Graham Nicholls
Graham Nicholls | |
---|---|
Born | Graham Nicholls 30 July 1975 London, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Author, speaker and artist |
Years active | Since 1999 |
Known for | His exploration of the out-of-body experience, Installation art and writings on spirituality. |
Website | www.grahamnicholls.com |
Graham Nicholls (born 30 July 1975) is a British author, installation artist and specialist on
Early life
Graham Nicholls was born in the Paddington district of central London into a working-class family. He states that during his early life he was surrounded by crime and social problems, but that the influence of literature, art, science and spiritual philosophies helped him to look beyond the limitations of this environment.[4][5]
Art career
Since the early 1990s Nicholls has developed artistic works that explore subjects such as
Out-of-body experiences
Nicholls claims to have had
As part of his inquiry into
Veridical cases
Nicholls also claims to have had several veridical out-of-body experiences.[11] In his books, articles and in recent videos published he gives examples of his out-of-body experiences that have been witnessed and confirmed by others. The videos feature the witnesses describing what they saw and recorded in notes at the time of the OBEs supporting Nicholls version of events. He also outlines an example of a claimed objective OBE in his October 2011 article for the journal of The Institute of Noetic Sciences.[12] Skeptics would generally dispute such claims as unreliable and impossible by current understandings of science.
Skepticism
In the October 2012 issue of The Psychologist, the journal of the British Psychological Society, a review of Navigating the Out-of-Body Experience by Graham Nicholls, criticised him for failing "to take into account psychometric properties (e.g. reliability and validity)" in the questionnaire section of the book. The reviewer went on to state that the book "does not meet the standards required by professional psychologists".[13]
Well known sceptic and critic of parapsychology James Randi also responded to an article about Nicholls that appeared in 2011 asking why those mentioned in the article, including Dean Radin, Rupert Sheldrake, Michael Persinger, and Graham Nicholls have not applied for the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge. Nicholls penned a response to Randi expressing doubts towards Randi's honesty, scientific credibility, and the limits of a single test to explore issues such as the existence of OBEs.[11]
Activism
In 2004 Nicholls founded an organisation called the Shahmai Network with a special focus on work towards relieving poverty, as well as human rights. The network were official members of the Make Poverty History campaign focused on campaigning for debt relief to countries in situations of extreme poverty, this culminated with protests aimed to influence the G8 conference, which took place in 2005.[14]
Beyond poverty he is also interested in the various social justice issues. According to a 2012 book on polyamory, Nicholls supports LGBT issues, polyamory, and feminism.[15] In 2009 he founded www.polyamory.org.uk, the United Kingdom's first website about polyamory; at the time he was in a polyamorous triad with two female partners.[16]
He is also an outspoken supporter of animal rights and veganism; in a recent interview he states that he has been vegetarian since 1992 and went vegan in 2005. He also states that "Veganism was the obvious next step in my ethical understanding and one that avoids supporting violent and exploitative practices."[17]
Books
- ISBN 978-1-84694-464-2
- ISBN 978-0-7387-2761-5
References
- ^ Twist, Jo (18 May 2004), New expression for virtual city, BBC, retrieved 12 January 2012
- ^ Lecture – Out-of-Body Experiences – In Search of the Truth – Graham Nicholls, The Society for Psychical Research, 2013, archived from the original on 18 July 2013, retrieved 20 July 2013
- ^ CATS College Cambridge students at the world-famous Cambridge Union, CATS College, 2011, archived from the original on 5 January 2012, retrieved 12 January 2012
- ^ Graham Nicholls Interview, Myartspace.com, 2008, retrieved 1 October 2009
- ^ a b Graham Nicholls Video Artist (PDF), Xfuns Magazine, 2007, archived from the original (PDF) on 18 December 2008, retrieved 1 October 2009
- ISBN 9781841501376.
- ISBN 9780230524651.
- ISBN 978-0-444-50870-6.
- ^ Anna Pukas (14 July 2011). "Out of their minds?". Daily Express.
- ^ Graham Nicholls LCS Interview, London College of Spirituality, 2009, archived from the original on 17 July 2011, retrieved 1 October 2009
- ^ a b c Art and Science: The Truth Behind Telepathy, Spoonfed, 2009, archived from the original on 8 September 2009, retrieved 1 October 2009
- ^ Nicholls, Graham (October 2011). "Out-of-Body Experiences: In Search of the Truth". Noetic Now (15). USA: The Institute of Noetic Sciences.
- ISSN 0952-8229.
- ^ Make Poverty History Official Members, Make Poverty History, 2005, archived from the original on 23 May 2005, retrieved 23 August 2011
- ISBN 978-1442200227.
- ^ "Meet the polyamorists – a growing band of people who believe". The Independent. 13 September 2009.
- ^ Graham Nicholls interview with Elisabeth Haljas (Estonia), fruitarians.net/, 2010, archived from the original on 19 October 2011, retrieved 20 July 2013
External links
- Official website
- Extraordinary Out-of-Body Experience – A video detailing a witnessed OBE, 2013
- Interview with AfterlifeTV – A video interview with Bob Olson, 2012
- Avenues of the Human Spirit – Interview about Nicholls' first book, science and scepticism, 2011
- Out-of-Body Experiences: In Search of the Truth – Article by Graham Nicholls for Noetic Now, the journal of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, 2011
- Skeptical Investigations Archived 21 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine – A report on TAM London by Graham Nicholls, 2010