In CP 1.115, Peirce wrote: "At present, while the existence of
telepathy cannot be said to be established, all scientific men
are obliged by observed facts to admit that it presents at least
a very serious problem requiring respectful treatment."

CP 6.159. I may be asked whether my theory would be favorable or
otherwise to telepathy. I have no decided answer to give to this.
At first sight, it seems unfavorable. Yet there may be other modes
of continuous connection between minds other than those of time
and space.

CP 6.559. Belief in telepathy ought to be ranked as variation
of spiritualism.

CP 7.598. Let me endeavor to explain the attitude of the physicist.
Many people imagine that there is a certain class of facts which it
is repugnant to the physicist to acknowledge. This is not so. If
there were such a class of facts, the phenomena connected with
radium would fall within it. Yet there has been no disposition to
ignore these phenomena. But the physicist recognizes that a phenomenon
is of no use to him unless both it and its conditions can be subjected
to exact analysis.  Moreover, the only theories that can have any value
for him are those from which can be deduced exact predictions capable
of exact verification. As long as a fact stands isolated and strange,
it is next to impossible to make sure that it is a fact, and quite
impossible to render it useful to science.

As an example, I'll mention some unexplained phenomena about the
composer, Percy Grainger.  He was born in Australia, but he lived
in White Plains, NY, from 1921 until his death in 1961.  His house
is now on the National Registry of Historical Places.

I have some friends, musicians and composers, who are members of
the Percy Grainger Society.  And I have attended some concerts
and lectures at the Grainger House, which is about a dozen miles
from my home.

One of them was studying some of Grainger's manuscripts late in the
evening.  He spread them out on the dining-room table, which was the
same place where Percy would have written them.  And he had an uncanny
feeling that Percy was looking over his shoulder.  It seemed that he
was trying to give some friendly advice.

A few years later, the PG Society installed motion-activated video
cameras, at the front door, back door, and some of the rooms.  The
cameras rarely showed any activity.  But on 2 July 2016, there were
strange occurrences at 8:32 pm and 9:23 pm:
https://percygraingeramerica.org/blog/4674266.

Both occurred in the dining room -- streaks of light above the
table where Percy wrote his MSS and where the musicians studied
them many years after he died.  Unexplained phenomena:

 1. Stray light, by itself, would not trigger the motion detectors
    of the camera.  They could only be triggered by physical motion.

 2. Light from the outside, even a laser beam, would shine on a wall
    or the ceiling.  But these lights were bright streaks in the
    middle of the room above the dining-room table.

 3. The motion detectors that turned on the camera also turned on
    some lights.  But the streaks of light were brighter than
    anything in the room that reflected the camera lights.

 4. The motion detectors of the cameras at the front and back doors
    were not triggered and no other videos were made that evening.

 5. The experts at the company that made the cameras could not
    explain what turned on the camera or what caused the streaks
    of light that were recorded by the camera.

As Peirce wrote in CP 7.598, "As long as a fact stands isolated and
strange, it is next to impossible to make sure that it is a fact,
and quite impossible to render it useful to science."

John
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