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Rhine Research
Center
2741 Campus Walk Avenue
Building 500
Durham, NC 27705
Phone (919) 309-4600
The History of the
Rhine Research Center
The changing face of the Rhine Research Center.
The East Duke building housed the Duke Parapsychology Laboratory
that was home to the Foundation for Research on the Nature of
Man (FRNM) and the Institute for Parapsychology from 1965 to
2002. The new building on Campus Walk Avenue, currently houses
the Rhine Research Center.
When Joseph B. and Louisa Rhine joined
Professor William McDougall at the newly founded Duke University in 1927,
the field of investigation into psychic phenomena was known as psychical
research. At that time psychical research was mainly concerned with working
with mediums in the search for evidence of an afterlife. J.B. Rhine
recognized that answering the survival question depended first on
investigating the ability of the living to gain psychic or psi information
by other than sensory means (telepathy and clairvoyance), an ability for
which he used the term extrasensory perception (ESP). Rhine began testing
Duke students with specially designed cards to study ESP and later used dice
machines to study psychokinesis (PK), the movement of objects by mental
intention alone.
By 1935 Rhine’s experiments into the unexplained powers of the mind had
shown sufficient promise to justify the creation of a special unit, the Duke
Parapsychology Laboratory, where under his guidance and with help of a
growing team of graduate students and colleagues, a new science was born,
the experimental science of parapsychology. In 1937 the Journal of
Parapsychology was founded as an independent peer-reviewed professional
journal to provide an outlet for reporting the findings from the Duke
research as well as from other laboratories at home and abroad.
For
the past 70 years, we've been researching and studying the experimental
science of parapsychology. Now in the 21st century, the Rhine Center
continues the mission and work of its founder J.B. Rhine with a broadened
scope directed deeper into the Study of Consciousness.
ESP cards and dice games have long since been replaced by modern techniques
that allow more subtle measurements of psi, such as by looking at the
physiological changes or bioenergy characteristics of psychics and healers,
or by measuring the telepathic awareness of emotional targets in a simulated
dream-like situation. Efforts are made to detect clues that come directly
from the psi experiencers themselves, whether they are healers, intuitives,
or simply ordinary people who have these extraordinary experiences.
The Rhine Center expands its search for
knowledge by an active give-and-take between the psychic experiencer and the
scientist with educational programs and discussion groups available for the
general public. This is a collaboration that stems back to the late 1940’s
when Louisa E. Rhine began her original collection of spontaneous psi
experiences from the general public, a case collection and analysis that
extended and amplified the findings that were continuously emerging from the
solid experimental research that is more closely identified with her
lifelong collaborator and husband J.B. Rhine.
For more information about Stacy Horn
click here: Unbelievable: Investigations into
Ghosts, Poltergeists, Telepathy, and Other
Unseen Phenomena from the Duke Parapsychology
Laboratory
Scientific
Research on ESP and Parapsychology, with Dr. Sally Rhine Feather and
Dr. Larry Burk. Radio Interview from Radio in Vivo: Your Link to the
Triangle Science Community, with Ernie Hood, aired on Aug. 8, 2007, on
WCOM-FM in Carrboro, NC. (Download, 24MB. Format: mp3 audio)
Progress and Controversy
From the start, parapsychology has known both progress and controversy. The
early years at the Duke Lab were characterized by new discoveries into the
forms and conditions of psi abilities, improvements in methodology, training
of new researchers, and considerable efforts to disseminate the findings.
But despite the continued accumulation of evidence for the existence of psi,
skeptics and conservatives dominated the academic environment around the
Duke Lab and as he neared retirement in the 1960’s, Rhine foresaw the need
for an independent organization to allow his work to continue.
In 1965, with the help of benefactors such as Chester Carlson, the founder
of Xerox, J. B. Rhine started the Foundation for Research on the Nature of
Man (FRNM) and moved it off campus where the work continued with broader
connections to other workers on both a national and international scale. For
the next thirty years FRNM served as a parent organization to the Institute
for Parapsychology, its major research and education institute, and the
Parapsychology Press, its publishing branch. In 1995, the centenary of J. B.
Rhine’s birth and 15 years following his death, the FRNM was renamed the
Rhine Research Center to honor the Rhines and their unique contributions to
parapsychology.
Consciousness Research, the New New Thing
Today the Rhine Center continues the mission and work of its founder but
with a broadened scope that is reflected in its new subtitle, an Institute
for the Study of Consciousness. ESP cards and dice games have long since
been replaced by modern techniques that allow more subtle measurements of
psi, such as by looking at the physiological changes or bioenergy
characteristics of psychics and healers, or by measuring the telepathic
awareness of emotional targets in a simulated dream-like situation. Efforts
are made to detect clues that come directly from the psi experiencers
themselves, whether they are healers, intuitives, or simply ordinary people
who have these extraordinary experiences.
As can be seen in the range of their educational programs and discussion
groups available for the general public, the Rhine Center seeks to broaden
its search for knowledge by an active give-and-take between the psychic
experiencer and the scientist. This is a collaboration that stems back to
the late 1940’s when Louisa E. Rhine began her original collection of
spontaneous psi experiences from the general public, a case collection and
analysis that extended and amplified the findings that were continuously
emerging from the solid experimental research that is more closely
identified with her lifelong collaborator and husband J.B. Rhine.
The "New "Home
In 2002, over thirty years after the move from Duke to the FRNM building, it
was decided there was a need for more modern experimental space and updated
research equipment as well as for expansion of the Center’s library. The
aging Buchanan Avenue building was sold to Duke University and a new
building, the first ever in the world built for experimental work in
parapsychology, was constructed for the Rhine Research Center at 2741 Campus
Walk Avenue in western Durham about a mile west of the Duke Medical Center.
This location, across from the Millennium Hotel, is easily accessible from
the interstates and is near the Stedman Auditorium on the Duke Center for
Living campus where frequent Rhine Center programs are held. Smaller
programs and social events are regularly held in the Rhine Center’s Alex
Tanous Research Library that was initiated and supported by a gift from the
Alex Tanous Foundation of Portland, Maine. For more
information