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Project alpha free trial
Project alpha free trial









project alpha free trial

In the 1970s, James Smith McDonnell, board chairman of McDonnell Douglas and believer in the paranormal, approached Washington University in St. McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research (MacLab)

project alpha free trial

  • 1 McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research (MacLab).
  • It remains a watershed event in the field of parapsychology. In 1983, Randi held a press conference to expose the deception In the wake of Project Alpha, there were a number of controversies about the ethics of interference in scientific research and the validity of paranormal research as it then existed. When rumors of the test subjects' connection to Randi reached Peter Phillips, head of the MacLab, he instituted tighter protocols for the experiments the two subjects' results declined sharply. The lab began leaking reports of the pair's capabilities, which were in fact simple magic tricks. They quickly proved to exhibit a range of paranormal abilities far and away better than the other subjects of the experiment. At the same time, two teenage boys (Steve Shaw, later known as Banachek, and Mike Edwards) independently contacted the McDonnell Laboratory and volenteered as subjects for such tests from 1979 to 1982. In the late 1970s, Randi contacted the newly established McDonnell Laboratory for Psychical Research ("MacLab") with suggestions on how to conduct tests for paranormal phenomena. Project Alpha was an effort by magician James Randi to test the quality of scientific rigor of a well-known test of paranormal phenomena. For the nuclear non-proliferation project, see Project Alpha (non-proliferation effort). For the military project, see Project Alpha (military). This article is about the parapsychology hoax.











    Project alpha free trial