Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Fighting FC pseudoscience requires a broader critique of paranormal beliefs—here’s mine

Ever since last September when it first came out, the Telepathy Tapes Podcast has been recasting as a paranormal phenomenon something that, in a normal world, would invalidate facilitated communication (FC) and help liberate non-speaking autistics from it. That something is evidence of facilitator control over messages that are generated primarily (in most of the instances discussed on the Telepathy Tapes) by Rapid Prompting Method (RPM) and Spelling to Communicate (S2C). In the world of the Telepathy Tapes and its many enthusiasts, the paranormal phenomenon in question is telepathy. That is, the non-speaking autistics who point to letters on letterboards while their facilitators are within auditory, visual, or tactile cueing range (typically holding up the letterboards and moving them in the air) purportedly aren’t being controlled by their facilitators, but instead are reading their facilitators’ minds.

The Telepathy Tapes Podcast has been highly influential beyond the world of non-speaking autism. Not only has it ranked in recent months as one of the top podcasts; it has also inspired other podcasts to have episodes about it, including podcasts in which people with no particular stake in either FC/RPM/S2C or in autistic telepathy seem ready to accept its conclusions—along with a host of other paranormal claims. (The Telepathy Tapes has also garnered a number of critical podcasts as well—see here).

This means that a full defense of the invalidation of FC by scientific experiments must now include a defense of science itself. And this, in turn, means (1) examining why some people go for paranormal explanations over scientific ones and (2) offering reasons for people to be more skeptical about the former.

This post is an attempt to do both.

I draw my admittedly non-representative sample of paranormal belief-prone individuals from two recent telepathy-friendly episodes on popular podcasts: Joe Rogan’s Joe Rogan Experience and Mayam Bialik’s Bialik Breakdown. Rogan is a top-ranked podcaster with viewership rates in the hundreds of thousands to millions of views (his telepathy podcast, Joe Rogan Experience #2279 currently has over 800K views). Bialik has a PhD in Neuroscience from UCLA and is famous for her role on The Big Bang Theory (which featured a main character with apparent Asperger’s Syndrome and savant skills, but no telepathic abilities—at least not in any of the episodes I watched). Bialik’s telepathy episode, which is called “Real or A Hoax? The Secrets Behind the Telepathy Tapes but which doesn’t actually entertain the hoax possibility, currently has almost 200K views.

On both episodes, hosts and guests alike appear sympathetic, not just to telepathy, but to paranormal phenomena in general. Besides Rogan and Bialik, there’s

While Kripal has long dabbled in the paranormal and while Dickens’ paranormal sensitivities are evident from the very beginning of the Telepathy Tapes, Rogan, Bialik, and Cohen all display at least a partial preference for paranormal explanations over scientific ones.

Rogan, for example, isn’t smitten with skepticism, but wowed (as in literally saying “Wow”) when Dickens tells him about The Hill, a mystical realm where non-speaking autistic individuals purportedly communicate telepathically with one another while sleeping. He asks Dickens whether this has been validated, and when she assures him that it has, he doesn’t probe further.

Bialik, for her part, is wowed by the Telepathy Tapes’ account of parents around the country reporting that their non-speaking autistic children simultaneously fell asleep in the middle of the day and learned, via telepathy on The Hill, that one of their non-speaking peers had just died. The only other explanation for this, Bialik states, is that “all the parents were lying.” Bialik also accepts a mother’s account of how her non-speaking son would telepathically communicate to her his musical compositions while she slept, which she would transcribe upon awakening. For Bialik, what counts as proof here is the mother’s report about taking her son to a music studio. The son, Bialik tells us, didn’t ask “What the f*** am I doing here?”, but instead communicated (it’s unclear how, since he’s nonspeaking and apparently doesn’t even point to letters) that he wanted to tweak this and that part of his mother’s transcription, and indicated in various (unspecified) ways that “that he was the agent of the music and the lyrics.”

Of course, the elephant in the room for all of this—the non-paranormal explanation—is a combination of (1) facilitator control (the accounts of the happenings on the Hill are generated through Spelling to Communicate or S2C), (2) what these parents would like to believe about their non-speaking children (where it’s more palatable to view facilitator control as telepathic powers—see discussion here), (3) parent-to-parent(s) communication and contagious memes within the community of parents who believe their non-speaking kids are telepathic, and (4) a mother’s highly motivated interpretation of her son’s non-verbal behavior in a sound studio. The delusions are many and (where the parents are concerned) quite understandable; no one has to actually be lying about any of this.

Elephant dans la pièce (illustration ChatGPT4 - Dall-e3) v2.jpg

So what I want to examine here is what other paranormal beliefs are held by Rogan, Bialik, et al., why they might seem compelling, and whether they actually outcompete alternative explanations that are more reasonable and scientific. If we can nudge these sorts of people back toward science, the damning evidence against FC that’s being recast as telepathic powers might stand a better chance of liberating FC/RPM/S2C’s victims.

Assuming that Rogan, Bialik et al. are representative of the general paranormal-prone public, we see several reasons—espoused by all of these people—for paranormal beliefs. They are:

  • Seemingly amazing coincidences

  • Seemingly amazingly accurate predictions (“precognition”)

  • Mysteries surrounding human consciousness

  • Mysteries surrounding savant skills

  • Apparent telepathy in animals

  • Converging beliefs across world history and cultures—with the exception, of course, of the “western” scientific community.

Let’s start with coincidences. One of the first things discussed on the Rogan episode is phone telepathy: when you think of someone and immediately they text you. We’ve all had that happen, but somehow many of us recognize it for what it is—a coincidence in the context of an event-filled world full of people who are primed to notice coincidences more than non-coincidences. We recognize this even if we don’t fully grasp just how many non-coincidences occur and how much we filter them out in favor of the coincidences. It’s easy not to notice how much wandering our minds do in the course of the day, with fleeting and often forgettable thoughts about one friend or another. It’s easy to forget how often the person doesn’t text when we think of them and does text when we don’t. It’s easy to underestimate how often our minds forget the usual stuff, retain the more remarkable stuff, and misremember so much of the more remarkable stuff as having been more remarkable than it really was.

As with coincidences, so, too with precognition—instances of amazingly accurate predictions. It’s easy to forget how often our minds make predictions, how often our—and other people’s—predictions don’t pan out; how selectively we remember the more successful predictions and forget the failures, and how much we misremember our—and other people’s—successful predictions as more accurate than they really were. In addition, some predictions and coincidences may be influenced by subtle cues, priming, or subconscious learning of which we aren’t consciously aware: a news headline causes two friends to simultaneously free-associate to thoughts of each other; a subconsciously learned “hunch” about someone may cause us to predict, correctly, which email messages they will respond to.

Far more mysterious than these phenomena is consciousness. No one—scientists included—has anywhere near an adequate account of how conscious experience arises from physical brains. Nor is it clear that anyone will—and this includes paranormal belief-holders. For Ky Dickens and Jeffrey Kripal, conscious experience provides evidence of a non-physical world. Both cite a former NASA scientist by the name of Thomas Campbell who believes that consciousness is what creates the universe—or, put another way, that “our reality is virtual and that consciousness is the computer.” According to Campbell’s author page on Anazon

a set of quantum physics experiments designed to provide evidence for or against the hypothesis... are being performed at the California Polytechnical university. First Results are expected in late 2023 or early 2024.

So far, no news. And as far as I can make out, his claim is essentially un-falsifiable. If we’re living in any kind of computer simulation, any experimental results we think we’ve produced would be part of the simulation. So what could possibly distinguish simulation-based results from non-simulation-based results?

The question of life as a simulation, like the mystery of consciousness, strikes me as unanswerable by anyone—scientists, normal people, and paranormal people alike. But that doesn’t stop Rogan, Dickens & Co from assuming that Campbell’s hypothesis is true. Kripal argues that “physical reality deeper down is more like a surrealist painting, more produced by the imagination.” Dickens argues for a paradigm shift that places human consciousness, not physics, at the foundation of the universe.

What’s sort of compelling about all this is that there’s a grain of truthiness here. Each person’s reality and identity is based on their conscious experiences. Our conscious experiences derive from the specific circumstances of our lives, which derive from the worlds we inhabit, which are, in turn, a function of the universe we happen to live in. And that universe is, in a sense, a function of us, and therefore of our consciousness. That’s because the universe we inhabit—along with the planet we happen to live on, down to the type of star it orbits, its position in the solar system, its orbital path and speed, its tilt, its spin, the way it wobbles on its axis, its moon, its size, its chemical composition, its geological history, and its current geological age—is the only kind of universe (solar system, planetary environment, etc.), of all the millions (billions? trillions?) of possibilities, in which the we, as humans, could possibly have evolved and could currently exist. So, if we limit ourselves to an extremely egocentric, human-centric perspective, human consciousness is essentially connected to our particular universe as we know it to be.

But Kripal and Dickens are positing something more literal than this: namely, that human consciousness is literally the foundation of The Universe. Furthermore, they propose, this solves the riddle of consciousness. But they don’t explain how, and if they tried to, they’d fail. That’s because, even with all this paradigm shifting and literal embedding of consciousness within the broader universe, we’re still left with the mind-body problem. That is, we’re still left with the nagging question of how conscious experiences connect up with physical brains: how, in particular, conscious experiences connect up, as we know they do, with the brain’s very physical electromagnetic activities and synaptic connections.

But while placing consciousness at the foundation of the universe doesn’t solve the mind-body problem, it does help Bialik et al. “solve” telepathy, precognition, and near-death experiences—assuming, of course, these phenomena actually exist. Telepathic thoughts, presumably, propagate through the fabric of the universe from one mind to another. Since that fabric, per Dickens and Kripal, is timeless—including all past, present, and future conscious phenomena—precognition presumably happens whenever phenomena from the future reach those minds that are open to them. Near-death experiences—and other altered states, including dreaming, psychedelic states, and what Kripal calls “trauma”—are simply the results of certain minds, or states of mind, that have openings into which some of the cosmic consciousness’s more magical elements can creep. Kripal cites Kevin Cann, a verbally fluent autistic man who says that all autistic people have mystical experiences—which would presumably include Sheldon Cooper from Big Bang Theory, were he a real person, and my moderately autistic son, who is. Kripal also cites Elizabeth Krohn’s first-hand accounts of her near-death experience, which, according to a previous Bialik Breakdown episode featuring Kohn, involved two weeks in heaven and newfound knowledge and abilities.” Surely Krohn isn’t fabricating anything, nor do Kripal or Bialik entertain the possibility of hallucinations, false memories, or some combination thereof.

Instead of discussing the unreliabilities of the human minds/brains, Rogan, Bialik et al. discuss the supposed reliabilities of human culture. Outside of what they call “western” science, they point out, most cultures throughout history agree that the mind is more than the physical brain, the soul survives death, and that dreams contain prophecies (Bialik cites the Bible). Most cultures also once believed that the earth is flat, that the sun literally rises and sets, and that the universe and all creatures great and small arose through forces other than the Big Bang and evolution—three mosty outdated beliefs that Dickens and Kripal, elsewhere in their interviews, disparage as ridiculous.

Besides believing in the Big Bang, evolution, and a round earth that spins with respect to the sun, Bialik et al. are into quantum physics. Kripal, for example, implicitly alludes to “quantum entanglement” when he gives his take on autistic telepathy. In what is one of the most dismissive statements about autistic people I’ve ever encountered, he states:

These individual autistic children are simply nodes. You know they’re picking up the signal from this broader consciousness or mind, and when one dies, they know right away that-that, and because they’re emotionally entangled with that node.

This makes the autistic community sound like the undifferentiated Borg from Star Trek. (Rivaling Kripal in his dismissiveness, Dickens tells Rogan that the most loving thing you can say to a non-speaking autistic person regarding their outward behavior is “I know that’s not you.”)

Shubham Dhage

Kripal goes on:

We all live in a Newtonian world. In other words, we think we’re material objects in some kind of neutral space. But our bodies are also quantum. We know that. That’s a fact. We know that matter is quantum deep down and it’s all connected and it’s all one and it does things that make absolutely no sense to this Newtonian up here frame of reference... And so we have physics to tell us that there are these two levels of reality, but we haven’t integrated that into our worldview.

One reason most of us haven’t integrated quantum mechanics into our worldview is that, for the most part, quantum phenomena have very little effect on the world as we experience it. A quick look at Wikipedia will reveal that the effects of quantum mechanics on the world as it affects human beings are limited to a handful of modern technologies: e.g., quantum computing, LEDs, MRIs, and electron microscopy. There are, thus far, no scientific reports of discernable quantum effects on our minds or bodies, or of how quantum physics contributes to the connectedness or oneness of the universe. For the latter, someone would have to empirically validate a sort of Unified Field Theory, and so far, no one—no physicist, no normal person, and no paranormal person—has done that.

But Kripal, like other paranormal belief holders (Deepak Chopra comes to mind), has recast quantum physics as being about something far beyond subatomic particles, black-body radiation, and the Planck Constant: something downright mystical. How else to explain all that quantum entanglement, all that spooky action at a distance, all that Uncertainty, and all those mysterious effects of observers on measurements? “The early quantum physicists,” Kripal claims, “they all turned to one place for the best place to understand what quantum physics is about, and one place was mystical literature. They all turned there.” That claim is easily fact-checked, and it isn’t true. As Wikipedia’s Quantum Mysticism article tells us, just two physicists, Heisenberg and Schrödinger, were interested in Eastern mysticism “but are not known to have directly associated one with the other” (quantum physics with Eastern mysticism). Only a few (lesser-known) physicists thought that the consciousness of the observer played a causal role in measurement outcomes. As Einstein said about quantum mysticism (or what Murray Gell-Mann called "quantum flapdoodle"): "No physicist believes that. Otherwise he wouldn't be a physicist."

Besides “quantum flapdoodle,” there’s flapdoodle about fields: ”energy fields”; “mind fields.” The mostly invisible power of electromagnetic fields, and the fact that the brain, as an electromagnetic object, must generate such fields, comes up in on the Telepathy Tapes, though not on Rogan’s and Bialik’s podcasts—at least not on the episodes I’m discussing here.

But let’s turn back to Dicken’s and Kripal’s claims about the supposed mysticism of autistic people and to yet another basis for paranormal beliefs—namely, savant skills. These aren’t exclusive to autism, but are more prevalent in autistic people; they include extraordinary skills in math, music, and language. This much everyone agrees on. As I discussed in my last post, however, Dickens, along with Diane Hennacy Powell, Dickens’ self-proclaimed expert on savant skills, goes further. They claim that savant skills are disproportionately present in non-speaking autistics and that they can only be explained by telepathy. The definition of savantism that Dickens gives Rogan is telling: “Being able to really excel at something that you haven’t been taught.” The actual definition of savantism Is slightly different: excelling at something, not that you haven’t been taught, but that is inconsistent with your overall level of functioning.

Nor are those savant skills that have actually been empirically confirmed (as opposed to those heard about through anecdotal reports) so mysterious as to cry out for paranormal explanations. Scientists have modeled how some of them develop; in general, they appear to correlate, not with being non-speaking but with “Heightened sensory sensitivity, obsessional behaviours, technical/spatial abilities, and systemizing.”

The only specific instances of savant skills that Dickens cites on Rogan’s show—with more wows from Rogan—involve language skills. She cites an autistic boy who could speak Russian and Japanese at the age of 5 or 6, and a non-speaking autistic girl who purportedly typed out messages in Portuguese and Spanish and also turned out to understand hieroglyphs. Both reports are second- or third-hand, and all the words attributed to the girl were generated by S2C and so most likely not her own. As for the boy, as I wrote in my last post, videos show hyperlexia vis-a-vis Chinese characters and Japanese hiragana (a recognition of the symbols and an ability to read them out loud) and a precocious ability to recite specific sentences in Chinese and a couple of other languages. There is no need to invoke a telepathic connection to a collective consciousness at the base of the universe; a precocious obsession with languages and writing systems, an ear for languages, and some systematic self-teaching will do the trick.

As far as apparent savant skills in non-speaking autism go, both Dickens and Kripal appear to find telepathy (as in a telepathic connection to the collective consciousness at the base of the universe) more likely than facilitator cueing (as in the adult facilitators being the ones whose skills we’re actually witnessing). For Dickens and Kripal, the mind-body disconnect that purportedly defines autism (according to FC proponents but not according to autism specialists) makes autistic people more tuned in to the purported cosmic consciousness. In addition, while the regular use of language causes the telepathic skills that all of us were purportedly born with to wither away, non-speakers with autism, who communicate less readily, retain these skills. Telepathy, ultimately, appears to be the only real savant skill—or at least the ur-savant skill. All other savant skills, per Dickens and Kripal, derive from telepathy—at least in the case of non-speaking autistics who depend on facilitators to demonstrate those skills.

But what about apparent animal telepathy? Dickens and Rogan discuss a bunch of examples, none of which depend on facilitated communication. They are:

  • The elephants that supposedly traveled for miles to the home of “elephant whisperer” Laurence Anthony after he died and again, for years thereafter, on the precise date of his death—a claim that Snopes classifies as “undetermined.”

  • Synchronized movements and cooperation within groups of animals: fish swimming in schools, birds flying in formation, wolves collaborating on hunts. Scientists have explained all of this synchrony (and successfully simulated some of it) in terms of individual group members following simple rules of thumb, either innate or learned through simple associative learning mechanisms, based on the position and movement of their nearby group-mates (and, in the case of wolves, the position of their prey), as sensed through visual, tactile, auditory, or olfactory cues. For fish, see here; for birds, see here; for wolves, see here.

  • The mystery of how prey animals know when they’re being watched. Here, too, the mechanism is subtle cues, in many cases way too subtle for humans: e.g., predator-specific vibrations and the changes in the concentration or age of particular scents. Animal precognition, namely of coming storms, goes unmentioned here, but this, too, can be explain by cues—e.g., by sensitivity to changes in atmospheric pressure.

  • Rupert Sheldrake’s research on dogs who know when their owners are coming home—because they anticipatorily go to the window. A quick look at Wikipedia shows that Sheldrake’s experimental design has been critiqued and that more plausible alternative explanations for his results have been offered.

Getty Images

Beyond all the apparent appeal of the paranormal as an explanation for seemingly amazing coincidences, seemingly amazingly accurate predictions, the mysteries surrounding human consciousness, the mysteries surrounding savant skills, and the apparent telepathy of animals, there are constant claims by paranormalists that they’re espousing the braver, more open minded, more interesting way of looking at the world. Kripal, for example, states that he finds things he can’t explain “delicious.” According to Rogan, Bialik, & Co., regular scientists, by contrast, are afraid of the paranormal (or “psiphobic”—my word; not theirs). They’re afraid of looking foolish, afraid of things they can’t explain, and afraid of people who experience things that don’t fit into their box. They’re also rigid and controlling. They need stability and limit themselves to what can be measured and observed, to what they can explain and control. They take everything else off the table. Except, presumably, for those mystical quantum physicists, they limit themselves to matter and linear time and are hopelessly stuck in a materialist paradigm. They dismiss the lived experience of other people. Like yesterday’s flat earthers, they’re holding back scientific progress. And destroying what’s beautiful to boot: by putting the flower under the microscope, they magnify the sun’s rays and burn it up.

One way in which these people might appear more open-minded than scientists is in seeming to embrace both science and skepticism in addition to the paranormal. But this embrace is quite limited. Kripal likes quantum physics, but not controlled experiments; Dickens doesn’t believe there’s scientific support for aliens, but she does believe in telepathy; Rogan interrupts the interview to google “Voynich manuscript debunked” and “HECS suit debunked,” but not to google “facilitated communication debunked” or “autism as mind-body disconnect debunked.” Rogan knows that there are quacks and charlatans out there, but thinks he can tell by gut instinct whether someone’s lying.

So who’s actually more open-minded? Scientists are. When people make claims that strike them as implausible, they ask for evidence—which might sound like being dismissive, but actually is more of a provisional openness. Scientists are inherently curious. They’re constantly looking for new things to observe, measure, and test. Observation, measurement, and controls, of course, are at the heart of empirical science—as everyone once learned in elementary school. Without these, there is no science, and anyone can claim anything they like: that the earth was created in seven days, that there are Zebras on the North Pole, or that vaccines cause autism. Scientists may take all sorts of things off the scientific table—from mystical poetry, to unfalsifiable claims like we’re living in a simulation, to claims that have already been solidly rebutted (like those about facilitated communication and non-speaking autism)—while still enjoying poetry and speculations about simulations during their off-hours.

As for who’s fearful, one thing that all espousers of paranormal beliefs appear to be afraid of is well-controlled empirical testing—despite the existence of a half million-dollar reward for anyone who can prove the existence of paranormal phenomena via such tests.

And as for destroying beauty and wonder by looking under the metaphorical microscope, the microscope in particular, and scientific findings in general, have revealed beautiful and wondrous phenomena: the microstructures of a flower petal, the ways that a few simple rules create phenomenal emergent properties like the elaborately coordinated movements of fish shoals, or the subtle ways in which one person’s involuntary, nonconscious muscle movements can non-consciously condition another person’s behavior in increasingly subtle and powerful ways over time.

So let’s conclude with a few things that those who lean towards the paranormal should open up their minds to:

  • How unreliable our first-hand experiences and memories are

  • How people can look like they’re telling the truth—because they believe what they’re saying—without actually telling the truth

  • How cues can simultaneously be too subtle for conscious minds to detect and yet powerful enough to influence animals into elaborate patterns of group behavior that aren’t deliberately planned out, or to influence human beings into the production of elaborately spelled messages that they may or may not understand

  • How the things that science can’t explain aren’t satisfactorily explained by paranormal phenomena

  • How paranormal phenomena don’t explain anything that science can’t explain better.

Addendum: A Telepathy Tapes Update

Through these podcasts and other developments, Ky Dickens is getting a ever growing attention for her various claims, and an ever-growing fund for her upcoming projects, which, as we learn at the end of the Rogan interview include:

  • releasing a documentary film based on the Telepathy Tapes within the year, with five non-speaking members on the production team

  • raising awareness of “spelling” (as in Spelling to Communicate) and getting it into all schools

  • opening up large centers that provide opportunities for “spelling” and for training more people to be “communication partners” so they can interact with and hire non-speakers.

Telepathy, Dickens acknowledges, is serving as a sort of “Trojan horse” to raise awareness and support for Spelling to Communicate.

But along with this dark revelation comes another one: The International Association for Spelling as Communication (I-ASC), Dickens complains, is sending letters telling people “Don’t talk about telepathy or you’ll have your accreditation taken away.”

The Telepathy Tapes has drastically raised awareness of “Spelling to Communicate,” but not all publicity is good publicity. Just possibly, a combination of infighting among quacks and true believers, on one hand, and the promulgation of credibility-straining claims about autistic non-speakers, on the other, could ultimately cause the whole abnormal-but-not-actually-paranormal phenomenon to collapse under its own weight.

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Channeling lies on the Telepathy Tapes—including lies about autism and lying

Why is a podcast on telepathy doubling as an infomercial for facilitated communication? I’ve just finished listening to and then reading transcripts of all 10 episodes of the first season of the Telepathy Tapes podcast, and I think I have the answer.  You can’t have telepathy without FC and you can’t have FC without telepathy. This co-dependence works as follows.

First, the only instances of purported telepathy that the podcast has been able to come up with are instances involving FC: instances, that is, in which the purportedly telepathic messages are channeled through facilitated communication. Every single purportedly telepathic individual on the podcast is a non-speaker with autism who only communicates through facilitated communication; in particular, through Rapid Prompting Method (RPM) and, especially, Spelling to Communicate (S2C). This even includes an individual who is described as being “completely blind” and yet still able to spell messages on a letterboard. There are, in other words, no telepathic individuals who channel the telepathy through speech, sign language, Morse code, semaphores, or, even, ordinary ten-finger typing—not on the Telepathy Tapes, and, I’d venture to add, nowhere else on planet Earth.

Second, all the available evidence on planet Earth strongly indicates that the messages generated from non-speaking individuals with autism through RPM and S2C are authored, not intentionally by the individuals with autism, but unwittingly by their facilitators. This makes it inevitable that, every so often, facilitators will notice they’ve facilitated messages that express their own private thoughts or other information that their client couldn’t possibly know. And since most of the thousands of facilitators who stay in the business long term (parents included) are convinced that they aren’t influencing their clients’ letter selections, at least some of them will decide that it’s more plausible, when their own private thoughts and knowledge leak out onto the letterboard, that their clients are telepathic.

In short, the co-dependence between FC and telepathy stems from the fact that (1) it’s extremely hard to find examples of seemingly convincing telepathy that don’t involve FC, and (2) that most facilitators and family members would much rather believe that clear instances of facilitator control over messages are the results, not of prompts and cues from the facilitator, but of telepathy.

Put another way, for those of us who know about Ouija board effects, nonconscious muscle movements, Clever Hans, and the empirical studies of facilitated communication dating back to the 1990s, the Telepathy Tapes podcast offers a treasure trove of examples of facilitator control over messages. For those who want to believe in FC, RPM, and S2C, it instead offers a treasure trove of examples of telepathy.

That is, one person’s evidence against FC/RPM/S2C is another person’s evidence for telepathy.

As an infomercial for facilitated communication, the Telepathy Tapes podcast makes all the usual claims about FC and autism, dishing out large servings of pro-S2C advocacy. It also makes additional claims about autism that provide additional, indirect support for both FC and telepathy—claims about savant skills and truthfulness that haven’t come up in previous material we’ve discussed on this blog. Before I get to these, here’s a quick recap of the usual pro-FC claims and advocacy statements that have made their way onto the Telepathy Tapes.

First, host Ky Dickens and her collaborators, like all FC-promoters, are convinced that there’s no cueing going on between the facilitators and the autistic non-speakers. In Episode 2, one of Dickens’ collaborators insists, in reference to one of show’s telepathy “experiments,” that the facilitator’s finger is “just on her head. It’s not moving.” In Episode 3, Dickens assures us that another mother “holds the letter board perfectly still” while her non-speaking son points to letters.  In Episode 8, Dickens states:

The accusation that most spellers are not actually communicating, that someone is pushing their hand around or moving around the letterboard, is unabashedly, unequivocally false. I have filmed dozens of spellers, and I have never witnessed such a thing. You can watch the clips of the spellers you've met at the telepathytapes.com.

We and others have watched these clips, and we have found evidence of subtle facilitator cueing throughout. See, for example, Janyce’s analysis here and Stuart Vyse’s analysis here.

Dickens goes on to state:

I also recommend The Spellers Movie, which you can watch for free on YouTube. It follows many incredible spellers who are communicating independently.

In fact, none of the individuals in The Spellers movie, which we reviewed here, are able to communicate spontaneous messages without their facilitator within auditory or visual cueing range. And, indeed, Dickens herself acknowledges as much about the spellers she’s met:

If the skeptic were to test a speller, which they have, they might find it surprising or even disqualifying that a trusted partner's presence must be in the room. And it helps them to communicate. Even if they're not being touched at all, even if this partner is 10 feet away, just having them there is necessary.

The only type of possible facilitator influence acknowledged by Dickens et al. isn’t the behavioral influence on FC-ed output of facilitator muscle movements, verbal prompts, and other cues, but the telepathic influence on FC-ed output of facilitator thoughts. Referring to it as a “telepathic link”, Dickens states:

The people who I've interviewed for this project, however, are aware of it, and do a lot of creative things to make sure the non-speakers are typing only their own thoughts.

But let’s return to the podcast’s FC advocacy. Besides assuring us that there’s no facilitator cueing, Dickens et al. also repeat the pro-FC talking points about why we should presume competence and not question non-speakers’ abilities. She berates people for assuming that “because a child can't talk, or has a difficult time controlling their body, that they're not competent.” She and others repeatedly assure us that these kids, despite what their bodies can’t do, are wise and gifted. She tells us that she’s “heard from scores of parents and teachers that spellers need to be believed and trusted to allow their gifts to shine.” One of the non-speakers is reported as having written in her diary “that she can read everybody’s mind but you have to believe in her for her to do it.” Many parents, Dickens tell us, are discovering that “if you believe and trust in your child, in their abilities and enable them to spell, you won't be disappointed.” She doesn’t mention that assuming that people are competent, while a good tactic for warding off authorship tests, is a poor tactic for ensuring that people actually become competent.

Dickens also repeats the usual, pro-FC justification for why non-speakers can only communicate by slowly pointing to letters on held-up letterboards: namely, that pointing to letters involves gross motor skills and thereby bypasses the purported challenges non-speakers have with fine motor skills. She doesn’t mention that pointing to letters is actually a fine-motor skill. Second, she and others claim that sometimes non-speakers require physical touch in order to regulate their bodies and locate their hands and fingers in order to type. She doesn’t mention that touch opens up additional opportunities for facilitator cues about which letters to touch. Third, she explains that “motor planning issues” cause the pointing to be slow. She doesn’t mention that slow, single-finger letter pointing is also much easier to cue than ten-finger typing (or speech, or sign language, or Morse code, or semaphores). Nor does she mention that slow letter selection reflects the uncertainty about what letter to type next that comes from not knowing what message you’re typing and waiting for a cue from the person who does know the message.

Dickens and her participants also repeat the usual, pro-FC justification for why non-speakers are more competent than they appear and urgently need to be unlocked through FC: namely, that purported mind-body disconnect that’s been around almost as long as FC has and still has no evidence backing it up. One facilitated message, for example, conveys that the non-speaker “didn’t realize he had a body” and later, when his mother helped him feel his body by touching him, “Oh, I have a body, but the body in my mind doesn’t move.”  An S2C practicing speech pathologist states:

We know that autistics have difficulty knowing where their body is in space. I've had kids who told me they don't feel their hands. They don't feel their arms.

We also learn how this mind-body disconnect has caused people to deny non-speakers an education. As Dickens tells us, “if you have a hard time coordinating motor function and regulating your body, testing behavior is not a good way to test intelligence.” Worse, we hear repeatedly how this mind-body disconnect has caused non-speakers to feel trapped inside their bodies, which are alternately described as “uncooperative,” “unruly,” and “betraying” them. Worse still, we hear how this mind-body disconnect has led to an epidemic of loneliness among non-speakers. As the infomercial revs up in the final episodes, we learn that “spelling” on letterboards is the solution to all of this. As Dickens puts it:

There is an epidemic of loneliness plaguing so many non-speakers. I've observed different extremes of this isolation. But the most unbearable is for those who never learned to communicate via spelling, who are trapped inside their own bodies, unable to share their thoughts, personalities or intelligence with the world.

Given this:

I wish[] a wise adult could just drop into the hill [the place where the purportedly telepathic, autistic non-speakers purportedly meet up at night], make a list of all the people that need help and then find a way to get all those people on letter boards.

These statements highlight a baffling contradiction in a podcast that simultaneously tries to demonstrate that telepathy is real and to promote facilitated communication: if non-speakers are telepathic, and therefore can communicate with one another telepathically (as many showcased here purportedly do), how is there an epidemic of loneliness that can only be resolved through RPM/S2C? All Dickens has to say is:

So yes, telepathy may be the best way to open up this incredible group of people so that they can share all that they know and have access to. But until society catches up with them, spelling to communicate will still be critical. 

By episode 10, Dickens sometimes sets telepathy aside completely to urge all concerned listeners to become S2C practitioners:

To listeners who want to get more deeply involved, you can look into getting trained in spelling to communicate or the rapid prompting method, because to meet the spellers where they're at, more people need to be trained and willing to work with them on the board.

Nowhere else have I heard such vehement pro-FC advocacy.

But now let’s move past the FC infomercial aspects of the podcast and turn, as promised, to some additional claims about autism that provide indirect support for both FC and telepathy.

First, there are claims about savant skills. An interest in autistic savant skills was what purportedly led the podcast’s main “expert,” Dianne Henacy Powell, to the belief that non-speaking autistic individuals are telepathic. Powell is a psychiatrist and the author of the 2008 book The ESP Enigma: The Scientific Case for Psychic Phenomena. While I haven’t read the book and therefore have no idea what kind of “scientific case” Powell makes, I do know, from an online Google Scholar search, that she has published no peer-reviewed research that indicates that non-speakers are telepathic. But Powell has apparently spent time with autistic savants, and based on what she observed, she has decided that savant skills are more likely the product of telepathy than of brain power. As she puts it on the Telepathy Tapes podcast: “Savant syndrome is when someone is able to do something that knows something that is not explainable by the traditional ways of acquiring knowledge.” In Episode 4, she and Dickens elaborate:

Powell: Savant syndrome really stood out to me because it can’t be explained by the materialist model [of the brain] that we have in mainstream medicine.

Dickens: But savant syndrome challenges this because how can you be great at calculus or piano or various languages if you haven’t been taught them

Dickens: And this is how everything ties back to telepathy.

Powell: When I thought about savant syndrome, I thought that is so similar to what we call ESP or extrasensory perception

Dickens: Because ESP means you know things you haven’t been taught via your five traditional senses.

In fact, it isn’t necessary to invoke any mysterious psychic processes to explain the specific savant skills/types that Powell lists: “calendar calculation, mathematical savant, musical savant, foreign language/hyperlexia, prime number generation.” These skills, which correlate with the “restrictive interests” that define autism, are readily explainable by a combination of precocious development in specific areas; rote memorization skills; eidetic (“photographic”) memory; fixations or obsessions with letters, numbers, and/or calendars; perfect pitch; detail focus; and/or an ear for languages. Dickens, for her part, seems unaware that it’s entirely possible to teach yourself calculus (assuming you’re mathematically inclined), piano (assuming you’re musically inclined), and other languages. What would be miraculous is learning calculus without any math texts (or within the space of a day, as J.B. Handley’s facilitated son is alleged to have done), or learning another language without any text-based or auditory input. But there is also no evidence that anyone—autistic or not—has actually accomplished these things. Meanwhile, peer-reviewed research finds no reported savant skills that rise to anywhere near this level of miraculousness (see Park et al., 2023), and the cognitive processes for specific savant skills (e.g., calendrics) have been successfully modeled (see Heavey et al., 2012).

Powell’s most compelling case for telepathy-based savantism is a boy named Ramses Sanguino. Ramses, Powell claims, “was able to read eight different languages at the age of two.” But I watched a few videos of this boy, and what I saw was a combination of precocious hyperlexia vis a vis Chinese characters and Japanese hiragana (a recognition of the symbols and an ability to read them out loud); a precocious ability to recite specific sentences in Chinese and a couple of other languages; and a curious dysfluency with spontaneous spoken English. There is no need to invoke telepathy for any of this.

Another claim has to do with truthfulness. It is repeatedly suggested, throughout the podcast, that individuals with autism are incapable of lying, or at least find it really difficult to do so. If true, this claim might allay suspicions on the part of some listeners that some of the more fantastical messages facilitated out of the non-speakers—for example that they tele-travel at night to mystical realms where they meet up or imbibe wisdom from rabbis and other sages—might be, shall we say, a tad unreliable.

While there is some evidence that autistic individuals lie less often and with less sophistication than the rest of us do (see Bagnall et al., 2022), there’s no evidence that autistic individuals can’t lie. Anecdotally, consider Temple Grandin, who looked her teacher “straight in the eye” and lied to her about ruining her garden (Grandin, 1986, p. 37). Or consider John Elder Robison, who regularly embellished the academic knowledge he imparted to others with made-up factoids like the existence of a star named the “Cow Star”; who tricked his mother into thinking his younger brother had been kidnapped by a stranger; and who raised money for a prank on a teacher by soliciting donations for a made-up orphan’s relief fund (Robison, 2007; pp. 36-40).

Grandin and Robison might be considered to have Asperger’s Syndrome rather than autism, but lying extends to individuals with unequivocal autism. One mother reports that her moderately autistic son regularly impersonates other people on his cell phone; once presented her with a doctored report card that reported As and Bs instead of the Cs and Ds he’d actually earned; and, through an elaborate web of deception, got her permanently banned from Twitter. Another mother reports that her profoundly autistic, non-speaking son pretended to comply with a request to go to bed, shortly afterwards escaping out of his bedroom through a door on the other side.

All this is quite magical, in its own way. So are savant skills—the precocious reading and arithmetic, the foreign language skills, the ability to recreate elaborate songs on the piano that one has heard only once, or to recite hundreds of digits of Pi. Indeed, these skills are arguably far more magical coming from actual autistic brains than they would be if they were simply absorbed telepathically from some vague, amorphous source somewhere out there. Which takes us back to FC and all its associated illusions and lies—and how it, like telepathy, removes us all from the humanity and magic that exists in all children, regardless of their communication skills, regardless of how profound their autism.

REFERENCES

Bagnall, R., Russell, A., Brosnan, M., & Maras, K. (2022). Deceptive behaviour in autism: A scoping review. Autism26(2), 293-307. https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613211057974

Heavey, L., Hermelin, B., Crane, L., & Pring, L. (2012), The structure of savant calendrical knowledge. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 54: 507-513. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8749.2012.04250.x

Park H. O. (2023). Autism Spectrum Disorder and Savant Syndrome: A Systematic Literature Review. Soa--ch'ongsonyon chongsin uihak = Journal of child & adolescent psychiatry, 34(2), 76–92. https://doi.org/10.5765/jkacap.230003