Stuff You Should Know - SYSK Selects: How Ghosts Work
Episode Date: October 31, 2020According to a 2009 poll, more Americans believe in ghosts than don't. But what are ghosts exactly? If they do exist, what are they made of and why are they hanging around? In this classic episode air...ing for Halloween, Josh and Chuck explore both sides of the divide between belief and skepticism on the topic of ghosts and look at some pretty cool explanations for hauntings. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hey everybody, it's your old pal Josh Ghoulish Clark.
And for this week's special Halloween edition
of S-Y-S-K Selects, I've chosen our classic episode,
How Ghosts Work, which it turns out,
we recorded in July, weirdly enough.
But it seems appropriate to release this Saturday,
so I hope you enjoy it.
And boo.
Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
["How Stuff Works"]
Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and this is Step You Should Know.
Jerry's over there fiddling and futzing around.
It's Halloween and June.
Right, remember when we had the horror fiction contest
last year?
Actually, this may be July.
Yeah, yeah.
I think the deadline for submissions was in July.
It was weird to be in that kind of Halloween mindset
while it was hot out.
Yeah, and I'm sure it was weird to ask the authors,
or not to ask, but to have them get in that mindset
to write something creepy.
We definitely didn't command.
You talked me out of that.
Yeah, those are good contests.
Also known as the contest that shall never happen again.
Well, we also ended up with the one
that we're gonna read this year, right?
You think?
Yeah, yeah.
It's a good one.
It is a good one.
You guys will have to see in a few months
what we're talking about.
That's right.
So Chuck, I myself have never officially seen a ghost,
but I understand you have a ghost story.
I do.
I remarked about it, and I said,
no, I'm gonna wait till we do our ghost podcast.
Well, here we are, pal.
Is this it?
Should I go now?
Yeah.
Okay, I'm not saying this was a ghost.
What I'm saying is one night,
I saw something very, very, very strange
that I cannot explain.
Okay?
Okay.
You ready?
Yeah.
I feel like a sheet of music or something.
Jerry?
That could probably be done.
Okay.
So, Athens, Georgia College, I would say,
I don't remember the exact year,
but it was probably 1994-ish.
Okay.
My best friend and I, Brett, had gone out
and we're going back home and driving through Five Points,
you know, the area.
Yes.
So, we're coming from, like, let's say,
the direction of campus, and you know,
there's a cut through if you take a certain road
and Five Points that cuts you over to Alps Road.
Okay.
And people are gonna be like,
what is he talking about?
I know what you're talking about.
Just, I'm talking to you here.
And so, there's this one area where you go around
the road curves 90 degrees, and then about,
I'd say 200 feet after that,
there's a four-way stop sign.
It's a very neighborhood-y area.
I think that's where Ray Goff used to live.
Vince Dooley lives over there.
Okay.
That might be what you're thinking.
So, we go around this 90-degree curve,
and I'm looking, you know,
I'm feeling with the radio or something,
and my buddy, Brett, starts, like,
kind of joke screaming, like,
oh, what is that?
But, kidding around.
And I look up, and in the middle of the intersection,
and I swear people, I'm not making this up.
And I did not hallucinate it.
This is God's honest truth.
There was a, what looked like a 100-year-old woman
wearing a black robe with a purple sash
diagonal across her chest.
And she was standing in the middle of the intersection,
holding a Bible like this,
kind of placed on her fingertips
as you would hold like a waiter would hold a platter.
Okay.
About chest level,
and she was sort of looking in the other direction.
With kind of a vacant look on her face?
Like, you have now, or is it just?
She was completely vacant, completely still,
didn't move an inch,
and wasn't like a hazy apparition.
I mean, was solid and looked real, real, real.
Oh, man.
Dude, it was so freaky.
We pull right up on her to, you know, take that left,
and we're both kind of joke screaming,
but then as we get closer, we're like,
you know, what's going on here?
But it all happened in, like, 15 seconds.
So it wasn't a lot of time to register, you know,
what is this?
We were just sort of kidding around.
And we pull right by her and take a left.
Like, you know, if this is her,
we pull within feet of her.
And she's on my side at this point,
because we're turning right by her.
She doesn't blink, doesn't move a muscle.
And we were going probably 15, 20 miles an hour
in this curve.
He starts like, he can't drive a stick shift anymore,
because he's freaking out.
The car's like jerking and sputtering.
He pulls over probably 50 feet later.
We both turn around, out the back window,
and there's nothing there.
Wow.
I'm getting, look, chill bumps.
I know, I can see them.
And to this day, I have no idea what the heck it was.
And it was either a crazy, crazy old woman.
Who is really fast.
Which is really creepy and really fast,
or the most believable Madame Tussaud's
waxed dummy I've ever seen.
It was also really fast.
That someone ran and sat out there,
and we didn't see it, and then ran and took it away.
I'm not offering any explanation,
not saying it was a ghost,
but I have no explanation for what it could have been.
And it was the creepiest, weirdest thing I've ever seen.
And we both described it to each other immediately,
like, what did you see?
What did you see?
It had gold leafing.
I mean, I can't say it was a Bible,
because I didn't see the cover,
but it had that gold leafing around.
It looked like a Bible.
So you both saw the same thing.
You after discussing it.
The exact same thing.
Purple sash, black robe, silver hair.
That is one of the pernicious qualities of a ghost sighting,
is that frequently people will see the same thing.
Two different people will see the same thing,
which lends a tremendous amount of credence to something,
because if one person just sees it,
well, it's a hallucination.
Exactly.
You were clearly on something.
We were not.
But that's what somebody could say.
Sure.
Both of you saw it.
Even if you both were on something,
that doesn't mean you're gonna see the exact same thing.
Yeah, and I wasn't like some big ghost guy.
I'd never had looked for them or say,
oh, I believe in ghosts.
It would just, out of nowhere, boom, there it happened.
Right, exactly.
You can also go a little further.
If you're a skeptic and say, well, I mean, Chuck and Brett,
just kind of were playing off on another's description,
and they came to some unconsciously,
came to an agreement of this.
You guys compiled the story, and you saw the same thing.
Yeah, impossible.
Who knows?
However you approach that probably depends
on whether you're part of the 45% or the 48% of Americans
who don't believe in ghosts or who do believe in ghosts,
according to a 2009 CBS News poll.
I had never given it much thought,
but after that, I was definitely like,
well, if that was a ghost, then I just saw one.
Yeah, and I researched a little bit,
but this was long ago before the internet was born.
And so I couldn't find anything.
I even looked yesterday just to see if I could find out
anything if there was some sightings or some old lady
that had been killed there or anything.
Nothing?
No, I couldn't find anything.
So that was just your own personal ghost?
Maybe, or just some creepy old woman
who was still and not blinking as a car barrel towards her.
Right.
Either way, that is very unsettling.
Either way.
And that's a pretty good ghost story, too.
It was a good one.
It was not a mask.
I can say that for sure.
We pulled up within feet of her.
Like I looked in her face.
And she didn't move a muscle?
Didn't move a muscle.
Man, that's scary.
It was the scariest thing that's ever happened to me.
And we've told that story many, many times over the years
and everyone's always like, really?
And I always say, I swear, why would I make this up?
Yeah.
So that's my ghost story.
That's a good ghost story.
You can reach us on Facebook and, is that it?
Yeah, it's time for message break.
All right, so.
Wait, Jerry, it's not really time for message break.
Boy, she left pretty quick.
So we're talking ghosts.
And like I said, 48% of Americans believe in ghosts.
45% don't.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of people, especially after reading this,
there's the whole, you know,
I really miss my deceased relative and I go to seances.
And I think those things, the mind can play tricks on you.
But in my case, it was just like,
those are the ones where I'm like,
what's going on here?
Right.
You know?
It's pretty much impossible to disprove something
or to prove something doesn't exist.
Right.
Which is one reason why belief in ghosts continues on.
Yeah.
But there's also a lot of factors in ghosts
that accumulated, create this body of, you know,
ghost belief, what are ghosts, ghostly sightings,
hauntings, apparitions, all that stuff.
Sure.
And kind of over time have taken on a life of their own
or I should say, have been around for thousands
and thousands of years and have not been dispelled
by science.
Right.
So we're going to kind of approach this from like,
you know, here's what people believe ghosts are
and here's some scientific explanations for it.
But throughout this, you'll notice that at no point
are we ever going to say conclusively,
science is proving that ghosts don't exist
because it kind of can't.
Right.
That's not to say that people aren't using
the scientific method to study ghosts.
Sure.
Because some are.
And my head is off to these people, most of all.
Yeah.
So let's hug ghosts, man.
All right.
Well, I just described my encounter,
which like I said, wasn't hazy or weird.
Well, it was weird.
It wasn't like a hazy apparition.
Right.
But many times is an apparition.
Sometimes it's lights.
It seems to hit every scent.
Sometimes it's a smell.
Yeah.
Like Tracy pointed out in this article,
like the smell of deceased relative's favorite meal
being cooked in the other room.
Right.
Stuff like that.
Or the smell of the deceased relative.
Just smelled something like rotting.
But it was just a squirrel in the wall.
Right, exactly.
Can be a song, can be flickering lights,
can be orbs in a picture.
We'll talk about that.
Or a ghost in a picture, like.
There's plenty of those.
Hey, you got to Google.
It's pretty fun to look at those.
Yeah, and there's some that are like,
this one's not quite explained to my full satisfaction.
Yeah, some of the,
if you look up famous ghost pictures,
there's a handful that have made the rounds
over the years that are pretty good.
Like the lady of Brown Hall, I believe.
Is that the girl with the fire?
No, that's a good one too.
That's a real good one.
There's a woman descending a staircase,
like a ghostly, vicious woman.
Oh yeah, yeah, very famous.
Freddie Jackson, the World War II,
World War I pilot who was killed or mechanic, I'm sorry.
He was killed and then he showed up
in a group photo two days later.
That one was explained as a double exposure,
which I mean, just the coincidence behind it
is in and of itself staggering
if that is the explanation for it.
Of course, it also could be a hoax,
but it's a pretty good one.
Freddie Jackson is my favorite one.
I think my favorite is the Old West.
Did you see that one?
It's like Boothill or something.
It was in 1996, I think,
and this guy dressed up like a cowboy
and had his picture made with his friend.
And then in the background, you see this guy.
Oh yeah, I did see him.
Like kind of peeking up, maybe behind a tombstone.
Yeah, just in the brush.
Yeah, and supposedly these things are verified
by photo experts and stuff having been untouched.
Yeah, because Photoshop is making it way easier
to screw with photography,
but it's also fairly easy to detect too
if you really dig into the individual pixels,
you can say, well, this is obviously to re-search.
And especially these old photos,
when they're examining negatives,
it's not that those weren't Photoshopped.
Right.
I mean, it could be light playing tricks,
but when you see a girl standing by the rail
with a fire behind her.
That one was explained as the girl in the fire.
That one's explained as just a sheer chance mixture
of smoke and light.
And then our programming,
like us being hardwired to pick faces out of anything.
I don't know, man.
It looked pretty much like a girl to me.
It definitely does, doesn't it?
Yeah, and then of course there's the funny things,
like the three men and a baby ghost,
which was a cut out of Ted Danson,
or the Wizard of Oz, like hanging munchkin,
which was a bird, I think.
Although I have to say, since you bring it up,
one of the greatest short, I love short horror fiction.
Of course.
One of the greatest ones I've ever read
was called The Hanging Man of Oz.
It's like, it's only just a few years old,
but it's a good little short story.
Really?
Yeah, I recommend that one.
Yeah, this guy who gets kind of caught up
and looking for it, it's good.
Good horror fiction.
This doesn't have to do with ghosts,
but supposedly there's a murder captured on Google Earth.
Have you seen that making the rounds?
No.
It's an aerial shot, obviously, of a dock somewhere
in Europe, I think, by the water,
and it looks like a guy's dragging a dead body
in a big pool of blood toward the water,
but they, I think they've debunked that.
It was a dog who had shaken off and gotten the ground wet,
and people verified later, like yeah,
that was me and my dog.
Yeah, stop asking questions, it was my dog.
Someone posted it on our Facebook wall.
But I mean, you bring up a, that's a really good,
like you see what you want.
Exactly.
But again, we say, you can't really prove
that ghosts don't exist, so people are like, prove it.
Doesn't prove anything, you know?
If you can prove that a photograph has been faked,
then you've proven it's been faked,
but you can't just look in and be like,
oh, I'm sure it's a fake.
That doesn't muster.
Yeah.
["Hey Dude, The Nineties"]
On the podcast, Hey Dude, The Nineties called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slipdresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the nineties.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the nineties.
Listen to Hey Dude,
the nineties called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass,
host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so, my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy, teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
So, we've covered photos, they show up in photos.
Well, why are they here?
I mean, there's a lot of explanations,
like they're delivering bad news or good news.
Right.
Yeah, there's a lot of ghost stories
where the dead have suddenly appeared to a relative
on the other side of the planet.
Yeah.
At the moment they died, like the relative wakes up
the next day to find out that the person died at 12.59 a.m.
when they just saw them sitting in their room
at that same time.
So, sometimes they're coming to say,
hey, love you, see you in 15 years.
Right.
Or they're coming to say, you're about to die.
That's another long-standing legend.
Yeah.
Or they're about to say, it's 1999,
you saw your Yahoo stock now.
That'd be a good ghost.
Right.
There's a lot of stuff you can say
that people have attributed to ghosts and why they're here.
There's also that horrible experience
as their last moments.
Yeah, they are at the point where they died too young
or maybe have just gone back to their favorite place in life.
Earthbound spirits, I think, is what paranormal investigators
call those situations.
Like they're stuck here or it's like, get off my train
type of situation.
They're guarding a place maybe.
There's not one but two ghost women at the Hotel Del Coronado
in San Diego, very famous late 19th century
built hotel resort.
And both of them took their own lives at the hotel
when they found out they were pregnant on a wedlock.
Or one was married but her husband had left her.
And so they're in two different rooms still.
But that's an example of a ghost being tied to a place.
Yeah, and we have an article on the site about haunted hotels
that a lot of hotels all around the world,
but especially in places like New Orleans
and Old Spooky Spanish, I guess the Coronado
is probably one of those.
There's one in, I believe, Colorado.
The Overlook, the one they use for the Overlook Hotel?
No, it's just like a plain old regular cool hotel.
But it has a stream running through the lobby.
Oh, awesome.
Yeah, which is cool in and of itself.
And I don't remember where I saw this,
but it was on some TV show where it's
like a super haunted hotel, supposedly.
Is he like the ghost waiter?
I don't remember.
He waved through the river.
He had his pants rolled up and flip flops.
The caviar, he probably was awesome.
That was the best I could muster right then, I'm sorry.
There are mediums out there who, if you
saw the movie Ghost, Whippy Goldberg, obviously,
there's many times hucksters trying
to take advantage of people, saying they can contact people,
put you in touch with your relatives that have passed.
But I'm sure there are a lot of mediums
who really believe what they're doing is for real.
Yeah, and what's kind of ironic is
there's this really great article.
It's just a little quick editorial, actually,
from the Los Angeles Times in 2006.
It's called The Science Afraid of Ghosts,
it's written by Deborah Bloom.
And she basically points out that we
used to have psychical research societies.
Like William James, effectively the founder of psychology,
investigated the paranormal as well,
and conducted extensive real scientific experiments.
And along the way, debunked a lot of mediums.
When was this?
The 19th century, the Victorian era.
And so part of this investigation into the paranormal
was not just, it wasn't just to prove that ghosts existed,
it was just to understand the paranormal on its own terms.
And along the way, say, this person is a fraud.
This person is a huckster.
This ectoplasm is cheesecloth that they had stuffed
in their cheek, you know?
And that was part of it.
Over time, I think science has just kind of thrown out
the whole thing, the baby with the bathwater.
And now it's just up to kind of the more mean-spirited
section of the skeptical world to just go after and debunk.
There's nobody looking for, there are very few people
looking to prove or disprove the existence of ghosts.
It's more just like this photograph was faked.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And on photographs, I guess we should talk about orbs.
Very famously, orbs show up in pictures.
And some people say that that is a very specific part
of the journey of the ghost is when they are an orb.
I have an orb picture, which I'll post on Facebook.
Emily believes it is her grandfather.
He had just passed away.
And the photograph, he was the biggest dog lover
I've ever known.
And we had just finished our fencing in our backyard
and our house that we bought.
So it had been like six or eight months
that our dogs couldn't go back there.
So we finally let them back there.
And I had a camera.
I was like, I got to take pictures of this.
And they start playing around like crazy.
And in one of the pictures, there's an orb boom right there
above the dogs playing.
And Emily was like, that's Charlie.
That's my grandfather.
That's awesome.
He's coming to visit.
So I didn't debunk that.
But supposedly skeptics will say that it could be a camera
flash reflecting off of dust particles.
I use no flash.
Water spots on the camera lens, bone dry.
Defects in digital camera sensors.
I guess it could be that, although it was a new camera.
And it's never done that since.
Or printing errors, it was not printed or developed.
So who knows?
I'm just saying I've got a great orb photo
that I'll post of my dogs playing.
You raise a really good question.
I mean, what's the value of debunking that photo?
It made Emily feel nice and still does.
So I mean, what is the value?
I mean, I guess we'll cover it later.
But that question keeps coming up to me
throughout the research in this.
Yes, like it's not hurting anybody.
Right.
So Chuck, I guess a really good question
if we're going to talk about how ghosts work is,
what would ghosts be made of?
Like we said, the Victorians believe
that they were made of ectoplasm.
Today, if you talk to someone who believes in ghosts
and like research is ghosts and like that's
part of their world, the prevailing idea
is that they're made of energy of somehow.
I can't remember which law of thermodynamics state
that energy cannot be created nor destroyed.
Just transfer states.
That would be a pretty good understanding of what ghosts
are if they are real.
So a life force that had passed from a live person
is now a different kind of energy.
Exactly.
Midichlorians.
What is that?
This is the Star Wars.
That was how they explained the force.
Who are the midichlorians?
I don't remember.
It was very disappointing though.
It sounds really familiar.
Was it from the newer three?
Yeah, yeah.
It was how they explained.
Basically, they explained what the force was
and everyone was like, oh, why don't you go and do that?
I got you.
I remember that now.
Other theories are that if they are some sort of energy,
they could also be some form of matter.
So maybe they're made of some sort of quantum particles
or an arrangement of quantum particles.
Which I find kind of an interesting explanation
because think about it, ghosts are
they're frequently said to be able to travel
through solid matter.
Well, if you go down to the quantum level
and you start looking at transistors,
there's a big problem in early transistor development
in that individual electrons can pass right
through the wall of a transistor.
It's called quantum tunneling.
And they had to figure out how to use crystals
to kind of block electrons in to make them flow the way you
wanted rather than just be like, oh, I'm over here now.
So some people say, well, maybe these
are some sort of quantum particles
or an arrangement of quantum particles
that we're able to perceive somehow.
Right.
And then the question I would have is,
is there a consistent explanation on why
some people might become a ghost and some others not?
And the answer is no.
Or are they everywhere and some you just
have a stronger energy force or something?
Who knows?
Yeah, because if people tend to perceive ghosts more
than others, and that typically from studies
has been shown to be people who believe in ghosts,
tend to see them more often or report hauntings,
why wouldn't they see them all the time?
Yeah.
So that would indicate that there
is something about an individual person that
would make them become a ghost.
So many questions.
Well, the whole unfinished business,
like it died too young thing.
I can wrap my head around that like an energy force that
was so strong that is now gone still could be around.
I'm trying to decide what part I'd lie in.
Do I believe in ghosts?
I think so.
OK.
So there's a dude named Richard Wiseman of a University
of Hertfordshire.
Yeah.
And he's done a lot of research in GB, Great Britain.
And he has found some pretty consistent results
that people have generally reported the same things
in the same places, even if they didn't know
there was any ghost activity there,
even if they did or didn't believe.
Actually, if they did believe they were more, like you said,
more apt to see a ghost.
Right.
But he had consistent results of specific places.
Yeah, I mean, like he applied the scientific method
of researching ghosts.
And he documented what areas in a reportedly haunted place
sightings were most frequently reported and basically
found that you could map out areas where sightings were.
OK, so that's step one.
And then step two, he had people who encountered ghosts
describe their experiences.
And he kind of compiled the data.
Then he went back to see what other commonalities
there were for an area.
Yeah, like physical conditions there.
Yes.
Like how cold is it?
Is it humid?
Let me measure the light.
Let me measure the magnetic field.
Right.
What he found, though, interestingly,
was that there were specific areas
where people who had no understanding of the history
of the place they were seeing or had heard
that the area was haunted had reported seeing something.
So there was something to a specific area being, quote,
haunted.
Right.
And people who didn't necessarily believe in ghosts
or didn't know that the place was supposed to be haunted
had reported not only that they'd seen a sighting or something
in this building, but in the specific area of this building.
So yeah.
What does that mean?
It's a consistent study.
Right.
So in Wiseman is a part of this kind of long, but very small,
sparsely populated tradition of paranormal researchers,
like legitimate ones.
Yeah, I could get into that.
Man, when I was a kid, I used to want to go to Duke
and study paranormal or parapsychology there.
Oh, really?
Yeah, they had a parapsychology department.
That's awesome.
It was led by a guy named Joseph Rine,
who is another legitimate parapsychological researcher.
You could have gotten a TV show on Science Channel.
Yeah, totally.
UCLA used to have one from, I think, 69 to 78.
Is Duke still around or?
No, they shut it down in, I think, the mid-80s.
But it was around from the 50s or 60s up to the 80s.
And it was well-respected.
William James was another researcher.
As of the 90s, James Huron and Renny Lange
are still doing research and writing books.
Harry Price was a very famous one.
Yeah, I think I've heard of him.
Yeah, he was famous for investigating
Borely Rectory, which was supposed
to be the most haunted place in England.
Oh, really?
And then now, if you want to get a degree in parapsychology,
you can go to the American University
or you can go to University of Edinburgh.
Those are the two places, as far as I know,
in the Western world, where you can get a parapsychology
degree.
I could see that.
The Great Britons has a lot of ghostly activity
and paranormal investigations, and they're into it over there.
And Edinburgh is supposed to be the most haunted city
in all of Europe.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
A bunch of dissatisfied Scotsman roaming the bog?
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
So we've kind of laid it out, right?
Yeah, I feel like we've laid it out.
Like, we've got the, we all understand what ghosts are.
I don't think we really said anything
that people are like, oh.
Yeah, sure.
I didn't realize what a ghost is.
Right.
What I found interesting is that there's some really good
explanations for ghostly activity.
Well, yeah, sometimes Tracy points out,
I mean, there's so many explanations that's
such a wide range from this person just hallucinated
something.
Right, and I want to say with that specifically,
we're starting to understand that hallucinations are way
more common than anybody has admitted for a very long time
because we are afraid of being put away or label is crazy.
But people hallucinate more than we generally
understand they do.
And specifically grief is supposed
to be able to trigger hallucinations pretty
readily, which would explain visitation
by dead relatives shortly after they die.
Totally.
Yeah.
We've talked about sleep paralysis before.
That's an explanation that you hear a lot about someone
laying in bed.
They can't move, and they are hallucinating spirits and things.
Right, they think they're awake, but they're not.
Right.
Yeah, and you're incapable of moving.
Yeah.
There's also the hypnagogic trance,
which comes at the onset of sleep
and is a sort of trance that supposedly you can hallucinate
in.
Yeah, I've had that happen before, like am I awake?
Am I asleep?
Did I just hear something?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, sure.
And then sometimes it's just the window shut itself
because it was loose and the wind blew it or the door shut
because there was a draft or it's cold in here
because there's a draft.
A lot of times there's just literally
an explanation, a physical explanation for what happened.
So you hit upon one of the hallmarks of haunting activity
is a change in temperature, an unexplained change
in temperature in a haunted room when a ghost is present.
And like you said, it's often like a chimney or a drafty window
or something like that.
But people who investigate this kind of thing
also often explain that phenomenon by a lack of humidity.
Lower humidity can make a room feel colder.
What about an area of a room, though?
I don't know.
I mean, that's a really good question, dude.
How can an area of a room be number one colder
if there isn't a draft?
If it's not a draft, it's just like a static area
in a room that's cold.
Yeah.
If there's just a decrease in humidity,
what causes the decrease in humidity that makes it feel
colder?
And they have found that areas that are supposedly haunted,
well, I should say Richard Wiseman found in one place that
was supposedly haunted, it tended to be less humid
than other areas.
So that would explain the cold chill.
But how is one area just a part of a room less
humid than another?
Yeah, and I'm curious about what kind of temperature
drop people have seen, like how drastic it's been.
I couldn't find any reputable information on that.
Like in the movies, you walk into the corner
and you can see your breath all of a sudden
and you're freezing.
Yeah, like the sixth sense, right?
Yeah, that poor kid.
But also, I wonder then if it's not even necessarily
a real change in temperature, although supposedly ghost
hunters can measure changes in temperature in a room
and that means the ghost is present,
or if it's just the sensation of a chill
running through your body.
And it's not actually thermal, it's psychological.
Yeah, it's your central nervous system.
Yeah, I just got chill bumps earlier.
You did.
What about the electrical fields?
That's a very common thing is for a paranormal investigator
to measure magnetic field and electrical fields in an area.
They will say that this is kind of proof
that there's some sort of presence there.
Because the ghost busters emeter is going crazy.
Right, exactly.
What do they call that?
I can't believe I can't remember that.
I can't remember it either.
The one that Egon held up to, I don't remember what it's called.
We're going to get in trouble for that.
Yeah, sorry, guys.
But sometimes these fields can cause wacky things happening
with the brain, can cause hallucinations,
can cause dizziness, or other neurological symptoms.
And they're saying that might play into the fact
that you think you have seen a ghost.
Right, they're saying, investigators are saying,
yeah, there actually is something different here
with the area's electrical field.
Electromagnetic field, there's something going on here.
But it's possible that that's what's
making you think there's a ghost here,
rather than there's a ghost here and it's affecting the field.
Yeah, it's hitting your angular gyrus.
That's a part of the brain that, evidently,
if it's stimulated, you can get the sense
that someone's behind you mimicking your movements, which
is pretty creepy.
I mean, we're all familiar with the transcranial magnetic
stimulation, the thinking cap.
That was a cool episode.
And when you apply a magnetic pulse
to different parts of the brain, different things happen.
And one of them is definitely hallucinations.
And then another example of the magnetic field
messing with us, I guess, is that a lot of haunting
activity is reported at night, supposedly.
Right.
And that's when it's scary.
Right, exactly.
That's number one.
But number two, the magnetosphere,
the part of the Earth's atmosphere
that protects us from the charged ions of solar wind,
the way that the Earth is arranged to the Sun,
the part that's in darkness, has a larger part of the magnetosphere
surrounding it.
It's more warped toward that, you see?
So that might explain it then.
Right, so.
Looks like a spider.
It does.
But there's a lot more magnetic field activity going on
in the darker side of Earth, so at night.
That one could be a stretch.
Yeah, I think my favorite explanation
that I had not heard about is infrasound.
I think that's pretty cool.
This, to me, is it?
Yeah, it's low frequency sound waves
that you cannot hear with your naked ear.
You won't notice it.
But it can cause your eyes to vibrate.
It can cause you to see things.
It can cause a sense of dread.
And cracked, actually, one of our favorite websites
did a test at a concert, didn't they?
Well, they reported on it.
Oh, OK.
There was a, yeah, they don't do tests, that's right.
They report on tests.
But yeah, there's a great cracked article on it.
And they're talking about, in the 50s,
a guy named Vladimir Gavro, a robotics engineer,
noticed that one of his lab assistants
was bleeding from an ear.
That's not good.
And traced it to this infrasound.
I think it's like 7 to 19 hertz.
And you can't hear it.
You don't realize you're hearing sound,
but you're reacting to it.
And like you said, it causes all sorts of weird psychological
effects, like a sense of dread, a sense
that there's somebody else near you.
All the classic telltale signs of hauntings,
so much so that they've traced literal hauntings back
to infrasound.
Yeah, the Ghost in the Machine is an article
by Vic Tandy and Tony Lawrence that the same thing was going
on there, and they traced it back to a fan.
And then they modified the fan's housing,
the sound went away, and the supposed haunting went away.
Right, exactly.
I mean, isn't that weird, though?
Like surely you've been in a room before that you just
had to turn around and run out of,
because you just knew that there was somebody else
in there with you.
You have?
I have, plenty of times.
It's sort of, but I think it's like I've been in like Savannah
near, you know, on the ghost tour.
Like I'm highly suggestible, that's what I'm saying.
But isn't it strange to think that a sound that you can't hear,
it was responsible for producing that?
That like our brains are that malleable?
That like just a sound we can't even hear,
but the vibrations we can still sense somehow
are having an effect on our brain,
and scaring us and making us turn around and run out of room?
Yeah, and potentially twitching your eye
and causing hallucinations?
Right, so this sound has been shown,
NASA showed that an infrasound at that frequency
can make your eye vibrate imperceptibly.
But then something close to your vision,
like say the rim of your glasses or something,
appear, your brain confuses and thinks that that's moving.
So it looks like there's a little dark figure moving
out of the corner of your eye.
Infrasound can actually cause visual and audit,
well, not auditory hallucinations.
Psychological.
Yeah, psychological effects and visual hallucinations.
So, and the creation of a sense of dread.
Yeah, that's spooky.
Yeah, so.
I wanna get an infrasound machine
and just like play it around the office, you know?
There may already be one here.
Well, I don't even think we said what the guy did though
at the concert, did we?
No.
He played, did he play it under the concert?
Yeah.
And people were freaking out?
Yeah, I think like a quarter of the people
at the concert reported feeling like horrible dread
and like some nausea.
Yeah, maybe because it was a Dr. John show.
That's the first awful thing I could think of.
Dr. John's great.
I know, I knew you were gonna say that.
It really is, I mean like, you should see that guy
play two pianos at once.
Yeah, he's a legend, what am I talking about?
You're thinking of maybe Dr. Hook in the medicine show?
No, Dr. Demento.
I was trying to think of the worst band I could think of
and that's the first thing that came to my mind.
That's who you thought of?
I know.
Nickelback is out there?
Yeah, it was a Nickelback show, perfect.
There you go.
We can fix this in editing.
Okay.
So what else?
I think the last thing Tracy has here
is that the National Science Board has actually come out
and said that if you believe in paranormal,
it can be dangerous because that means you have
reduced critical thinking skills
and you can't make great day-to-day decisions.
Right.
That irked me because on the other end of the spectrum,
you can definitely make the case that just poo-pooing
out of hand as non-existent,
anything that science can't explain,
it shows a distinct lack of critical thinking
and even more dangerously, a lack of imagination.
And that irks me to no end.
Yeah, I enjoyed that you sent me the Skeptoid,
Brian Dunning, is that his name?
His article and I kind of appreciated
his approach with this.
Well, yeah, you know, maybe that means
there's other cool ways to explain these things.
Right.
Like don't poo-poo it, maybe open your mind
to other interesting phenomena that can be explained.
Well, he was saying, don't just assume that
if you just stop at, it was a ghost.
Yeah, or it wasn't.
Right, then you're not pursuing any longer
one way or another.
Yeah, yeah.
And yeah, you're kind of shutting down these avenues
that could be really interesting in eye-opening.
I appreciated that.
I appreciated his approach too,
cause he's a huge skeptic, but he's not,
he didn't take like a James Randy-esque glee
or delight in destroying the illusions of idiots, you know?
Yeah, and I think that's his deal period,
is people, I think he gets accused of that,
oftentimes as a fun killer.
And he's like, that's not what I'm trying to do here.
I'm trying to apply research and real science to things.
I think he likes killing fun a little bit.
Yeah, maybe a little bit.
So that's ghosts, yeah.
Done.
Yeah, for now.
Ooh.
If you want to learn more about ghosts
and read a ghost story, first-hand account
of a ghost story from Tracy Wilson,
you can type ghosts in the search bar
at howstuffworks.com.
It will bring up this article and I said how stuff works.
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