   But – after the whole experiment was concluded by me at the end of  Day 18 - I was able to enlist the kind services of Dr. Michel Fitzgerald – former lecturer in statistics at GMIT, Galway.
    He defines a winning day as one wherein I scored either 1, or2, or 3 successes (+ scores) with p-value of 0.284.  And he calculates the total p-value after Day 15 as 0.002, or about 1 chance in 500 days more colloquially.   While the p-value after 18 days was 0.0125, or about 1 chance in 80 in popular terms.
    After Day 15 however it grew quite evident to me that I had definitely ‘lost form’.  This was for several strong background reasons I will not elaborate on  here.  “Loss of form” is of course a very familiar occurrence in certain athletic pursuits (golf among others) wherein mind control is paramount.  Think Tiger Woods in this context…..
    So that after Day 18 – and despite the fact that we had originally planned for 24 days – the latest incoming evidence made me conclude that it would be rather useless to go any further with this first Lotto attempt.  Frequential analysts may of course conclude that this ‘optional stopping’ obviated the entire experiment.  But such would ignore the subtleties of my psychological background which had changed markedly after Day 15.




     There are of course at least 6 obvious measures whereby this first attempt at Lotto pre-call could be much improved:
1/ The protocol could be strengthened: should the pre-caller aim for just 1 (out of 3) win-selections daily? Instead of trying for ‘as many as possible’ indiscriminately as I was attempting here. 
2/ Pre-call selections should be done around 7.30pm daily – so giving a lesser 1-hr extension into future space-time.  Instead of that much longer  8-hr interval involved in this attempt.
3/  There should be twice-weekly attempts – i.e. on both Wednesday and Saturday.  Instead of just Wednesday as our protocol involved.
4/ As opposed to too-rigid frequential analysis, Bayesian analysis must seem preferable.   This would better allow for p-calculation after every single result, and also for obvious “loss of form”.
5/ Google time-stamping – as used for financial documents - should be preferable to ordinary G-mail from a fraud-proofing viewpoint?
6/ There should be 6 pre-call adepts – instead of one solitary individual,  which was just me here.  With each concentrating to pre-call just 1 correct result out of 3 selections.  Plus also a (7th) director to iron out any inconsistencies and attend to business otherwise.    
   Given such a program, It then seems reasonable to project that the full 6 Lotto winning numbers might be pre-called perhaps once a year.  For that mixer-machine which spews out the winning numbers is just another mechanical randomiser.  And there’s abundant evidence from other randomisers that pre-call can be made to operate with them.
   Finally I intend to publish the results of this Lotto experiment in full detail in a later Blog.  So inviting comment from all quarters – and hopefully Bayesian analysis from those competent in this sphere…



    Nevertheless, and despite its great simplicity and ready functionality, there are obviously still various problems and possibilities associated with the pre-call concept overall.  Among these are:-
   1/  Just what is the basis for pre-call functionality? 
         But since the functionality of more familiar re-call is still a mystery to current science, it must seem premature to question its less frequent counterpart at this early stage.
2/  Does pre-call require a new, temporally enlarged, paradigm for consciousness?
          Quite possibly, since currently there’s large uncertainty on what a viable paradigm on the function of consciousness might involve.    
3/   Does pre-call violate the principle of causality?
           Initially it does looks so.  But to apply the physical doctrine of causality, to the less corporeal region of mental function, may constitute what philosophers term a category mistake. 
               While further realising that causality stems from observations incorporating that Prime Assumption of wholly asymmetric memory.
4/   Does it threaten the common impression of  an open future mostly susceptible to free will, and induce an undue degree of fatalism instead?
           ‘Free will’ is a term inherited from the ancients, and probably requires to be replaced.   Likewise for this common notion of ‘the future’ which might require new differentiation and neologisms.  For example ‘the physical future’, ‘the personal future’, ‘the common future, ‘the plastic future’ and so on.
     Such current deficiencies are part of a greater problem, in that overall time language is still largely untested, pre-scientific and confused.  Much as mediaeval alchemy had no well-defined term/concepts for elements, compounds, atoms, molecules, etc.
     As for fatalism, well-balanced pre-call adepts would hardly let that possibility worry them unduly: the mentality is difficult enough to elicit for just numerate endeavours right now.
5/ Could 100% reliability – e.g. for card pre-call – ever be attained?
    While 90+% competence is certainly imaginable, the learning process is definitely exponential, so making full pre-call reliability more questionable.  Or can even a champion dart-player attain full perfection at all times?
6/   Is there likely to be an objective physical indicator (for example EEG waves) whenever the desired pre-call mentality has been attained?
      Probably…
7/   If one had 3 adepts – each with .75 competence in binary (red-or-black?) pre-call – would there be greater reliability on those occasions when all happened to agree?
     In theory yes:  in practice still unclear….
8/ What is the maximum time horizon into future space-time for pre-call to operate?
       Very definitely at least 4 months in my experience.  And probably much longer as the traditional literature suggests.





       More positively in this final section, we can consider various new possibilities apparent under the pre-call paradigm…
1/  It should radically elevate the status of psi research from its current low position of general derision.  To the much higher status of providing pragmatic answers to some large problems on the modern physics scene.
2/   Pre-call makes psi more fully science-coherent – as opposed to the science-confliction implied by the older ‘transmission’ ideas.
3/ It affords a final proof of Minkowski space-time.  By confirming that all those implications of a ‘laid-out’ future are, at least to some extent, true.
4/  If quantum RNGs can be pre-called as initial experiments suggest, it would falsify the Copenhagen dictum.  And likewise much of that ‘quantum weirdness’ now prevalent on the scientific scene.
5/ And in so doing restore Relativity Theory as the overall prime arbitrer of time.
6/ Since “computers can’t pre-call” – at least insofar as we currently understand them - this provides a new Turing Test.  With a very clear difference between mind and machine, and so important in A.I. fields.
7/  Does familiarity with pre-call enhance one’s general creativity?
      Certainly.
     But also enhance intelligence?
     Not so certain, or maybe at best occasionally.
8/ Through definition and falsification of The Prime Assumption (i.e. that memory is limited to the past alone) pre-call provides more firm foundations for progress in the overall philosophy of time
9/  It may even suggest that there’s a whole new continent of time-future which now awaits pragmatic exploration.  And of which my investigations as reported here, have probably revealed just a general outline so far.
10/ If so, we might soon see a whole New Science of Time get under way – a development for too long absent from the overall science scene…..












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