Academic literature on the topic 'Parapsychology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Parapsychology"

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SARMA, AMARDEO. "Parapsychology." Nature 322, no. 6079 (August 1986): 494. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/322494c0.

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BELOFF, JOHN. "Parapsychology." Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 184, no. 6 (June 1996): 389. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00005053-199606000-00018.

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Cardeña, Etzel, Monica J. Harris, and Robert Rosenthal. "Parapsychology." Journal of Anomalous Experience and Cognition 4, no. 1 (June 5, 2024): 18–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.31156/jaex.26222.

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Monica J. Harris and Robert Rosenthal were commissioned by the National Research Council to conduct meta-analyses and review five areas of potential human enhancement. Despite finding that ganzfeld psi research followed the most rigorous protocols they were pressured to withdraw their supportive evaluation of psi, but refused to do so. This is their original report, with only very minor formatting changes. Among other things, Harris and Rosenthal concluded that “it would be implausible to entertain the null given the combined p from these 28 studies… when the accuracy rate expected under the null is 1/4, we estimate the obtained accuracy rate to be about 1/3.” They were then asked to analyze the effect of potential design and procedure flaws and, after doing so, they concluded that: “Our analysis of the effects of flaws on study outcome lends no support to the hypothesis."
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Chang, Yi-Fang. "Nonlinear Whole Parapsychology and Its Mathematical-Physical Methods." Sumerianz Journal of Social Science, no. 73 (June 22, 2024): 31–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.47752/sjss.73.31.39.

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Based on the quantum theory, we first discuss some research of parapsychology, whose experiments indicate possible existence of new other worlds. Panpsychism shows also the existence of mind, psi, etc., except general matter-energy-information. Second, we propose the nonlinear whole parapsychology and its three basic rules. Third, we study some mathematical and physical methods, which include the thought field, quantum parapsychology, etc. Fourth, new spaces of parapsychology and the network model are researched. Fifth, we search a mathematical space with complex manifold—Kahler geometry, which may provide wide perspectives to lucubrate new worlds in parapsychology. Chinese parapsychology can combine rich traditional Chinese culture to display various unique phenomena, but parapsychology must be universal for the world.
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Friedman, Harris. "Parapsychology Studies." EXPLORE 6, no. 3 (May 2010): 129–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.explore.2010.03.003.

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Thomas, Donna. "Rethinking Methodologies in Parapsychology Research with Children." Journal of Anomalistics / Zeitschrift für Anomalistik 22, no. 2 (December 2022): 355–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.23793/zfa.2022.400.

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In contemporary parapsychology research, children are missing. The wealth of literature with adults highlights children‘s paranormal experiences as an under-researched topic. Through this article, I argue for children‘s inclusion in parapsychology research, but with a caveat – as active agents, rather than passive objects. I consider the convergences between missing children and absent women researchers in parapsychology and argue for a rethinking of traditional research methodologies in the field of parapsychology. Traditional methodologies rooted in a patriarchal system could explain the exclusion of children, and the othering of women researchers in the field. I include a discussion around my own research with children, which produces different kinds of meanings and data in the act of knowledge production around paranormal or unexplained experiences.
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Mayer, Gerhard, Cedar S. Leverett, and Nancy L. Zingrone. "Women and Parapsychology 2022 – An Online Survey." Journal of Anomalistics / Zeitschrift für Anomalistik 22, no. 2 (December 2022): 465–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.23793/zfa.2022.465.

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In 1991, the Parapsychology Foundation organized an international conference on the topic "Women and Parapsychology," held in Dublin, Ireland. The survey aimed for an assessment of the situation in parapsychology 30 years after this conference. Our team asked women active in the research field of parapsychology and related areas about their scientific careers, authoring articles, contributions to the field and gender-specific experiences. We distributed the link to the extensive online questionnaire on several e-mail lists and websites and also sent the link specifically to individuals. 30 women completed the questionnaire. We got a selective, non-representative sample, with a high average age and level of education. Due to these limitations, the survey did not provide complete clarity as to whether parapsychology differed from other disciplines with regard to the status and situation of women. Several aspects are comparable to the situation of women in other research fields. As is generally the case in academia, women tend to be paid less. They have to make greater efforts to be taken seriously by male colleagues, which can slow down their careers, in addition to career interruptions due to raising children, greater difficulties balancing work and family life, and the like. We found a relatively low proportion (10 women who reported sexual intimidation or harassment in the field of parapsychology. General funding problems in parapsychology are even greater for women because of the additional childrearing responsibilities and less institutionalized research. Some findings lead us to the thesis that it is not necessarily the gender aspect that is responsible for rude and inappropriate behavior on the part of male colleagues, but rather a tendentially greater openness on the part of female researchers for worldviews and heterodox research subjects outside of the scientific mainstream. This thesis must be validated in further studies.
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Hansel, C. E. M. "Parapsychology Re-Viewed." Contemporary Psychology: A Journal of Reviews 36, no. 3 (March 1991): 198–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/029504.

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Lamal, P. A. "Attending to Parapsychology." Teaching of Psychology 16, no. 1 (February 1989): 28–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15328023top1601_10.

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Fassbender, Pantaleon. "Parapsychology and the Neurosciences: A Computer-Based Content Analysis of Abstracts in the Database “Medline” from 1975 to 1995." Perceptual and Motor Skills 84, no. 2 (April 1997): 452–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pms.1997.84.2.452.

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A computer-based content analysis of 109 abstracts retrieved by the subject heading “parapsychology” from the database MEDLINE for the years 1975–1995 is presented. Data were analyzed by four categories referring to terms denoting (1) research methods, (2) neurosciences, (3) humanities/psychodynamics, and (4) parapsychology. Results indicated a growing interest in neuroscientific and neuropsychological explanations and theories.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Parapsychology"

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Storm, Lance. "A parapsychological investigation of the theory of psychopraxia : experimental and theoretical researches into an alternative theory explaining normal and paranormal phenomena." Title page, contents and abstract only, 2001. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phs885.pdf.

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Published articles by the author appended to thesis. Bibliography: p. 288-315. Describes a series of four experiments which were conducted to test the theory of psychopraxia. The thesis is an investigation of the theory from the perspective of paranormal phenomena only. It is argued that the theory of psychopraxia is important to the field of parapsychology because it offers (a) a philosophical critique on taken-for-granted assumptions about the nature of the paranormal, (b) relatively unambiguous terminology, and (c) a process-oriented approach to investigations of the paranormal by concentrating on conditions deemed necessary in bringing about paranormal effects. The thesis concludes that, in its current form, the psychopraxia model needs clarification of its most crucial concepts ("self", "pro-attitude" and "necessary conditions") before it can be regarded as a workable theory.
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Tranguch, Jeff. "From bigfoot in the backyard to ghosts in the attic predictors of paranormal belief /." Morgantown, W. Va. : [West Virginia University Libraries], 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10450/10978.

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Wolffram, Heather. "On the borders of science : psychical research and parapsychology in Germany, c.1870-1939 /." On the borders of science-- Read the abstract of the thesis, 2005. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe18732.pdf.

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Lewis, Chad M. "Investigating students' beliefs in the paranormal." Online version, 2002. http://www.uwstout.edu/lib/thesis/2002/2002lewisc.pdf.

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Coelho, Claudia Carvalho De Matos Teixeira. "Constructing parapsychology : a discourse analysis of the accounts of experimental parapsychologists." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/9997.

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This thesis is concerned with parapsychology as a field of experimental science. It is based on the discourse analysis of interviews with experimental parapsychologists, in which they provide accounts of their field, their own research practices and experimental outcomes. Drawing on literature from the fields of parapsychology and social studies of science, experimental parapsychologists are characterised as having an asymmetrical standing within science. Whilst they share with other experimental scientists (e.g. psychologists) many of their core assumptions and investigative methods, they differ significantly in how their phenomena, basic propositions and empirical expertise are actively disputed both outwith and within parapsychology. It is this asymmetrical standing, the disputed nature of the reality of their object and of the scientific justification of its existence that makes parapsychologists' accounts of their work particularly interesting to the exploration of discursive practices involved in the construction of what they do a doing science. Drawing both on literature relating to the "linguistic turn" in social studies of science, and on recent methodological developments in discourse analysis, this thesis puts forward that the analysis of parapsychologists' accounts provides a particularly rich insight into how scientific knowledge and practice are discursively accomplished. It thus focuses on how these parapsychologists produce meaningfully variable factual versions of what they do as 'doing science', and of their disputed object as a real phenomenon. The aims of the study were the following: a) to examine parapsychologists' own accounts of their field, research practices and experimental outcomes; b) to analyse how these accounts attend to normative versions of what 'counts' as science; and c) to analyse the discursive resources they use to achieve factual accounts of 'doing science'. The analysis of the data obtained from 20 interviews with experimental parapsychologists begins with the examination of how they constructed their field as a community, as a body of evidence, and as a field with a particular relationship to a standard view of science. The analysis was inspired by the thread of discourse analytic research which focuses on 'fact construction'. It shows how they orient to ideas of demarcation and constitute parapsychology as a field with characteristics that compromise the scientificity of their own knowledge and practice. It also shows how these parapsychologists attend to and manage the relationship between what they do and these compromising characteristics, by building them up as essential properties of the evidence for the phenomena (as essentially ambiguous), and even of psi itself (as essentially elusive). The construction of parapsychology as inherently problematic (i.e. a 'less than perfect' scientific field), allows these parapsychologists to constitute their research work as an almost heroic achievement. Regarding the participants' versions of their research practices, the analysis shows that they make these scientifically safe (e.g., by appealing to, and by presenting them as, in line with, ordinary versions of empirical research). The analysis further explores these parapsychologists' constructions of their practices as doing strict and extreme empiricism, with no assumptions, expectations, theoretical uderpinnings or objectives. Their appeal to the primacy of facts, the doing of methodology, neutrality and the dispensability of theory and models, constitute versions of scientific inquiry that are bearably in line with a version of science as 'doing strict empiricism'. The analysis argues that the variety and extremity of these formulations constitute the extent to which the empirical quality of their research is oriented to by them as something that is not taken for granted (and thus needs to be accounted for). Paradoxically, this same extremity rhetorically breaches normative accounts of doing science, through the intense problematization of theory or expectations of any sort. The final focus of the analysis is the exploration of these parapsychologists' constructions of the outcomes of their own research, specifically their categories of psi and of anomaly. The analysis shows that, though both of these concern the central object and claim of parapsychology, the participants present radically different categories of each, which are functionally meaningful in relation to their versions of doing science. Overall, the thesis argues that these parapsychologists constitute a paradoxical discursive position in relation to normative accounts of doing science. On the one hand, they actively appeal to the primacy of evidence and empiricism On the other hand, they construct a set of characteristics for their research object and evidence that compromise the rhetorical achievements of empiricism; also, the extremity of these accounts is such that this constructed empiricism is made into a remarkable rhetorically brittle account of scientific practice in parapsychology. Finally, the thesis discusses the implications of these arguments for parapsychology, namely, for the development of a reflexive and discursive thread of research within the field. It also examines the limitations of this approach and possible future research.
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Zingrone, Nancy L. "From text to self : the interplay of criticism and response in the history of parapsychology." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7722.

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The thesis examines the history of criticism and response in scientific parapsychology by bringing together the tools of history, rhetoric of science, and discursive psychology to examine texts generated in the heat of controversy. Previous analyses of the controversy at hand have been conducted by historians and sociologists of science, focusing on the professionalisation of the discipline, its philosophical and religious underpinnings, efforts of individual actors in the history of the community, and on the social forces which constrict and restrict both the internal substantive progress of the field and its external relations with the wider scientific community. The present study narrows the problem domain from the English-language literature ---- an extensive database of over 1500 books and articles ---- to the following: (1) a brief history of the development of the field in the U. K. and the U. S. that includes a survey of previous reviews of the controversy; (2) a specific controversy that extended over a 10-year period in the mid-twentieth century; and (3) a solicited debate on parapsychology with two target articles, 48 commentaries, and 3 responses published in Behavioral and Brain Sciences. The thesis is comprised of eight chapters. In Chapter 1, the goals and methods of the thesis are described, previous considerations of controversy and closure in science studies are reviewed, the notion of closure is discussed, and the thesis content is described. In Chapter 2, a brief history of the field is provided which emphasises the broad structure and content of the field rather than specific methodology, results, or theory. In Chapter 3, previous reviews of the controversy are examined to provide a sense of the controversy terrain and to examine the extent to which what Gilbert and Mulkay (1984) have called ‘‘contingent’’ and ‘‘empiricist’’ repertoires have been used in criticisms and response. In Chapter 4, case studies on parapsychology that appeared in the science studies literature are reviewed. Rhetoric of science is introduced as a domain from which analytic tools for the present research are drawn. In Chapter 5, a case study tests the hypothesis that differences in style and structure in the two volumes that bracket the most important controversy in the history of American experimental parapsychology may have contributed to the scope and persistence of the controversy. The controversy extended from 1934 to 1944, beginning with the publication of the monograph Extra-sensory Perception (Rhine, 1934) and ending with the publication of Extrasensory Perception After Sixty Years (Pratt, Rhine, Smith, Stuart & Greenwood, 1940). In Chapter 6, I justify a turn towards the methodology of discourse analysis by reviewing both the antecedents of modern discursive psychology, and methods that are currently in use. I also review Mulkay’s (1985) The Word and The World as a prelude to the case study in the next chapter. In Chapter 7, a subset of the methods available in discourse analysis, particularly the concepts of formulation, category entitlement and footing are used to analyse a target article, 48 commentaries and two responses to the commentaries that center on James Alcock’s contentions that parapsychology is the search for the soul and that dualism as a philosophical position is incommensurate with science. I show how Alcock’s use of the contingent repertoire in characterising science practise in parapsychology undermines his authority as a scientific interlocutor, and obscures, to some extent, the substantive message he intended his target article to carry. Chapter 8 concludes the thesis by restating the findings of the three methods used, examining the limited use of the methods in this thesis and outlining what a more extended study with the same and/or related materials would look like, while describing other potentially fruitful research that might be done. How these methods should and may contribute to science practise in parapsychology is also discussed with a particular emphasis on the multidisciplinary nature of the discipline and the need for a more complete reflexivity.
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Pérez, Navarro J. M. "Develping a 'recipe' for success in free-response Ganzfeld ESP experimental research." Thesis, Coventry University, 2003. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.289245.

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Nattress, Emma. "Psychic phenomena: meditation, perception actuality: an Australian study." Thesis, Nattress, Emma (2007) Psychic phenomena: meditation, perception actuality: an Australian study. Masters by Research thesis, Murdoch University, 2007. https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/222/.

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This thesis presents the findings of an investigation into contemporary psychic phenomena as reported by Australian students. It asks the question: 'do people experience psychic phenomena?' The study is an empirical one of reported psychic phenomena. It uses a questionnaire which involves the matching of perceptions of specific psychic phenomena, rather than an examination of psychic phenomena as such. The questionnaire is based on a medical diagnostic model. Its findings are benchmarked against a previous study and compared with other empirical studies. A comparison of the study's findings with those of more directly religious investigations undertaken overseas in countries with a longer monotheistic religious history than Australia: * provides insight into the Australian attitude, generally recognised as being secular, towards psychic and or spiritual experiences; * indicates that meditation is not necessarily a prerequisite for experience of psychic and or spiritual phenomena; and * argues that commonalities between specific experiences, reported not only within the Australian secular survey but also as reported in the predominantly religious overseas studies, demonstrate that the scientific requirement of repeatability has been met, thus providing ground to believe in the actuality of the reported experiences.
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Nattress, Emma. "Psychic phenomena : meditation, perception actuality : an Australian study /." Nattress, Emma (2007) Psychic phenomena: meditation, perception actuality: an Australian study. Masters by Research thesis, Murdoch University, 2007. http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/222/.

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This thesis presents the findings of an investigation into contemporary psychic phenomena as reported by Australian students. It asks the question: 'do people experience psychic phenomena?' The study is an empirical one of reported psychic phenomena. It uses a questionnaire which involves the matching of perceptions of specific psychic phenomena, rather than an examination of psychic phenomena as such. The questionnaire is based on a medical diagnostic model. Its findings are benchmarked against a previous study and compared with other empirical studies. A comparison of the study's findings with those of more directly religious investigations undertaken overseas in countries with a longer monotheistic religious history than Australia: * provides insight into the Australian attitude, generally recognised as being secular, towards psychic and or spiritual experiences; * indicates that meditation is not necessarily a prerequisite for experience of psychic and or spiritual phenomena; and * argues that commonalities between specific experiences, reported not only within the Australian secular survey but also as reported in the predominantly religious overseas studies, demonstrate that the scientific requirement of repeatability has been met, thus providing ground to believe in the actuality of the reported experiences.
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Gissurarson, Loftur Reimar. "Psychokinetic attempts on a random event based microcomputer test using imagery strategies." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/26540.

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Books on the topic "Parapsychology"

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Groome, David. Parapsychology. Second edition. | New York, NY : Routledge, 2017. |: Psychology Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315689678.

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Groome, David, and Ron Roberts. Parapsychology. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367.

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O, Thompson Henry, and Arthur S. Berger. Religion and parapsychology. Barrytown, N.Y: Unification Theological Seminary, 1988.

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Broughton, Richard. Parapsychology: Controversial science. London: Rider, 1992.

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L, Edge Hoyt, ed. Foundations of parapsychology. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1986.

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L, Edge Hoyt, ed. Foundations of parapsychology. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1987.

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B, Wolman Benjamin, ed. Handbook of parapsychology. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland, 1986.

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1980-, Partridge Kenneth, ed. The paranormal. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 2009.

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1980-, Partridge Kenneth, ed. The paranormal. New York: H. W. Wilson Co., 2009.

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Alcock, James E. Science and supernature: A critical appraisal of parapsychology. Buffalo, N.Y: Prometheus Books, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Parapsychology"

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Salbod, Stephen, John D. Hogan, Mohamed Elhammoumi, Carl Ratner, Adam Crabtree, Roger K. Thomas, David C. Devonis, et al. "Parapsychology." In Encyclopedia of the History of Psychological Theories, 754–65. New York, NY: Springer US, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0463-8_10.

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Kihlstrom, John. "Parapsychology." In Encyclopedia of psychology, Vol. 6., 43–46. Washington: American Psychological Association, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/10521-014.

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Gross, Richard. "Parapsychology." In Themes, Issues and Debates in Psychology, 245–63. 5th ed. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003357698-14.

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French, Christopher C. "Alien Contact and Abduction Claims." In Parapsychology, 51–68. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-5.

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Groome, David, and Ron Roberts. "Introduction." In Parapsychology, 1–6. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-1.

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Brotherton, Robert, Christopher C. French, and Daniel Jolley. "Conspiracy Theories." In Parapsychology, 173–93. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-12.

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Groome, David. "Astrology." In Parapsychology, 113–27. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-8.

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Watt, Caroline. "Extrasensory Perception." In Parapsychology, 7–18. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-2.

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Wiseman, Richard. "Psychic Fraud." In Parapsychology, 150–58. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-10.

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French, Christopher C. "Exorcism and Possession." In Parapsychology, 35–50. 3rd ed. London: Psychology Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003361367-4.

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Reports on the topic "Parapsychology"

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Palmer, John. An Evaluative Report on the Current Status of Parapsychology. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada169486.

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