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<text id=94TT0473>
<title>
Apr. 25, 1994: The Man From Outer Space
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BEHAVIOR, Page 74
The Man From Outer Space
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Harvard psychiatrist John Mack claims that tales of UFO abductions
are real. But experts and former patients say his research is
shoddy.
</p>
<p>By James Willwerth/Boston
</p>
<p> The young man had slowly become aware of his enigmatic memories,
of otherworldly beings lurking in his life, of "strange coincidences"
and time out of joint. What was happening? Who could tell him?
Casting about for help, says the boyish Pennsylvania health-care
worker, "I saw this article in the newspaper about Dr. Mack.
And I thought if you can't trust a Harvard professor, who can
you trust?"
</p>
<p> John Mack is more than a Harvard professor; he is a respected
author (his book on T.E. Lawrence, A Prince of Our Disorder,
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1977), a psychiatrist who helped found
the clinical psychiatry department at Cambridge Hospital and
a noted scientific advocate of environmental and antiwar causes.
Under Mack's hypnotic guidance, the young man "remembered" being
abducted repeatedly by aliens, taken to a spaceship and having
a probe inserted in his anus. He also recalled past lives, including
one as a young Indian warrior called Panther-by-the-Creek, who
died in battle. Even more astonishing, Mack believed every word.
</p>
<p> The story of "Dave Reynolds" is one of 13 recounted by Mack
in his new book Abduction (Scribners), the result of his study
of scores of "experiencers," people who he believes have come
in contact with extraterrestrial visitors. The striking similarity
of their memories and Mack's academic reputation have led UFO
believers to proclaim Abduction as the most important step yet
in scientifically validating abduction experiences. A 1991 Roper
poll found that 4 million people have had at least some abduction-related
experiences, such as seeing unusual lights or missing time.
"Until John came along, there wasn't enough credibility for
this subject to support a methodological investigation," says
Caroline McLeod, Mack's research chief. "Until now, if you decided
to research alien abductions, you risked being pigeonholed as
a lunatic."
</p>
<p> Psychologists and ethicists do not question Mack's sanity so
much as his motives and methodology. They charge that he is
misusing the techniques of hypnosis, trying to shape the "memories"
of his subjects to suit his vision of an intergalactic future,
and very possibly endangering the emotional health of his patients
in the process. "If this were just an example of some zany new
outer limit of how foolish psychology and psychiatry can be
in the wrong hands, we'd look at it, roll our eyes and walk
away," says University of California, Berkeley, psychologist
Richard Ofshe. "But the use of his techniques in counseling
is substantially harming lots of people."
</p>
<p> The scientific skepticism is bolstered by some unusual firsthand
evidence. One of Mack's "experiencers" has revealed to TIME
that she was actually an undercover debunker who worked her
way into Mack's confidence and rose high in the ranks of his
subjects. She found that Mack's work was riddled with scientific
irregularities; it lacked a formal research protocol as well
as legally required consent forms that advise research subjects
of potential risks. She also discovered that Mack billed the
insurance companies of at least some patient-subjects for what
he described as therapy sessions.
</p>
<p> Mack says he expected the disbelief that has greeted the bizarre
tales recounted in his book. "This isn't supposed to be," he
explained to TIME. "You aren't supposed to have little guys
with big black eyes taking men, women and children against their
wills on beams of light through walls and windows into strange
craft and have this going on all over the country." But after
hearing dozens of such stories, Mack concluded that the abductions
were real. Moreover, he discerned a motive behind them: the
abductors, it seems, were implanting mind-to-mind messages urging
better care of the planet. The aliens' apparent objective was
an intergalactic breeding program combined with a brotherly
warning of impending doom if the earth doesn't change its warlike
and ecologically wasteful ways.
</p>
<p> Mack's studies are largely funded by a tax-exempt, nonprofit
research organization that he founded in 1983, now called the
Center for Psychology and Social Change. With headquarters in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, the center was started as an attempt
to study the nuclear arms race in psychological terms. After
the cold war ended, the organization started raising money for
scholars who want to combine psychology with such topics as
ecology and ethnic conflicts. Explains the center's executive
director, Vivienne Simon: "One of our main goals is to challenge
current scientific method, which is to deny all things you cannot
reduce to statistics."
</p>
<p> Donna Bassett's story seemed to fit right in with that goal.
Bassett, 37, then a Boston-based writer and researcher, became
interested in Mack's studies after hearing complaints that he
was "strip mining" the stories of emotionally distraught people
and failing to help them with follow-up therapy. After reading
stacks of books and articles on UFO abductions, Bassett made
up an elaborate story of otherworldly encounters involving her
family, going back to the 11th century. Her great-grandmother,
she said, saw "little people," whom she called angels from God.
Bassett herself saw "balls of light" around her house at age
five. She also said that as a child she had a space-alien friend
named Jane, who healed her hands after a neighbor stuck them
in boiling fudge to punish her for snooping.
</p>
<p> Bassett participated in three hypnotic-regression sessions (she
says she used method-acting techniques to fake her way through
them) and eventually served as treasurer of an abductee support
group that Mack organized and ran. "I've never seen a UFO in
my life," Bassett says, "and I certainly haven't been inside
one."
</p>
<p> Bassett, who made extensive tapes and notes of her life in the
UFO cult, says Mack provided her with UFO literature to read
prior to her sessions--a practice that medical hypnotists
say will almost surely influence hypnotic revelations. During
the sessions, which Mack held in a darkened bedroom in his house
rather than in a neutral office, he asked leading questions
that reflected his biases. "John made it obvious what he wanted
to hear," says Bassett. "I provided the answers." Among other
recollections, she told of an encounter with John F. Kennedy
and Nikita Khrushchev on board a spaceship during the Cuban
missile crisis. Bassett said Khrushchev was crying and that
"I sat in his lap, and I put my arms around his neck, and I
told him it would be O.K." Hearing her tale, Mack became so
excited that he leaned on the bed too heavily, and it collapsed.
</p>
<p> Later, at a support-group session, Bassett confronted Mack about
mixing research and therapy. According to Bassett, Mack billed
insurance companies for some support-group sessions, claiming
they were "therapeutic" rather than "research." Yet some members
of the support group complained about the lack of therapy following
their traumatic hypnosis sessions. "That I can't do everything
that each person needs does not mean that what I'm doing is
not therapeutic," Mack said. "There are too many of you, and
I'm also doing research."
</p>
<p> Bassett's account is supported by others who had close encounters
with Mack. "He had a hidden agenda," says Dave Duclos, who left
the experiment when he became disenchanted. "He was against
anybody who said anything negative about the aliens. Once he
said to me, `If you think the aliens are bad, Mr. Duclos, keep
thinking about it until you realize they are good.' "
</p>
<p> But what of the surprising consistency of the stories Mack elicited?
"Dr. Mack is ignoring the high level of suggestion and imagery
that surrounds the way in which he deals with these people,"
says Fred Frankel, 70, a Harvard Medical School professor and
psychiatrist in chief at Boston's Beth Israel hospital. "Hypnosis
helps you regain memories that you would not have otherwise
recalled...But some will be true, and some will be false.
The expectation of the hypnotist and the expectation of the
person who is going to be hypnotized can influence the result."
</p>
<p> To many experts, the abduction scenarios bear a striking resemblance
to stories of satanic rituals and child abuse--stories that
can be shaped by all sorts of outside influences, from movies
and TV shows to the suggestive questioning of a therapist. Says
Ofshe, who is an expert in hypnosis: "If you convince someone
they've been brutalized and raped, and you encourage them to
fully experience the emotions appropriate for this event--and the event never happened--you've led them through an experience
of pain that is utterly gratuitous."
</p>
<p> Confronted by TIME with the news that Bassett had faked her
abduction experience, Mack declined to discuss her case, though
he hinted that he had doubts about her reliability. (Hers is
not among the 13 case histories recounted in his book, but tapes
of her sessions leave little doubt that Mack took her seriously.)
In general, he insists, there is no evidence that the core memories
he elicited are distorted. "When [the subjects] talk about
this--and other people in the room with me have witnessed
this, including several psychiatrists--the experience is that
of a person who has been through something deeply disturbing."
While acknowledging that he is not "an expert on hypnosis,"
Mack scoffs at the debunkers. "The attacks on hypnosis didn't
begin until it began to reveal information that the culture
didn't want to hear."
</p>
<p> Mack's view of the UFO phenomenon reflects a larger philosophical
stance that rejects "rational" scientific explanations and embraces
a hazier New Age reality. "I don't know why there's such a zeal
to find a conventional physical explanation," he says. "I don't
know why people have such trouble simply accepting the fact
that something unusual is going on here...We have lost the
faculties to know other realities that other cultures still
can know. The world no longer has spirit, has soul, is sacred.
We've lost all that ability to know a world beyond the physical...I am a bridge between those two worlds."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>