Have you ever thought about a friend you haven’t heard from in a while and then received his call? Have you ever finished a sentence someone else started? Have you ever experienced anxiety, believing that something terrible happened to parents, children or a loved one? If you have, you have simply experienced reflections in a spiritual mirror – telepathy. “Mirror, mirror on the wall..” and just like in the brothers Grimm’s fairy tale we look in the mirror expecting our thoughts to reflect together with our image.
The phenomenon falls between spirituality and science, adopted by neither, suspected by both. Telepathy is an orphaned phenomenon.
The word telepathy is of Greek origin (tele means “distant” and pathe or patheia means “feeling” or “perception”). It is the transmission of information from one person to another without any physical contact between the two. Telepathy is one of those atrophied skills possessed by all humans and animals, or to be more exact – by their spirits. Again – spirits. Humans are spirits wrapped in, or suffusing bodies and not vice versa. This insight is accepted by many world faiths but its implications are rarely considered. Telepathy is the least understood implication - the ability of spirits to communicate in a non-physical manner as if you are mirroring someone else’s thoughts.
In recent times telepathic abilities have been considered either a mental disorder (such as schizophrenia) or a form of magic. People claiming to be able to connect to other spirits, see the future or the past and thus travel in time were thought to be insane and even dangerous. Since this kind of communication has nothing to do with the material world and cannot be easily analyzed, it is not seriously considered by mainstream science.
The first scientist who dared to look in the mirror of telepathic abilities and hypnosis was a Russian
neurologist Vladimir Bechterev. Bechterev’s work resulted in a breakthrough in neurological science. In 1886 he established the first laboratory of experimental psychology in Russia to study the nervous system and the structures of the brain. Later Bechterev became the head of the department of nervous and mental diseases at the Saint Petersburg Military Medical Academy. In Saint-Petersburg he continued his neurological research and started specializing in neurosurgery. The Russian scientist published over 600 papers in which he, for the first time, wrote about the experiments proving telepathic abilities.
But what was of greater interest in Bechterev’s work was his experiments designed to influence the behaviour of others from a distance – hypnosis. He started with dogs, practising his ability to influence their thoughts. His friend, a famous animal trainer, Vladimir Durov, participated in those experiments. Durov was given a list of tasks for dogs to perform, which he would transmit to them by looking in their eyes and trying to send his thoughts. Dogs, after being given a telepathic task, would perform exactly what Durov would “ask” them to do. Having achieved successful results with dogs, Bechterev continued his telepathic experiments with humans. During one of them he hypnotized a large group of people. Each of the participants was given a glass of water; Bechterev convinced them it was vodka and then asked them to drink the whole glass. After the experiment the participants said they actually felt the taste of vodka and felt drunk.
Bechterev not only laid the groundwork for neurological science, his studies in behaviourism were of immeasurable importance to the future development of psychology studies. Bechterev’s experiments in hypnosis were of great interest to the Communist party and Joseph Stalin, in particular. His strained relationship with Stalin was surely connected to his mysterious death. It is widely believed that Bechterev was poisoned on Stalin’s orders. However, according to the official report Bechterev died of “heart paralysis”. The strange relationship with Stalin would also explain why Bechterev’s son and daughter-in-law were arrested and sentenced to “10 years in prison without the right to correspondence”. Later, Bechterev’s son was executed and his wife died in the prison camp, leaving their children orphans. Bechterev’s studies in neurology were continued by his granddaughter, Natalia Bechtereva and her son Svyatoslav Medvedev.
Another important figure in science who made a significant contribution to the study of telepathy and other psychic abilities was the Soviet scientist Nikolai Kozyrev. Using his knowledge of astronomy and physics, Kozyrev invented something unique. Mirrors. He installed aluminium mirrors, creating an enclosed space in which there was a weakening of the magnetic field of the earth and which thereby provided more human access to solar and galactic information. Kozyrev’s “mirrors” were in practice two hollow, metal, person-sized tubes made of aluminium. The surface was perfectly smooth and shiny, so that it had the same reflecting properties of a mirror. Through numerous experiments using the mirrors, he focused studies in such areas as human psychophysiology, pathology of disease and health and the evolution of telepathic fields’ remote sensing.
Kozyrev’s mirrors reflect the energy of a human thought in space, where it can be stored in “the universal bank of information” or shared between “spirits”. Within the mirrors “the flow of time”— present, past and future — all exist at the same time and in every place. The scientists who worked on these experiments, including Kaznacheev and Trofimov, realized that human consciousness was enhanced when a person was placed in the mirror tube. The experiment involved two people communicating through telepathy. These two people were placed in identical mirror tubes 6 000 km apart. In the course of experiment, that involved hundreds of pairs of individuals communicating at a distance, Kaznacheev and Trofimov found that the information sent telepathically was received correctly by the participants in 95 per cent of cases.
The technique was simple. A person inside the mirrors was given symbols to project and others in different parts of the world were able to receive them. The experiments made with the apparatus invented by Kozyrev proved that distant communication was possible. This is how Trofimov defined the importance of “the mirrors”: “As we investigate brain activity – either with an electro-encephalogram or by assessing brain functions like intellect level, memory and other functions, we realize that we currently use only 5% of the capacity of our brains throughout our whole lives. And, after some time we spend inside the apparatus we see that our mind’s additional reserves and abilities are activated. We can see an increase in memory capacity, increased IQ and changing zones of electric activity of the brain”.
Another peculiar thing that happened inside “the mirrors” was the possibility of the participants “travelling” in time and space. Most of them witnessed “the time machine” effect. Just like in H. G. Wells’ novel, these people claimed to be able to go back in time and see important historic events, or they could travel to the future and foresee it. Some of these people said that they clearly saw answers to the most important questions of their lives, or saw signs of Mayan or Egyptian origin. Certain people were influenced more than others – ‘the mirrors’ revealed knowledge of foreign languages they hypothesised they once spoke in past lives.
The implication of all this is extraordinary: The human intellect, as we understand it now, is not only a tool of communication but also a peculiar cosmoplanetary phenomenon. Bechterev, Kozyrev, Kaznacheev, Trofimov and many other scientists using different approaches, proved one important thing: all beings (spirits) are interconnected not only with each other but also with the planet earth and its electromagnetic field. Everything that happens, will happen or ever happened somewhere in the universe is mirrored in a way to influence other events or other people.
Something to reflect on the next time you look in the mirror.
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Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Telepathy
Etichette:
health,
psychology,
russia,
science,
spirituality
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Memory magic
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Brad Williams |
Do you remember every day in your life? Would you like to have that kind of memory or there are some moments you would like to forget? What if you and I, we all, could remember each detail of our life, its every single day? Brad Williams, a mnemonist, can remember it all!
"Since I was three years old I could remember every day from my life. I remember where I was and what I was doing, what was on the news. I don't have any particular method of memorizing. If you ask me what I was eating 10 years ago for breakfast I can tell you that precisely."
Give Brad Williams a date, and he can usually tell you not only what he was doing but what world events happened that day. He can do this for almost every day of his life.
Williams is one of only three people in the world identified with this off-the-charts autobiographical memory, according to researchers at the University of California-Irvine who gave the condition its name: hyperthymestic syndrome, from the Greek words for excessive (hyper) and remembering (thymesis).
The California researchers are studying Williams and the two others with hyperthymestic syndrome, a man in Ohio and woman in California, hoping to gain new insights into how a superior memory works.
The goal of the study is to find a way to help people with failing memory.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Can you really change your life?
You've all probably heard a lot about the old Buddhist say: "Change your mind and your life will change". But do you believe in it? Have you tried to change your life by taking a positive attitude? Let's try to be honest: it's not easy, not everyone is mentally ready for a change.
Before you start, do not forget that positive thinking should be a life-changing process. Start in the morning, wake up and say thank you for things in life you already have. Don't think about what you're missing. You have it all, it just takes time to arrive to you. During the day ask yourself if your thoughts are positive or negative. Think of what you want now. Is it money, love, family, health? Take your time and think about it. What is it that you want?
As soon as you know the answer, tell yourself you already have it. Embrace the joy of being healthy, having money and a happy relationship. Feel good when you think about it. Think of all the things you could do if you had it. Imagine you are already there. Tell yourself that you are loved, that you are healthy, that you are rich.
You will have it all. You deserve to have it all. Just open your mind to the Universe and send your message. The Universe is a living being and we make a part of it. You and I, we all are connected to this common intelligence. Don't lose the connection. Feel happy today!
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
the world's genius turnes down a million dollar prize
"I don’t want to be on display like an animal in a zoo. I’m not a hero of mathematics. I’m not even that successful. That is why I don’t want to have everybody looking at me", - says Grigori Perelman, probably the world's greatest mathematician, who lives in Saint-Petersburg with his mother.
He worked out a solution to one of the seven great unsolved mathematical problems, the Poincaré conjecture, in 2002 - almost a century after it was first posed, and just two years after the Clay Mathematics Institute offered a one-million-dollar prize for its solution. It was a magnificent achievement. Honours, cash, offers of world lecture tours and lucrative teaching posts were hurled at the Russian theorist. But Perelman turned down the Fields medal, the mathematical world's equivalent of a Nobel prize. What was even more astonishing was that he turned down a million of dollars that the Clay Institute wanted to give him for his work.
One of my friends admires him so much, he said this was such a rare gesture it is almost impossible to believe it.
Grigori Perelman is now 45 (he was born on June 13th 1966). Ever since he was a child he was obsessed with mathematics. He turned down a scholarship to study in the United States and he graduated in Leningrad (now Saint-Petersburg). Since the begginning of the 1990's he worked at the prestigious Institute of Mathematics named after Steklov in Saint-Petersburg.
Now, he has given up his job as mathematician and has no contact with media at all. He lives in his own fragile world, filled with books and his manuscripts.
Some might argue that monetary awards for mathematical work are inappropriate, or that the Poincaré Conjecture is of little practical value and not worth the one-million-dollar prize. But do we owe respect to him? Yes, and not only as a mathematician. We must respect his gesture, a rare gesture in the world where money decides everything.
He worked out a solution to one of the seven great unsolved mathematical problems, the Poincaré conjecture, in 2002 - almost a century after it was first posed, and just two years after the Clay Mathematics Institute offered a one-million-dollar prize for its solution. It was a magnificent achievement. Honours, cash, offers of world lecture tours and lucrative teaching posts were hurled at the Russian theorist. But Perelman turned down the Fields medal, the mathematical world's equivalent of a Nobel prize. What was even more astonishing was that he turned down a million of dollars that the Clay Institute wanted to give him for his work.
One of my friends admires him so much, he said this was such a rare gesture it is almost impossible to believe it.
Grigori Perelman is now 45 (he was born on June 13th 1966). Ever since he was a child he was obsessed with mathematics. He turned down a scholarship to study in the United States and he graduated in Leningrad (now Saint-Petersburg). Since the begginning of the 1990's he worked at the prestigious Institute of Mathematics named after Steklov in Saint-Petersburg.
Now, he has given up his job as mathematician and has no contact with media at all. He lives in his own fragile world, filled with books and his manuscripts.
Some might argue that monetary awards for mathematical work are inappropriate, or that the Poincaré Conjecture is of little practical value and not worth the one-million-dollar prize. But do we owe respect to him? Yes, and not only as a mathematician. We must respect his gesture, a rare gesture in the world where money decides everything.
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