The clairvoyant dog *)
A
personal reminiscense
It must have been in 1941 or thereabouts.
I was a pupil at the highschool in Veendam, a little provincial town near
Groningen in the North of the Netherlands. One of our teachers in mathematics
was a compact somewhat sturdy gentleman with an unruly head of hair and a 'five
o'clock shadow', accentuated by his slightly yellowish complexion. At least,
that's how I remember him. But as you can gather, it all happened a long time
ago.
This teacher was in the habit of straying
from his subject, and to pose riddles or to broach areas of general interest.
One of these occasions is indelibly printed on my mind: the case of the
clairvoyant dog. What it boiled down to was that during his study at the
University of Groningen he owned a little dog. And not one of your
run-of-the-mill dogs (if dogs can ever be that). This particular dog 'felt'
when his master had almost finished his studies for the day, making it time to
be taken for a walk. It was the moment to jump up, run to the door and wag its
tail. Something normal dogs do as well, by the way.
This ritual was repeated for several
weeks, thus confirming the clairvoyance of the dog: studies practically
(but not quite) finished, dog anticipates and stands prepared. Now, you don't
study mathematics without any benefit. It sharpens your critical faculties and
teaches you to approach problems in a systematical way. Covert observation of
the dog did not enlighten our student. The dear animal just slept untill the
'moment suprème'. At long last it dawned upon our student: he was in the habit
of lighting a cigaret as a reward for his endeavours. And he kept his cigarets
in a metal cigaret-case. And closing the lid of the case . . .
The rest you can guess.1)
And the moral of the story? It was never
explicitly stated. Here follows an attempt.
Student of mathematics
I won't keep you in the dark any longer. The
student's name was A.S.van Dam. And when he studied in Groningen, the
university boasted the presence of the then well-known professor of psychology,
Gerard Heymans. This coincidence was to have far-reaching consequences: (I
confine myself to the most important details):
"During the
summer of 1919 Heymans met mr A. van Dam, who studied mathematics and physics.
Van Dam surmised himself to be endowed with the gift of telepathy, and made
himself available for parapsychological research. Heymans gladly accepted this
offer, and from spring 1920 till the summer of 1922 an extensive series of
experiments was conducted. From preliminary investigations it became clear that
Van Dam possessed a special talent for the taking in of
motor-representations. [ ] This experiment became widely renowned." *)
(Italics not in original)
This renown may have faded somewhat since
then, but searching the internet still results in hits, hits that present the
Van Dam-experiments as proof for the existence of telepathy. I myself was
approached several times regarding this case. And the recent publications
commemorating Heymans, referred to in the notes, may have revived that interest
to a certain extent.
After all, the experiments were conducted
under the auspices of the shortly thereafter founded Studievereniging voor
Psychical Research (comparable to the Society for Psychical Research).
"The first
task of the society was to ascertain experimentally whether parapsychological
phenomena really exist. Subsequently an inquiry was to be made into the laws
that governed these phenomena. The occult was to become less occult through
research. What is the role of hypnosis? Is there a link between the keenness of
the senses and the emergence of telepathy? Are gifted telepathists endowed with
a characteristic temperament? Heymans insisted on exact, quantative research,
and he relied on the assistence of the members of the Society. The majority of
the members however showed greater affinity with spiritist sceances than with
statistics, resulting in the fact that Heymans' own investigation remained the
only respectable methodological experiment from that era."*)
A sketch of the experimental set-up will
suffice here. Van Dam was to be seated in front of a kind of chess-board,
containing 48 partitions. The board itself was hidden from Van Dam's view by a
curtain. The experimentator concentrated his thoughts on one of the partitions,
which had been determined by chance, and then endeavered to 'send' the position
to Van Dam. The latter was to reach under the curtain and point at the correct
partition. At first sight it appears that the necessary safe-guards were built
in to make other modes of communication unlikely not to say impossible. Which
is not the same as fool-proof. To that end it would have needed a James Randi,
the well-known medium-buster. What about Houdini?
The results were astounding. Under the
severest of control-conditions Van Dam scored 32 out of 80! Heymans concluded
that 'the existence of thought-transfer under circumstances that completely
(sic!) precludes other modes of communication has been proved beyond all
reasonable doubt by these experiments'. A very conservative conclusion, as
Heymans figured the chances of obtaining this result by guesswork as one to a
quintillion.
You can save yourself the trouble of
ascertaining how many zeros are involved. Draaisma reports that a certain
Schouten and Kelly 'translated' this into the these days more current notion of
significance. They not only confirmed the findings of Heymans, but while they
were about it also scotched the idea that Van Dam might have utilised a
systematic irregularity in the generation of a random series which determined
the square to be pointed at. As only one of the experimentators was responsible
for this irregularity, Schouten and Kelly apparently reckoned with the
possibility that Van Dam was endowed with sheer inhuman, be it 'normal' gifts,
compared to which the tour de force described in footnote 2 was childs play.
Understandably, Heymans was very disappointed
that Van Dam's gifts diminished in the course of time.
Some 'personal' memories
Isn't there a credibility gap between the
happenings in the early twenties, a few years before I was born, and my
experience with mr Van Dam in the early forties? Let me state here that I knew
Van Dam also outside the school-setting. That I even was to a certain extent
his confidant, if he had confidants at all. In addition I shall rely on the
experiences of my much older brother, who also had had Van Dam as a mathemetics
teacher. And in his case not only as a mathemetics teacher, but also as a
scout-leader in the scout-movement.
As regards the parapsychological experiments
I wish to point out a few aspects. Why the chess-board with 'targets' was
hidden from Van Dam's view is not clear to me. I suspect that the experimentors
pulled the wool over their own eyes. 2)
Were they sufficiently competent in the rest
of the arrangement of the experimental setting?
"The
experiment was conducted under two different conditions. Under the close-up
setting the experimentator stood at a distance of approximately one meter from
the testee, under the remote setting the experimentator resided in a
room above the room with the testee. In the floor between the two levels a
square hole was cut, closed with two sheets of glass. The report of the
experiment states that 'the penetration of sound through the sheets of glass
was muffled to such an extent that even when shouting one could not make
oneself understood in the other room'. Carington, a visiting researcher of
parapsychology who came to have a look at the experimental conditions says of
the floor that it was 'of a most uncompromising solidity' " *)
It is truely remarkable that the close-up
experiments showed less result than the remote experiments, for the
controls for unintended clueing in the close-up condition were sloppy to
say the least. For this anomaly (my word) I can offer no explanation. On the
contrary, on the basis of my understanding of the background to the puzzle-Van
Dam I would expect the opposite.
This is not to say that in my view the remote
experiments did not allow of (unintended) communication. Double glazing
does indeed act as excellent sound-proofing. But what about the floor?
Carington's words regarding this aspect , ('of a most uncompromising solidity')
carry a meaning that might be unintended by him. Such a floor is effective
against acoustic transmission of sound, but (due to its solidity!) not
effective against contact transmission of sound. In this connection I
wish to remind you of the application of so-called 'floating floors' in newer
housing estates, to counteract noisy neighbours living one floor up. Shuffling
of feet might well have been audible. (And the additional conclusion of
Schouten and Kelly just mentioned, that Van Dam had not made use of the
irregularity in the random series also raises a question: Van Dam could only
have done so if he had been kept acquainted in each instance of his hits and
misses. And wasn't communication from floor to floor impossible?)
Remains the question, whether this calls for
hyper-sensitive ears? This is the moment to call upon my brother:
"During a
summer-scoutcamp our scout leader gave a demonstration of his telepathic
powers. He let himself be blindfolded, then told us to hide an object, just
anywhere. We thought to be very inventive, and hid a book in a sea-bag in one
of the tents. Full expectation we then surrounded our scoutleader. After some
hesitation he started to walk in the right direction, closely followed by the
troup. Etcetera etcetera, until he triumphantly pulled the book from the
sea-bag.
After keeping us in uncertainty as regards the way he had fooled us
(clairvoyance was not an option for clear-headed scouts), he came with his
explanation: all he had done was to listen to our collective breathing and how
it changed if he appeared to be on the right track . . . "
Which still does not provide the decisive
answer the question whether Van Dam had extra acute hearing at his disposal.
Now this is the point at which some readers might conclude that Van Dam only pretended
to be guided by his ears, to camouflage his true gifts. Those readers need not
read any further.
Still there? It is my contention that most
people are not inclined to test the extremes of their human potentialities 3).
For many it may come as a surprise that we can hear our own blood-circulation.
This would constitute a handicap in our daily life, reason why we have a
built-in mechanism that normally raises the sensitiveness by a few decibels.
(At last something that literally resides between the ears).
Van Dam himself reported that he could enter
the (according to him) needed 'state of passivity' at will. And a relaxed state
of mind can go hand in hand with a heightened alertness for extraneous stimuli 4).
Temperament (?)
Which brings us to Van Dam's 'temperament'.
He was known as a very intense type of person, which now and then tended to
work on people's nerves. Not exactly a relaxed type as such. But also as
somebody who did not fight shy of exploring human capabilities. Let me give
some examples.
Van Dam was an officer in the Dutch army
reserves. En route to the summercamp mentioned above the scouts were trained in
quickly alighting from their bicycles and hiding in a ditch on the cry:
"Enemy planes attacking". Allright, so the scout movement was founded
by Baden Powell, himself an officer. . . .
What about this one: there exists a method of
mental arithmatic which makes use of the squares of numbers. Van Dam had
memorized them to at least 1002, but I seem to remember even to 1002.
So what! you may well remark, surely not umusual for a teacher of mathematics.
Do you know of one?
The best is however another of his free
discourses in the classroom. He was in the process of having a house built for
himself. During one of his frequent (and irritating) tours of inspection, he
came across a carpenter who, standing on a scaffolding, had to cut a beam that
extended to the left. But the carpenter was right-handed. So Van Dam took the
saw and cleared the job. But Van Dam was also right-handed. Only, he had tought
himself to handle a saw with the left hand as well. Just in case. And,
typically for Van Dam, was of the opinion that a carpenter worth his salt
should do the same.
Ergo: it does not appear too farfetched to me
to assume that Van Dam had on occasion 'experimented' in picking up minimal
clues.
Conclusion
Before coming to a kind of conclusion we
should take into account the course of affairs that led up to Van Dam being
singled out for the laboratory experiments, something that is usually missing
from the enthousiastic retelling of the story.
Van Dam had originally taken part in a game
to match the feats of a stage-'mentalist' who, blindfolded, recovered objects
that had been hidden on the stage by the public. This performer had most likely
made use of the involuntary movements most people make when concentrating on
the direction one should take to recover the hidden object, so-called
muscle-reading. Van Dam had no difficulty in replicating this feat, though to
me the reports sound here and there a bit too good to be true.
And now we can at last choose between various
possibilities as regards the phenomenon Van Dam:
a) Van Dam was aware of the modus operandi,
and took part in the later experiments as a student's prank. I should remark
here that Van Dam's brand of humor, which depended on putting the listener on
the wrong track, leaves some room for this possibility.
b) Van Dam was aware of the modus operandi,
but reasoned that it was covered by the terms of the experiment. Didn't it
specify an investigation into 'a special talent [ ] for taking in
motor-representations'? This could be taken as covering his performance. He
studied mathematics after all, not psychology.
For the experimentors this leeway is unacceptable however. The research
addressed modes of communication by methods other than through the senses known
to us. The use of the expression 'representations' leaves no doubt.
Let's not judge from the present perspective.
At the time it was a valid field for psychological research.
Refer for example to Parapsychology
>>>
c) Van Dam was unaware of the modus operandi
d) And as a gesture to those who are still
with me, though forewarned: Van Dam possessed paranormal gifts. They should
face the fact that more than 100 years of parapsychology has not resulted in a
theoretical model for telepathy that could stand the test, nor has it come up
with a practical case that could be replicated under controlled circumstances.
I maintain that I have made clear that the
controls in the case of Van Dam left something to be desired. This on top of
Van Dam's 'confession'.
Whatever the case may be, it seems plausible
to me that Van Dam at a certain moment decided that enough was enough. Either
he forefelt (yes, you read correctly!) that his chances of being unmasked
became too great, or he could not spare the time any longer.
Or he had become convinced that his gifts
were not in the field of telepathy. With some assistence of his little dog? Let
me add that it does not have to come as a surprise that he did not openly
confess to have cooperated in creating a myth. It would have made a laughing
stock of Heymans. And the case of Conan Doyle, the creator of supersleuth
Sherlock Holmes, makes clear that such a step is not lightly taken 5).
Not to mention that Van Dam himself would have appeared naive, stupid or
manipulative, if not all three.
No, then it is more elegant to simulate that
your 'gifts' are leaving you. But you later on give a covert warning to your
pupils (and to a bunch of boy-scouts). How sensory leakage can mislead yourself
and others.
For the accuracy of my story you'll have to
take my word.
And I may have been taken in. May-be Van Dam
never had a little dog.
Unless a dog called White Lie?
Notes
*) The data regarding Van Dam during his stay in
Groningen were derived from:
"De parapsychologie", the contribution of D.Draaisma to
D.Draaisma et al: Gerard Heymans. Objectiviteit in filosofie en psychologie. A
publication of Het Wereldvenster, Weesp (1983)
and from:
"De witte kraai van Heymans. De Groninger telepathie-experimenten",
the contribution of D.Draaisma to:
Douwe Draaisma (ed): Een laboratorium voor de ziel. Gerard Heymans en het begin
van de experimentele psychologie. A publication of the Historische
Uitgeverij/Universiteitsmuseum, Groningen (1992)
Both with permission of the author, for
which I hereby express my appreciation.
1) Van Dam's dog had many animal predecessors. Famous was Clever Hans, a
horse that in the early 20th century astounded the public with his
gift for performing simple arithmatical calculations. He tapped the correct
answer to sums by scraping the ground with a hoof. Until the psychologist
(sic!) Oskar Pfungst showed that Hans simply reacted to unwitting nods of
approval. A successor to Hans, the blind horse Berto, most likely used his
ears.
2) Was this precaution taken to avoid that Van Dam 'consciously' would
point to a target upon telepathically received instructions? For didn't Heymans
specifically direct his investigation towards 'a special talent for the
taking in [ ] motor-representations'? How this professor of psychology
imagined this feat to be accomplished without the intervention of the brain
escapes me.
Not that 'blind' pointing at at specific target
is beyond human capabilities. I refer to "The road to En-Dor" by
E.H.Jones, originally published in 1919, reissued as a Pan Book in 1955. A few
officers, prisoners of war of the Turks during World War I, fooled first their
fellow-officers, subsequently their captors and finally themselves by
performing on a Ouija-board. They could spell any message at will, though
blindfolded. Also when their skeptical colleagues rotated the board at random.
They simply re-oriented themselves by a few notches they had cut in the outer
edge.
A fascinating story with an almost fatal
ending. Recommended reading for those who are fooled by messages from the
beyond, spelled out by a sliding drinking-glass.
3) To wit: to stick a needle through your cheek, a feat performed by
'fakirs'. To convince his public that he is endowed with magical powers,
preferably brought forth by hypnosis?
Just try it. You'll hardly feel anything! Tip: disinfect that needle first.
And now that the subject has been mentioned,
do you believe that there exists a special faculty that enables somebody to
hypnotise others? In this case: experiments not recommended.
4) Refer for example to:
Robert E. Ornstein (1972) - The psychology of
consciousness. Penguin Books
For readers who are conversant with the Dutch
language:
P.Vroon (1976) - Bewustzijn, hersenen en gedrag. Baarn: Ambo
5) One summer Conan Doyle was visited by some nieces. To amuse them he
gave them a photo-camera. And amuse themselves the ladies did. They cut out
some pictures of fairies they found in a childrens book, placed them in a bush
in the garden and then took some pictures. When uncle saw the prints he came to
the conclusion that fairies actually existed, but apparently only manifested
themselves to innocent children. The innocent children never confessed to
uncle.
To the man who once wrote: "Having endured a severe course of training in
medical diagnosis, I felt that if the same austere methods of observation and
reasoning were applied to the problems of crime some more scientific system
could be constructed". (Taken from the Foreword to the 1929 edition of
"The complete Sherlock Holmes long stories").
He should have applied his lofty intentions
to his own back-garden.
A piquant note: Conan Doyle was an intimate
friend of the famous magician Houdini, who abhorred all things paranormal.