ABSTRACT If we are to accept the data from the field of parapsychology that telepathically a person, particularly unconsciously, may communicate with another person and that psychokinesis exists, we are confronted with the possibility that a person may aggressively hurt another through psychic means. This possibility has been anathema in the field of parapsychology, despite the fact that some parapsychologists have suggested it, and despite the fact that it may explain the resistance to accepting parapsychological data in the scientific community. Anthropologists are more than familiar with this idea as it is so often an intrinsic part of indigenous psychology and yet anthropologists too have been reluctant to accept that there may be a kernel of truth to the belief that one person can through psychological rather than physical means administer a “whammy” on another. The author explores this concept, noting how often the idea is associated with oral aggression in indigenous culture and how this too may reveal why we are so reluctant to entertain the concept.
Richard Reichbart (Thu,) studied this question.