This post should rankle Steve further,

and maybe
@bilby, too.
In this paper,
Materialism is Holding Back Science, Alex Gomez-Marin, a theoretical physicist and neuroscientist, presents a defeasible case for remote viewing, based on an “an anomalous” 1979 paper in Nature. Remote viewing is the claim that we obtain information about distant events without any recourse to our known senses. It was a staple of discussion on Art Bell’s Coast to Coast crackpottery (?) in the 1990s. (I’ve not yet read the Nature paper.)
The linked essay is a study in both the philosophy and sociology of science, which are both very real things. The author does not attempt to defend remote viewing, but argues that the reaction of the scientific community to the claim was insular.
Confronted with the remove viewing claim, most scientists, as the author describes, responded that it was not true, because it
cannot be true. The author points out that this is not a very scientific way of thinking.
A lot of modern science, whether acknowledged or not by scientists, depends on the philosphical assumption of metaphysical naturalism or physicalism, or materialism — what have you. On this assumption, something like remote viewing would be hard if not impossible to defend, and so is ruled out a priori.
But is metaphysical naturalism true?
This thread examines the analytic idealism of Bernardo Kastrup.
Broadly, metaphysical idealism is the philosophical concept that all of existence is mental, and that the existence of a material world external to our own private mental worlds is mythical. Note that Kastrup rejects supernaturalism but draws a distinction between naturalist materialism, which he rejects, and naturalist idealism, which he advocates.
One reason to favor idealism as opposed to materialism or physicalism is Chalmers’ Hard Problem, which is discussed in the analytic idealism thread. But there are problems with using the Hard Problem in defense of idealism, about which more later.
Still, an account of remote viewing, consciousness surviving death, and other things besides, might be sustainable under an assumption of idealism.
The above linked paper also deals, as mentioned, with the sociology of science — in the race for grants, peer acceptance and prestige, stuff Iike remote viewing and idealism must be ruled out a priori. This, as the author argues, holds back science.
Whether remote viewing or idealism is true is beside the point.
The author describes his own
near-death experience here, which I expect probably motivated his interest in remote viewing and the possible shortcomings of materialism.