CLAIRVOYANCE LOVE & LUCK READING
Clairvoyance is defined as a form of
extra-sensory perception whereby a person perceives distant objects, persons, or
events, including "seeing" through opaque objects and the detection of types of
energy not normally perceptible to humans (i.e. radio waves). Typically, such
perception is reported in visual terms, but may also include auditory
impressions (sometimes called clairaudience) or kinesthetic impressions.
The term clairvoyance is often used broadly to refer to all forms of ESP where a
person receives information through means other than those explainable by
current science. Perhaps more often, it is used more narrowly to refer to
reception of present-time information not from another person, there being other
terms to refer to other forms: telepathy referring to reception of information
from another person (i.e. presumably mind-to-mind); and precognition referring
to gaining information about places and events in the future. The term
clairsentience is often used in reference to psi phenomena falling under this
broader context.
As with all psi phenomena, there is wide disagreement and controversy within the
sciences and even within parapsychology as to the existence of clairvoyance and
the validity or interpretation of clairvoyance related experiments (see
Parapsychology).
Clairvoyance through
history
There have been anecdotal reports of clairvoyance and claims of clairvoyant
abilities on the part of some throughout history in most cultures. Often these
have been associated with religious figures, offices, and practices. For
example, ancient Hindu religious texts list clairvoyance as one of the siddhis,
skills that can be acquired through appropriate meditation and personal
discipline. But a large number of anecdotal accounts of clairvoyance are of the
spontaneous variety among the general populace. For example, many people report
instances of "knowing" in one form or another when a loved one has died or was
in danger before receiving notification through normal channels that such events
have taken place. Similar presentiments that are not eventually fulfilled are
soon forgotten, however. While anecdotal accounts do not provide scientific
proof of clairvoyance, such common experiences continue to motivate research
into such phenomena.
Clairvoyance was one of the phenomena reported to have been observed in the
behavior of somnambulists, people who were mesmerized and in a trance state
(nowadays equated with hypnosis by most people) in the time of Franz Anton
Mesmer. The earliest recorded report of somnambulistic clairvoyance is credited
to the Marquis de Puysegur, a follower of Mesmer, who in 1784 was treating a
local dull-witted peasant named Victor Race. During treatment, Victor reportedly
would go into trance and undergo a personality change, becoming fluent and
articulate, and giving diagnosis and prescription for his own disease as well as
those of other patients, and forgetting everything when he came out of the
trance state. All this is in a manner reminiscent of the reported behaviors of
the 20th century psychic Edgar Cayce. It is reported that although Puysegur used
the term 'clairvoyance', he did not attribute any of this to the paranormal
since he accepted mesmerism as one of the natural sciences.
Clairvoyance was in times following a reported ability of some mediums during
the spiritualist period of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and was one
of the aspects studied by members of the Society for Psychical Research (SPR).
Psychics of many descriptions have claimed clairvoyant ability up to the present
day.
While experimental research into clairvoyance began with SPR researchers,
experimental studies became more systematic with the efforts of J. B. Rhine and
his associates at Duke University, and such research efforts continue to the
present day. Perhaps the most well-known studies of clairvoyance in recent times
was the US government funded remote viewing project at SRI/SAIC during the 1970s
through the mid-1990s.
Results of some parapsychological studies, such as the remote viewing studies,
suggest that clairvoyance does exist (though that interpretation is disputed
strongly by critics), and that it does not in general require another person to
send the information being received, i.e. it can to some extent be distinguished
from telepathy. However there are as yet no satisfactory experiments designed
that cleanly separate the various manifestations of ESP. Some parapsychologists
have proposed that our different functional labels (clairvoyance, telepathy,
precognition) all refer to one basic underlying mechanism, although there is not
yet any satisfactory theory for what that mechanism would be.
Clairvoyance as a term has its origins from the French word claire, which means
"clear", and voyance, "seeing". It literally means 'clear seeing' in French. |


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