Telepathy [Druid study]
Telepathy [Druid study]
How many times have you thought of someone and, in the next moment, answered a call from that person? Or did you receive a visit from a dear and distant relative after you wanted to hear from him? Such phenomena are nothing new. Some time ago, she answered the door and came face to face with her brother, who, in a lightning passage through São Paulo, decided to leave him a check. A few hours earlier, worried about making a payment, Iraci had thought of him as the only alternative to getting the money. She had wanted to tell him so much, but she hadn't felt comfortable making the request. Body therapist Sandra Fainbaum also has a collection of similar cases. One of them: years ago, she couldn't resist the feeling of being called by her husband. Worried, she left the house and started walking along the sidewalk, watching the passing cars. She was already on the third block when she saw his car, stopping in the middle of the street. Sandra realized that her husband had passed out on the steering wheel and managed to rescue him quickly.
Such reports are impressive, but they prove nothing. There is no way to rule out the possibility that everything is just a coincidence. After all, for every creepy story like these, how many there should be of people who had a feeling and it didn't come to nothing? The only way to prove the existence of telepathy would be to have statistically significant results that these phenomena happen more frequently than it would be normal for any event to happen. And these results do not yet exist - at least not with enough clarity to dispel doubts.
Telepathy is the term used to refer to the acquisition of information by means other than the known physical senses. The resistance to try to understand or believe such events is great, but easy to understand. "To get in touch with other people's thoughts, feelings and ideas in an apparently direct way, without the need for such information to pass through the senses, is considered something out of the ordinary, because it is a different type of interaction than the way predicted by science" , says Wellington Zangari, coordinator of Inter Psi (Semiotics, Interconnectivity and Consciousness Study Group), at PUC São Paulo.
And, as everything that is out of the ordinary goes hand in hand with skepticism, it seems to have no way: “If you believe, you can be associated with quackery, mysticism, or be seen as someone easily influenced. If not, he will be suspected of atheistic scientism, of having no openness, no scientific curiosity ”, says Jean Claude Obry, a French researcher and philosopher who has lived in Brazil for about 20 years. He is president of the beOne International Association (BIA), which promotes quality of life through the experimentation of sensations (the five senses). According to Obry, if subjects considered out of the ordinary could fit into everyday reality, they would not seem so scary. “To allow the out of the ordinary to transfer into this reality, it is necessary to accept and change the concepts, rules and beliefs that manage the day-to-day. If we do not make this change, nothing will be done but a pleasant but sterile debate ”, says Obry.
Telepathy can understand various forms of communication, from the non-verbal, non-symbolic, non-written and non-phonetic language of animals to that performed with the cell phone. Or does anyone doubt that wireless communication at a distance would not be considered unusual by our ancestors? “Today's young people are not surprised by the technology with which they live since childhood, but they are still fascinated by the mysteries of unusual stories of a Harry Potter, because for him to call someone safely, he doesn't even need a cell phone, just his celestial operator, ”recalls Obry.
Mental waves
According to Zangari, from Inter Psi, although there is no consensus on the best theory to explain telepathy, parapsychology has presented interesting interpretations. “In the first decades of study, we sought to understand telepathy as an electromagnetic phenomenon, which would work in the same way as radio and television sets. It was assumed that, between the receiver and the sender, there would be ‘mental waves’, which would transport information about the brain content between them. However, theories based on this model fell apart because, apparently, telepathy is not limited by distance or physical barriers, as are known electromagnetic waves. ” According to Zangari, other theories surfaced later, aiming to recognize the “why” rather than “how” the phenomenon occurs.
May the gods bless everyone,
From Brasil to the world,
Paulo César Ebbano Moreira
Druid Merlin
instagram: @paulocesarmorteit
Twitter: @EbbanoSaenger
Sources:
https://super.abril.com.br/comportamento/telepatia-papo-cabeca/
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