Thoughts Have Wings
By Robert M. Schoch, Ph.D.
Telepathy is real. Thoughts have wings. Of this I am
certain. It is a shame that telepathy, direct mind-to-mind interaction
independent of the known senses (vision, hearing, smell, taste, touch, balance,
and so on), is still shunned and mocked by many people. This despite the
extensive studies of telepathy, precognition, and similar mental phenomena,
carried out for more than a century by some of the best minds, including Ph.D.
scientists and Nobel laureates.
The basic phenomena of telepathy have been demonstrated over
and over again, and even put to practical use. A vast scientific literature on
parapsychology (which encompasses the study of telepathy) exists, with
specialised journals and societies.
There is strong laboratory evidence for telepathy, from
classic card-calling studies to controlled experiments where an agent inserts
material telepathically into a subject’s dreams, through more sophisticated
tests for telepathic information transfer in the fully conscious state or at
the threshold of consciousness between sleep and waking (hypnagogia).
A large and compelling body of evidence from spontaneous
cases supports the reality of telepathy, such as crisis events when a person
has telepathic awareness, or even “sees” an apparition, of a loved one
experiencing emotional turmoil, pain, suffering, or death. Telepathy and
related parapsychological phenomena have been successfully applied to
intelligence gathering. Jimmy Carter, 39th President of the United States
(1977-1981), testified to their efficacy.
The proven results of these exchanges between our
intelligence services and parapsychologists raise some of the most intriguing
and unanswerable questions of my presidency… They defy logic, but the facts are
undeniable.
Recently Dr. Daryl J. Bem of Cornell University released the
results of nine experiments, involving over a thousand participants,
documenting consistently significant positive results for precognition and
retroactive influences, important components of parapsychology. Despite the
overwhelming evidence for telepathy and related phenomena, many scientists do
not consider parapsychology a science and, knowing nothing about the subject,
feel free to make disparaging statements concerning the field and its
practitioners.
At this point I believe it is time to move beyond assuaging
the debunkers and scoffers, for no amount of evidence will ever convince some
that telepathy is genuine. Let us concentrate on studying the phenomena and
unravelling the secrets of telepathy. Thoughts may have wings, but how far can
they fly?
Telepathy is often considered independent of distance; that
is, thoughts are free to fly as far as they desire. But, is this really the
case? There are well-attested instances of telepathy occurring over thousands
of kilometres, but to conclude that all telepathy is literally independent of
distance is premature. It is extremely difficult to measure the strength of a
telepathic signal apart from the delivery of the message (in analogy, an
audible message may be received across a room whether yelled or whispered).
A few controlled studies indicate that at least sometimes
telepathy may attenuate with distance. Attenuation might be expected unless
perhaps telepathy is a nonlocal quantum mechanical phenomenon. Possibly there
are multiple forms of telepathy: information carried on extremely low frequency
electromagnetic waves, information transferred by quantum mechanical means, and
information propagated via some other mechanism.
We must also consider the psychological aspects of
telepathy. A person may preferentially focus telepathically on the thoughts and
emotions of someone who is psychologically “near,” even if far removed in
physical space.
There is another, most curious, aspect of telepathy.
Telepathic-type phenomena are not limited to the present, but transcend the
boundaries of time. Telepathic information can be received from the future and
the past, with the proviso that telepathic experiences drop off dramatically as
one moves temporally further away from the present. Various forms of
precognition, such as those confirmed by Dr. Bem, can be explained in terms of
telepathic information received from the future, the future agent in some cases
being the same person as the receiver (the percipient) in the present. You can
receive telepathic information from your future self! Perhaps this sounds
strange, but it may just be the way the world is. Indeed, if you think about
it, who is closer emotionally and psychologically to you than yourself?
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