In my last post, we looked at a wild story illustrating the general principle that once some crazy claim gets out there, it's damn near impossible to eradicate. Today I've got a second one -- a story that I'd heard of a long while ago but just bumped into again yesterday.
The retelling of this particular claim prompted me to roll my eyes so far I could see the back of my own skull, and say, "No way. This is still making the rounds?" But of course it's still making the rounds. Once the rounds are joined, it's permanent. There is, apparently, no getting off the Wingnut Carousel.
This rather unfortunate conclusion was prompted by a recent article in All That's Interesting, written one Marco Margaritoff, called "The Story of the Chronovisor, the Rumored Vatican Invention That Allows You to See Into the Past." The bones of the story go as follows.
In 1972, an Italian Catholic priest named Pellegrino Ernetti published an incredible claim in the popular magazine La Domenica del Corriere: that he and a group of scientists had developed a machine that allowed you to witness events from the past. It was, he said, made of cathode ray tubes, antennae, and wires, and "therefore picks up sound and light signals on all wavelengths." This is an immediate red flag to anyone who knows some science; there is no configuration of -- well, anything -- that allows absorption (and thus detection) of all possible wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation and sound. (If there were, it could save NASA a metric fuck tonne of money, because they wouldn't have to have separate x-ray, gamma ray, infrared, microwave, and visible light telescopes.) But perhaps we can set that aside as hyperbole.
After all, I'm not sure how observing the assassination of Julius Caesar in the x-ray region of the spectrum would be all that useful in any case.
In any case, Ernetti said the whole thing had gotten started twenty years earlier, when he was working with a friend, the Franciscan physician and psychologist Agostino Gemelli, to fix a balky tape recorder they were using for some research. Gemelli was frustrated by the uncooperative machine, and (half in jest) called out to his deceased father for assistance. When they replayed the tape, they heard Gemelli's annoyed plea... followed by the answer, "Of course I shall help you. I'm always with you."
Alarmed, the two men brought this to the attention of the Pope at the time, Pius XII. The Pope was just tickled by this, because it'd finally be evidence of an afterlife, and convince all of us stubborn doubters. He encouraged Ernetti and Gemelli to continue their research, but to focus on the paranormal, and see if they could gather more... um, "data."
Fortunately for his reputation, Gemelli died in 1959, but Ernetti kept going. By 1972, he had developed what he called a Chronovisor -- a machine that because of its amazing ability to detect everything, could pick up the "waves" left as traces from historical events as far back as you want to go. The alleged science behind all this never got much beyond that; ineffable impressions still bouncing around the place somehow, that could be detected and amplified.
Because scientific types were already lining up with their objections about how impossible this is, Ernetti brought out the big guns. He had been assisted in building the Chronovisor, he said -- by none other than Enrico Fermi and Wehrner von Braun! (Fermi was long dead by then, and von Braun desperately ill with terminal cancer, so neither of them were in a position to contradict him.)
And, Ernetti insisted, he'd tried out his magic machine. He had witnessed the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, heard a speech by Cicero from the great man's own mouth ("How powerful it was!" Ernetti gushed,"what flights of oratory!"), watched a performance of the lost dramatic masterpiece Thyestes by Quintus Ennius, and even witnessed the crucifixion of Jesus.
Oh, and I've got proof, Ernetti added. Because my device allows any kind of light to be captured, it also takes photographs! (In the words of the 1970s infomercials, it probably also slices, dices, and makes julienne fries.) As evidence, he brought out a pic of Jesus on the cross:
Then, according to one of his relatives, shortly before his death in 1994, Ernetti suddenly reversed course and admitted that the entire thing had been a hoax from beginning to end. There had been no collaboration with Fermi and von Braun, the quotes he brought back from Thyestes were written by him, and the Jesus photo and other such artifacts were faked. "I was hopeful that my Chronovisor would work," he said. "I was always so optimistic."
Which is an odd thing to say, isn't it? I mean, if you know you're faking evidence, it seems like you've already given up on getting any actual evidence. But the human mind is pretty good at holding two or more mutually exclusive convictions at the same time, so perhaps this isn't as unusual as it might seem.
And the problem, of course, is that Ernetti never publicly confessed; all we have is the word of his relatives who spoke with him as he was dying. The people who'd believed his story simply disbelieved in his sudden deathbed confession.
But even so, I don't see how anyone could dispute that the quality of the evidence is, to put not too fine a point on it, abysmal. A bunch of handwaving about magical super-absorptive metals that pick up magical traces of historical events that conveniently have never been detected by anyone else, and the only thing we actually have in hand is a couple of photographs that are obvious fakes.
But the astonishing thing is that now, over fifty years later, there are still people who believe this. There are even claims that the FBI and CIA here in the United States have used Ernetti's design for remote viewing and information-gathering. As far as the Margaritoff article, it says the Chronovisor "remains a Vatican mystery," and its reality is still "hotly contested."
The thing is, the only reason it is still hotly contested is because of articles like this that take it seriously, and do a both-sides-ism thing with the evidence for and against, as if the skeptics and believers are somehow on an equal footing.
And in this case, they're very much not. Whether Ernetti had a last-minute change of heart or not, his claim is (1) scientifically ridiculous, (2) lacking in any kind of convincing evidence, and (3) rest upon the statement of one man who said, basically, "No, I really did this, I swear!" and threw around names like Pope Pius XII and a couple of famous physicists to give himself more credibility.
So the Chronovisor is a complete non-starter, and I would very much appreciate it if everyone would treat it as such.
In any case, there you have it. The tale of the Vatican time window. Yet another example of the principle that once you launch a loony claim, we'll never be rid of it. Jesus himself said that "the poor are always with us" (not that I heard him say it personally, mind you), but I think we can safely add, "... as will the hoaxers."







