PDA

View Full Version : Schwartz commends UofA for honoring academic freedom;Grammer produces medium's story



Pam
02-23-2004, 07:04 AM
http://wildcat.arizona.edu/papers/97/102/01_3.html

Prof sees light at end of death's tunnel

(picture of Gary Schwartz) Gary Schwartz, a UA professor and director of the Center for Frontier Medicine in Biofield Science, holds a cap used to measure brain waves. Schwartz is conducting a study on the effects the human heart of one person has on another person.


By Sarah Stanton
Arizona Daily Wildcat
Monday, February 23, 2004

The existence of an afterlife is a mystery that has plagued religion, philosophy and psychology since their conception - until now.

For seven years, Gary Schwartz, a UA professor and director of the Center for Frontier Medicine in Biofield Science, has been conducting afterlife experiments and research that he believes prove the survival of human consciousness after death.

"When you look at the totality of the data, the simplest and most parsimonious explanation that accounts for the largest amount of data is the survival of consciousness hypothesis," he said.

The experiments are performed in a lab with a medium, a sitter and Schwartz. A medium is someone who believes that he or she can communicate with the dead, and a sitter is a person who wishes to gain knowledge about a deceased loved one.

The medium receives messages from the dead and then relays them to the sitter, who tells Schwartz if the information is correct or incorrect. These messages can include the deceased's cause of death, memories that include the deceased and the sitter and "signs" for the sitter that indicate the deceased is around him or her.

After the experiment, Schwartz analyzes the data and determines the accuracy of the medium's reading.

In this process, he rules out information that the medium got about the deceased before the experiment or that the medium got with clues from the sitter. Schwartz also rules out any information that may have involved cheating or fraud.

"Our motto is, 'If it is real, it will be revealed, and if it is fake, we will find the mistake,'" he said.

Schwartz has tested many mediums in his research, including John Edward, host of the TV show "Crossing Over," in which Edward contacts deceased relatives of audience members.

"To my great surprise, what he does in the lab under controlled conditions is what he does on TV," Schwartz said.

One of the most accurate mediums Schwartz has worked with is Allison DuBois, an ASU graduate and mother of three whom Schwartz calls a "Michael Jordan of the mediumship world."

DuBois' accuracy is between 70 percent and 90 percent.

"I have successfully read for major celebrities, scientists, skeptics, TV producers and even a documented university test with Deepak Chopra," DuBois states on her Web site.

DuBois has become so famous that Kelsey Grammer of "Frasier" has bought the rights to her life story, which he plans to make into an NBC show. A pilot is currently being filmed, with Patricia Arquette playing DuBois. Schwartz will also be a character on the show.

At the UA, Schwartz is also performing experiments to determine the nature of the afterlife. In this research, the medium asks the deceased a series of 30 questions, including, "Where are you? What do you see? Do you sleep? Do you have sex?"

Schwartz says the data from these experiments are "extremely interesting," but more data needs to be collected before any conclusions can be drawn.

He acknowledges that it can be difficult for people to believe that consciousness survives death, and that mediums can communicate with the dead.

"I have something called 'PESD,' or Post-Education Stress Disorder. I was taught throughout school that this stuff is impossible, and I think a lot of other people were too. But how much data do you have to see before you accept a new vision?" Schwartz said. "The psychology department is to be commended for honoring academic freedom and for allowing science to function as it's meant to function, which is allowing the data to speak for itself."

Some UA students are skeptical of these afterlife experiments.

Sean Harris, a journalism junior, said, "I think it's a waste of the UA's money. For funding, they should turn to the suckers who believe in this crap. I've seen that show 'Crossing Over,' and it's such a joke."

But Schwartz said his research is controlled and scientific.

"We're a real research laboratory," he said. "It's a gift and a privilege to be able to do this kind of work."

Tonight, Schwartz will emcee a lecture on extraterrestrial life - another controversial topic in science.

The free lecture and screening, titled "Evidence for Extraterrestrial Life?" will be held in University Medical Center's Duval Auditorium, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., at 7:30 tonight.

It will include two documentaries: "The Phoenix Lights," by Dr. Lynne Kitei of the Arizona Heart Institute, and "Touched," featuring Dr. John Mack, professor of psychiatry at Harvard. Kitei and Mack will introduce their films, answer questions and sign books. The event is free and open to the public.

Irishrose
02-23-2004, 09:23 PM
You gotta just love Gary Schwartz. He continues to work as hard as possible to make sure that our abilities are not childs play. That, in fact, we do survive the death of the physical body.

The only thing left now is to decide when each one of us on this planet earth accepts that fact as an every day conversation.

Aren't you glad we have such hard working souls? I am.

Thanks for the article Pam. It is very uplifting.

Irishrose

teresa02
02-24-2004, 05:36 AM
Refreshing change, eh?

Teresa

Pam
02-24-2004, 08:06 AM
DuBois has become so famous that Kelsey Grammer of "Frasier" has bought the rights to her life story, which he plans to make into an NBC show. A pilot is currently being filmed, with Patricia Arquette playing DuBois. Schwartz will also be a character on the show.
I'll be looking forward to this show. I have to imagine that Grammer is a "favorite child" over at NBC right now, with such success under his belt. I can't imagine he would support this if he thought it might flop. Arquette is a well known name also, and might be a draw.

Could this show pave the way for more "Psychic TV" over at NBC? :)


Kudos to Mr. Grammer for being willing to put a show like this on the air bringing the Other Side more mainstream!!!!

AngelsMailroom
02-24-2004, 08:10 AM
Could we consider sending pink roses to Mr. Grammer with a note? Do you think its too much to ask? :handofgod

:angel2:

qtncrazy
02-24-2004, 03:54 PM
Originally posted by AngelsMailroom
Could we consider sending pink roses to Mr. Grammer with a note? Do you think its too much to ask? :handofgod

:angel2:

I thought it and you posted it Adrienne!

Might it be possible to get Mr. Grammer to be part of our efforts...hmmm..imagine the possibilities!:devil:

Pam
02-24-2004, 04:41 PM
For very specific reasons, this must be a "fan based grass roots" effort, and no celebs must be involved. This has to be a "voice of the people" kind of thing, at least at this stage of the game. Our efforts actually mean more to those who make the decision, coming from us and not from people in perceived places of power.

Did I make sense? :) LOL if not, I'm not surprised....

AngelsMailroom
02-24-2004, 05:06 PM
But - But - But - ......

Aren't we doing a disservice to Mr. Grammer and any other celebrities if they already ARE a fan?

After all, don't celebrities use their noteriety all the time, such as in politics, or to get a good table at a restaurant , a ticket to a ball game, etc.??? Whats the difference between sending the roses to the ladies, all of whom could be considered celebrities and Kelsey?

I mean, gee whiz, - ???:shrug: :shrug: :shrug:

Pam
02-24-2004, 08:47 PM
Ad, hon, dear, yes you are right - but -all things are not equal. All things don't weigh the same on the scale. If you read my post above, about effectiveness, we must keep the goal of effectiveness in mind, not simply shouting out and getting attention. We want to send the right message once we get that attention.

The roses were sent to Ladies of the MEDIA, not because they are CELEBS. They are a "middleman" in this process. We wanted their attention and service - not their endorsement.

If we start including all kinds of celebs ~ at this point ~ the media execs won't think that people who buy sponsor products and make up viewer ratings are the real people who want JE on. They'll think it's just a publicity thing by other celebs using their celeb status to rub shoulders with JE, or worse, get media attentino for themselves.

Our goal is to show execs that people like you and I care enough, and are passionate enough, to group together and make OUR voice heard on our own. WE are the "customer" in this scenario. Grammer is on the same side of the table as the people we are pleading to. Sometimes we have to break it down purely to a business thing.

There may a point in the future, after we have established our own voice in the media, that other celebs may add their voices to ours, without our asking them, and that's fine.

But we have to show our own strength first.

Am I making sense yet?

AngelsMailroom
11-25-2004, 09:50 AM
:love: Dear Pam...

I just reread this post, & YES, dammit - you do make sense. I HATE it when that happens!! :lwink:




:angel2:

JoDi
12-25-2004, 09:07 PM
I first saw a commercial for this in the movies a few months ago. I have been seeing them in TV lately!! I'm psyched !! LOL