TELEPATHY INFORMATION

The psychic phenomena by which communication occurs between minds, or
mind-to-mind communication. Such communication includes thoughts, ideas,
feelings, sensations and mental images. Telepathic descriptions are universally
found in writings and oral lore. In tribal societies such as the Aborigines of
Australia telepathy is accepted as a human faculty, while in more advanced
societies it is thought a special ability belonging to mystics and psychics.
Although not scientifically proven, telepathy is being increasingly studied in
psychical research..
Most often telepathy occurs spontaneously in incidents of
crisis where a relative or friend has been injured or killed in an accident. An
individual is aware of the danger to the other person from a distance. Such
information seems to come in different forms as in thought fragments, like
something is wrong; in dreams, visions, hallucinations, mental images, in
clairaudience, or in words that pop into the mind. Often such information causes
the person, the receiver, to change is course of action, such as changing his
travel plans or daily schedule, or to just call or contact the other person.
Some incidents involve apparent telepathy between humans and animals.
Telepathy seems to be related to the individual's emotional state. This is true
of both the sender and receiver. Most women were receivers, as case findings
showed, and one possible explanation is that women are more in touch with their
emotions and rely on intuition more than men. Geriatric telepathy is fairly
common, this may be due, it is speculated, to the impairment of the senses with
age.
Telepathy can be induced in the dream state. It appears to be related to some
biological factors: blood volume changes during telepathic sending, and
electroencephalogram monitoring show that the brain waves of the recipient
change to match those of the sender.
Dissociative drugs adversely affect telepathy, but caffeine has a positive
effect on it.
During his 1930 ESP experiments J. B. Rhine also made some discoveries
concerning telepathy: It was often difficult to determine whether information
was communicated through telepathy, clairvoyance, or precognitive clairvoyance.
He concluded that telepathy and clairvoyance were the same psychic function
manifested in different ways. Also, telepathy is not affected by distance or
obstacles between the sender and receiver.
A telepathic experiment conducted during the Apollo 14 mission in 1971 proved
distance is not a barrier. The experiment was not authorized by the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), nor was it announced until the
mission was completed. Astronaut Edgar D. Mitchell conducted the experiment with
four recipients on Earth, 150,000 miles below. Mitchell concentrated on
sequences of twenty-five random numbers. He completed 200 sequences. Guessing 40
correctly was the mean chance. Two of the recipients guessed 51 correctly. This
far exceeded Mitchell's expectations, but still was only moderately significant.
Theories:
Although over the centuries various theories have been advanced to describe the
functioning of telepathy, none seem to be adequate. Telepathy, like othe psychic
phenomena, transcends time and space. The ancient Greek philosopher Democritus
put forth the wave and corpuscle theories to explain telepathy. In the 19th
century, the British chemist and physicist William Crookes, thought telepathy
rode on radio- like brain waves. Later in the 20th century the Soviet scientist
L. L. Vasilies proposed the electromagnetic theory. The American psychologist
Lawrence LeShan proposed that each person has his or her personal reality, and
the psychics and mystics share separate ones from other people which allow them
to access information not available to others.
In conclusion telepathy, like the other forms of psychic phenomena is elusive
and difficult to test systematically. Enough evidence is available to reasonably
substantiate the phenomenon does exist. But, quantifying it seems to be another
matter. The phenomenon is closely connect to the emotional states on both the
sender and receiver which creates difficulty in replicating experimental
results. Attitudinal factors also influence the phenomenon. The best that
researchers can hope for is to have supportive and receptive subjects in
experiments that produce similar results. A.G.H. |


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