Mysterious telepathy

The scientific community has constantly tried to find evidence of so-called telepathy. And although it has not yet been proven, many people still believe it is true.

>>>Turn over the first evidence of telepathy

When Julie Beischel met Mark Boccuzzi at a conference and agreed to participate in the telepathy experiment, she immediately felt strong connections with the subject, but of course kept it in her heart. . After all, they are just strangers. After becoming husband and wife, both Beischel and Boccuzzi assumed that the telepathic themselves dragged them together to fall in love.'That's something I've never encountered , ' Beischel said.

The data from the experiment supported Beischel's judgment, and the couple suggested Dean Radin, the senior scientist of the Abstract Science Institute (IONS), who also conducted the experiment, as The owner kisses me. They now write a book entitled Spiritual Intimacy: A guideline for lovers, recording practical measures to implement telepathy to tighten the feelings of lovers. The couple even asked Radin to turn the experiment into a real dating service, according to deanradin.com.

Picture 1 of Mysterious telepathy
Telepathy is always a mystery to the scientific world - (Photo: blouinartinfo)

According to NCBI pages, the field of psychotherapy (studying neurological phenomena outside the normal psychological field) - may be a difficult topic for scientists to swallow. They may be listed as extremists or, at worst, equated with astrologers and fortune tellers. In addition, these types of topics are convincing to be sponsored by the National Institutes of Medicine. Therefore, it is impossible to blame why many people seem surprised when they see Beischel, a serious scientist with a doctorate in pharmacology and toxicology, publishes a book in the form of 'shadow'.

However, both Beischel, Radin and many others still have great confidence in their ability in an attempt to accurately explain the long question: Is telepathy true? Radin recounts the story of German scientist Hans Berger, who first recorded the electroencephalogram (EEG) in humans in 1924. He fell down from his horse and nearly crumbled under the wall of a group of racing horses. His sister, many kilometers away, was intrigued with something bad and persuaded her father to send telegrams to see the situation immediately. She has never sent a telegram before. This coincidence caused Burger's curiosity to shift from mathematical and astronomical research to medicine in the hope of discovering the origin of that spiritual energy.

Nearly 100 years later, the mystery is still mysterious, but there have been about 200 experiments showing that mental connections are not random, though they don't explain their mechanism. For example, the experiment of relations between Beischel and Boccuzzi: Beischel sits in the room, can't see Boccuzzi. Boccuzzi was instructed to stare at the object reflected on the screen when he saw it.

Data show that Beischel had physiological reactions when Boccuzzi saw her, and wavered when he didn't see, like her body uttered, "Oh, where is he going?". The closer the object is, the stronger the effect is on strangers. Radin's expert study of love, published in 2008, shows that a person's attention to a lover can activate his or her nervous system.

With the rise of quantum biology, Radin expert can start again the decoding effort on the correlation that appears between those who are not close together. He suggested that telepathy appears to be a quantum congestion: when related objects are at a distance without energy interaction between two points.'We still have no explanation, but at least it is no longer impossible,' Radin concluded.