Lynne McTaggart See book keywords and concepts |
In the 1970s, Persinger was able to test the effects of geomagnetic activity on telepathy during sleep by teaming up with noted parapsychol-ogist Stanley Krippner, then the director of a dream laboratory at Mai-monides Medical Center in New York City. Krippner had perfected an experimental protocol to test telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition in dreams during deep sleep. Volunteers would be paired off. |
Lynne Mctaggart See book keywords and concepts |
Unlike the initial SRI studies, no one was chosen because of a gift for telepathy. Furthermore, better scores were obtained when the traveling participants were randomly assigned their sites from a large pool of possibilities, rather than spontaneously selecting it themselves. This made it unlikely that any common knowledge between the pairs of participants improved the scores.
Jahn, as well as Puthoff, realized that nothing in the current theories of biology or physics could account for remote viewing. |
| He'd read of studies like the one with the Mexican painting, which was one of the more dramatic of studies on telepathy conducted by Charles Honorton, a noted consciousness researcher at the Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York. For a behaviorist like Braud, the Honorton study represented a radical new education.
Braud was soft-spoken and thoughtful, with a gentle, deliberate manner, most of his face encompassed by a generous beard. He'd begun his career as a psychologist of the old school, with a particular interest in the psychology and biochemistry of memory and learning. |
| Together they'd realized that Ed's journey to the moon presented them with a unique opportunity to test whether human telepathy could be achieved at greater distances than it had in Dr Rhine's laboratory. Here was a once-in-a-lifetime chance to see if these sorts of communications could stretch well beyond any distances possible on earth. |
| There was plenty of research on telepathy. There'd been the highly successful card experiments of Joseph Rhine, used by Mitchell in outer space. Even more convincing were the studies of the Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn in the late 1960s, conducted in its special dream research laboratory. Montague Ullman and Stanley Krippner had conducted numerous experiments like the one with the Mexican painting to see if thoughts could be sent and incorporated into dreams. The Maimonides work had been so successful? |
| Thereafter, the study would follow the usual design of a telepathy experiment. Braud's hunch proved correct. The ganzfeld experiments were among the most successful of all.
When Braud's own studies were combined with twenty-seven others, twenty-three, or 82 per cent, were found to have success rates higher than chance. The median effect size was 0.32 - not dissimilar to PEAR's REG effect size.21
Important shifts in thinking often occur in interesting synchronicities. |
Lynne McTaggart See book keywords and concepts |
Although no one had any prior experience in telepathy, some participants began to pick up information about our subjects, notably Annemarie. Several meditators were convinced that she was an amateur singer, and had a recurrent problem with her throat. Isabel thought she might be suffering from gut problems or something gynecological. Michael, who was German, kept thinking of the term im Schutz der Dunkelheit ("under protection of darkness"), and interpreted it to mean that she was wrapped up in a blanket. |
| Plant telepathy interested me less than a tangential discovery of his that has been sidelined amid all his adverse publicity: evidence of a constant two-way flow of information between all living things. Every organism, from bacteria to human beings, appears to be in perpetual quantum communication. This relentless conversation offers a ready mechanism by which thoughts can have a physical effect.
This discovery resulted from a silly little diversion in 1966; Backster, at the time a tall, wiry man with a crew cut and a great deal of childlike enthusiasm, was easily distracted. |
Lynne Mctaggart See book keywords and concepts |
Braud had even seen cases of telepathy during the influence sessions. At the beginning of one session, one influencer happened to remark that the electrodermal tracings of the subject were so regimented that they reminded him of a German techno-pop musical band called Kraftwerk. When Braud returned to the recipient's room at the end of the session, the first thing she said was that early in the session, for some odd reason, she kept thinking of the pop group Kraftwerk. In Braud's work this kind of association was becoming the norm, rather than the exception. |
Lynne McTaggart See book keywords and concepts |
During days of geomagnetic calm, spontaneous instances of telepathy or clairvoyance are more likely to occur40 and remote viewing accuracy is more likely to improve.41 Persinger carried out his own intriguing test of ESP using a group of couples. One member of each pair was shown an image while it was being bathed in magnetic fields, then asked to describe the memory of an experience he or she had shared with his or her partner that was prompted by the image. Simultaneously, in another room, the partners were shown the same images and also asked to describe a memory. |
Larry Dossey See book keywords and concepts |
There are no absolute separations between premonition, insight, intuition, dreams, hunches, synchronicities, revelations, telepathy, and clairvoyance. The common denominator is nonlocal mind—a way of knowing that operates outside of space and time. telepathy
Telepathy is a term coined in 1882 by the British researcher R W. H. Myers to describe communication between minds by some means other than the normal sensory channels. telepathy is an expression of nonlocal mind—mind manifesting beyond the confines of brain and body. |
Pam Montgomery See book keywords and concepts |
Is it shared telepathy that lets them know precisely when to turn so that not one wing flutters adrift, or does their group consciousness come from an ancient imprint embedded in their very essence?
Journal Entry, February 2007
57
It is difficult to give a definitive explanation or meaning of spirit, as the very defining of it places limitations on that which is limitless. For our purposes here we will refer to Webster, who says spirit is "the vital principle held to give life or that which animates physical organisms." Its etymology is from the Latin spiritus, meaning breath. |
Win Wenger, Ph.D. and Richard Poe See book keywords and concepts |
Some years ago, a group of parapsychologists thought that they had uncovered conclusive proof of telepathy. They had been testing the ability of experimental subjects to "guess" which concealed card a researcher was holding. Certain test subjects gave so many accurate responses that mere guesswork was ruled statistically impossible. Those subjects must be using telepathy, the parapsychologists reasoned.
Fortunately, there were some active skeptics on hand to double-check the data. It turned out that the "telepathic" subjects were not reading the researchers' minds at all. |
Richard Bartlett See book keywords and concepts |
This understanding opens the door for phenomena such as telepathy. Have you ever heard the saying, "Great minds think alike"? With what you just read about morphic resonance, you can easily begin to understand how ideas and concepts can be accessed and brought to conscious awareness from the unlimited pool of universal intelligence.
My point is that when you free up your thinking from its normal linear patterns, you can begin to access and integrate new information directly from the Zero Point Energy Field: what some physicists have referred to as the Mind of God. |
Lynne McTaggart See book keywords and concepts |
Krippner had perfected an experimental protocol to test telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition in dreams during deep sleep. Volunteers would be paired off. While one partner slept, the other would be in a separate room and would be asked to concentrate on an image and attempt to "transmit" the image to the dreamer, so that it would be incorporated into his dream. Upon waking, the participants who had been sleeping would describe their dreams in great detail, to determine whether they contained anything resembling the target pictures they had been sent during their slumbers. |
Gabriel Cousens, M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
Phosphorous is also used up in telepathy, ESP, and dream work, as well as in mental imbalances such as obsessions, delusions, and hallucinations.
Phosphorous is needed for bone development and semen formation.
In the form of calcium phosphate, phosphorous helps build and repair bone. Phosphorous is needed in DNA and RNA production, and for making ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which is a major way energy is stored at the biomolecular level in the body. Phosphorous is needed for white blood cell production and for metabolic regulation. |
Gary E. Schwartz and Linda G. S. Russek See book keywords and concepts |
According to Laszlo, nearly every current anomaly seen throughout history and documented in contemporary science (such as out-of-body experiences or telepathy over long distances), becomes plausible when we entertain the idea that the vacuum is actually the place where all is connected, the space we all share. When we add the systemic memory process to Laszlo's logic, the vacuum of space itself becomes eternal, alive, and evolving. And our visions of the Grand Organizing Designer become even more exciting. The universe becomes an organizing and remembering universe, a living energy universe. |
Joseph E. Mario See book keywords and concepts |
Hojas de la Pastora Leaves of the Shepherdess" (Salvia divinorum) Leaf tea; a broadleaf Sage of the Mint family in Mazatec, southern Mexico; Aztec Pipilzintzintli; divinatory; for visualizations, telepathy, and clairvoyance. Used like Coleus, described above.
•Hops (Humulus lupulus) the female plant has a yellow powder related to hemp resin; a sedative, for insomnia (tea). (*)
•Hydrangea Leaves (Hyd. paniculata grandiflora) Has a chemical like cyanide. |
Win Wenger, Ph.D. and Richard Poe See book keywords and concepts |
The Sensitive Mind
Enthusiasts of telepathy were keenly disappointed by these results. Nevertheless, the experiment revealed a degree of perceptiveness in the test subjects that was hardly less surprising than the ability to read minds.
For thousands of years, Polynesian sailors have known how to navigate by feel alone. You can take a traditionally trained outrigger pilot, blindfold him, and place him in the water hundreds of miles from home. Just by feeling the ocean currents on his body, he will be able to pinpoint his location with great accuracy. |
Gary E. Schwartz and Linda G. S. Russek See book keywords and concepts |
The question is, can all of the data in this experiment be explained by remote viewing or telepathy with the living? We don't think so. The reason is that when Laurie was attempting to contact the departed hypothesized co-investigators, she was flooded with information, none of which was wanted! For example, we were frankly not interested, then, in hearing from Betty about how much she loved her daughter. And we did not ask for images about where Susy grew up as a child. However, Laurie reported seeing a farm-like house with a cow in the backyard, plus a flower and vegetable garden. |
Win Wenger, Ph.D. and Richard Poe See book keywords and concepts |
Such discernment is not in the least bit psychic or paranormal, yet it seems hardly less marvelous than clairvoyance or telepathy. Like the crafty test subjects in the aforementioned ESP experiment, Polynesian sailors have managed to harness perceptions so subtle that most of us aren't even aware that we have them. The Butterfly Incident at my 1981 seminar may have resulted from just such enhanced attentiveness. Perhaps those thirty-four participants unconsciously tuned in to faint, subaudible cues and patterns of behavior throughout the room. Pending further research, we can only guess. |
Joseph E. Mario See book keywords and concepts |
Such innate potentials exist as ExtraSensory Perception (ESP), telepathy (in two people who know each other well); and a sixth sense based on magnetism which swallows use to return to Capistrano, computing distance and annual time to arrive at location, on the exact same St. Joseph's Day March 19, every year), monarch butterflies, and whales navigate over long distances (whales often beach in areas of low magnetism from sea to shore). |
Gary E. Schwartz and Linda G. S. Russek See book keywords and concepts |
This was the control picture (to test for possible telepathy, remote viewing, etc., on the part of Medium Two).
Step Four: Medium Two (Laurie Campbell), who had never met Medium One (Susy Smith), and had not even spoken to her on the phone, attempted in two, two-hour video recorded sessions at a later time, to contact each of the deceased purported collaborators, and receive information about each of their experimental drawings.
Step Five: Medium Two also attempted to receive information about Medium One's control picture. |
| If the survival of consciousness hypothesis were correct and psi (a term meaning the paranormal, particularly telepathy and action at a distance) was not involved, then Laurie would have been accurate in Step Four, but not in Step Five. If only psi was involved, Laurie could have gotten all five pictures correct. This is in fact what she did.
Of course, the systemic memory process predicts that a sensitive person should be able to retrieve information from both the physical living and the "dead," hence Laurie should be good with all of it. |
Walter Last See book keywords and concepts |
This method works on the same principle as radionics and telepathy with a two-way exchange of information energy between the body and any separated part. additional therapies: Use colloidal silver or copper, oxygen therapy, and an electronic zapper, and possibly a magnetic pulser (see step 19). You can also use a hot bath (with Epsom salt) followed by sweating; a hot foot bath with mustard powder or cayenne; cold packs placed on the abdomen and around the calves. |
Michael Talbot See book keywords and concepts |
Bohm believes the ubiquitousness of meaning offers a possible explanation for both telepathy and remote viewing. He thinks both may actually be just different forms of psychokinesis. Just as PK is a resonance of meaning conveyed from a mind to an object, telepathy can be viewed as a resonance of meaning conveyed from a mind to a mind, says Bohm. In like manner, remote viewing can be looked at as a resonance of meaning conveyed from an object to a mind. |
Brian O'Leary See book keywords and concepts |
For example, we have Cleve Backster's astounding data on telepathy and biocom-munications '; Rupert Sheldrake's experiments on various species showing intraspecies communications that cannot be explained entirely by heredity and the environmentand the miraculous healings many individuals have reported widely in the literature. All of life seems to possess energy fields of consciousness that transcend time and space.
The recent stunning developments in defining the human genome reveal a mysterious complexity in the molecular structure of all life. |
| For example, Radin's look at thousands of studies on telepathy and perception at a distance show significant "hit rates". The studies also reveal that about one per cent of the population have an innate psychic talent, and no amount of training seems to help the others much. Regardless of psychic ability, the analyses indicate that there is greater performance when operators remotely view objects and events by free choice rather than by constrained choices, such as concealed cards. Hypnosis can further enhance the effects. |
Michael Talbot See book keywords and concepts |
Just as PK is a resonance of meaning conveyed from a mind to an object, telepathy can be viewed as a resonance of meaning conveyed from a mind to a mind, says Bohm. In like manner, remote viewing can be looked at as a resonance of meaning conveyed from an object to a mind. "When harmony or resonance of 'meanings' is established, the action works both ways, so that the 'meanings' of the distant system could act in the viewer to produce a kind of inverse psychokinesis that would, in effect, transmit an image of that system to him," he states.53
Jahn and Dunne have a similar view. |