Approved For Release 2003/09/10 : CIA-RDP96-00792ROO0400430012-4 09-Jun-90 L09-Jun-90 page Parapsychology in the People's Republic of China: 1979-1989 Leping Zhal & Tron McConnell ABSTRACT: The senior author, a graduate student of physics in the U.S.A., provides from his personal involvement, an informal history of the parapsychology movement in the People's Republic of China (P.R.C.) over the last decade. From 1979 to 1982, research into ESP (and PK) among children swept through China. This research upon what was called "exceptional functions of the human body" (EFHB), gave rise to a sizable literatu re and to commitments, pro and con, among scientists. Two protagonists emerged to carry the battle to the highest political forum. The opponent of EFHB was an eminent social scientist and vice-chairman of the Chinese Academy of Science. The proponent was a physicist regarded internationally as "the father of Chinese space technology." After a public debate inthe press, ending in a collaborative test of the country's best-known psychics, the Communist Party ruled that. both sides must cease public discussion but that unsupported research could proceed quietly. From 1983 W 1&6, interest jor universities but shifted to gifted adult psychics. Research was c-QRductcd-,pAi#y_,q irp,4 primarily_ under defense-related ices Bering, where gros@s-PK-effuis @yere rje)o 0. Nle-a-n-w-FuT6,''l~tivAldly--C~irculated publications fanned civilian research interest in parapsychology under the ancient rubrics of "qigong" and "Traditional Chinese Medicine." In 198 7 a set of seminal PK experiments was reported in the Acta Biophysica Sinica from Qinghua University. From 1987 to 1989 interest in qigong grew until, according to news reports, theree were 20 million participants, including top leaders of the Communist Party. Restraints on research were quietly lifted. Official approval was granted 'to a "China Society of Somatic Science" for the study of EFHB. The space scientist mentioned earlier was made responsible for coordinating all of Chinese science. The favoring of parapsychology has a0phrently persisted despite the Beijing events of the Spring of 1989. Meanwhile, a divergence 6f the popular qigong movement and scientific EFHB research has begun. The greater prevalence and strength- of psi effects reported from the P.R.C., as compared to laboratory experience in the- West, ra'iscs- a --- question a--s-t-b-the role of the West's Cartesian cultural heritage in determining @mpirical reality. 'In accordance with Chinese custom Chinese family names precede given names in this paper except in the author's by-line, where the U.S-A. custom of family-name-last is followed to facilitate indexing. Mr. 2ha is currently studying for a doctoral degree in physics at the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He received a B.S. in physics from Wuhan University in P. R. China in 1982 and an M.S. from the University of Pittsburgh in 1988. Between 1979 and 1986 he participated in parapsychological research activities at Wuhan University, Beijing Teachers College, and elsewhere. Approved For Release 2003/09/10 : CIA-RDP96-00792ROO0400430012-4