Extrasensory perception in movies, documentary and comics.

Extrasensory perception in movies, TV documetaries and comics.

Extrasensory perception (ESP) is a term used to describe the ability to receive information through means other than the known physical senses. It includes phenomena such as telepathy, or thought transference between persons; clairvoyance, or supernormal awareness of objects or events not necessarily known to others; and precognition, or knowledge of the future.


The term was first used in 1932 by Joseph Banks Rhine (September 29, 1895 – February 20, 1980), usually known as J. B. Rhine, an American botanist and parapsychologist, in his book “Extrasensory Perception” published in 1934 by the Boston Society for Psychic Research.


Here are some movies that feature extrasensory perception:

Scanners (1981): A science-fiction horror film directed by David Cronenberg, which follows a group of people with telepathic and telekinetic abilities who are recruited by a corporation for their own gain.
Patrick (1978): An Australian horror film about a comatose patient who uses his psychic powers to manipulate the hospital staff.
The Power (1984): A British supernatural thriller about a scientist who discovers a way to harness psychic energy, but the experiment goes awry.
Sole Survivor (1984): An American horror film about a woman who is the sole survivor of a plane crash and begins to experience psychic visions of the other passengers.
Beyond the Black Rainbow (2010): A Canadian science-fiction film about a young woman with psychic powers who is held captive in a mysterious research facility.

Here are some TV documentaries that feature extrasensory perception:

The Baffling World of ESP (1969): A documentary narrated by Basil Rathbone that explores the phenomenon of extrasensory perception and features interviews with parapsychologists and people who claim to have psychic abilities.
Remote Viewing (2018): A documentary that follows a group of filmmakers as they experiment with remote viewing, the alleged paranormal ability to perceive remote or hidden targets by using extrasensory perception.
The Unexplained Files (2013): A television series that explores unexplained phenomena, including episodes on telepathy and other forms of extrasensory perception.
The Secret Life of Chaos (2009): A documentary that explores the science of chaos theory and features interviews with scientists who discuss the role of intuition and extrasensory perception in scientific discovery.
Stan Lee’s Superhumans is a documentary television series that debuted on History Channel in 2010. The show is hosted by Marvel comic book superhero creator Stan Lee and follows contortionist Daniel Browning Smith, “the most flexible man in the world”, as he searches the globe for real-life superhumans – people with extraordinary physical or mental abilities.
One of the episodes of the show, titled “Mind Force,” features Miroslaw Magola alias Mind Force by Sussex Innovation Centre in Brighton UK who claims to be able to harness the power of psychokinesis to lift objects off the floor, transport them through the air and force them to stick to his body. Miroslaw Magola has demonstrated his talents under the scrutiny of such well known scientists as Dr David Lewis-Hodgson BSc (Hons), D.Phil., FISMA, FRSM, AFBPsS, Chartered Psychologist. Chairman and founder of Mindlab

Here are some comic books that feature extrasensory perception:

X-Men: A Marvel Comics series that follows a group of mutants with various superpowers, including telepathy, telekinesis, and precognition.
Daredevil: A Marvel Comics series about a blind lawyer who gains heightened senses after being exposed to radioactive waste, including a “radar sense” that allows him to perceive his surroundings.
The Umbrella Academy: A Dark Horse Comics series about a dysfunctional family of superheroes, including one member with the ability to communicate with the dead.
The Sixth Gun: A supernatural Western series published by Oni Press, which follows a group of characters who possess various magical abilities, including extrasensory perception.

The neuronal network is responsible for consciousness in the brain.

consciousness-neuronal-network-interdisciplinary-project

The neuronal network is responsible for consciousness in the brain.
I’m searching for people world wide who can lift objects made of metal, ceramic, wood or plastic off the floor, against the force of gravity without any aid.
If you can do similar things like in the short video-clip e.g holding objects against your hands or your head, and move them vertically or in circles; please contact me, I would like to you to join interdisciplinary scientific projects.

Brain research in Germany – Perception, Attention, and Consciousness

short video-clip

Inside and Outside, Perceptions of Duality. René Descartes Immanuel Kant and Albert Einstein. A short history,

René Descartes Immanuel Kant Albert Einstein

René Descartes the famous French philosopher and mathematician was born 31 March 1596 is known as the father of analytic geometry who discovered infinitesimal calculus and was a key figure in the scientific revolution, a true genius, he also experimented with human emotions and the concept of duality. Coincidentally he was stationed in 1619 in Neuburg an der Donau the very same location of the refugee camp where I was incarcerated in 1987- 89 and where I did my “out of body” and “altered consciousness” experiments. While he was there he carried out many experiments and actually created the background and much of the work that contributed to his well-known book “Meditations on First Philosophy”.

Many readers will be familiar with René Descartes is because of his famous quotation “Cogito ergo sum” – ” I think therefore I am”.

I will only refer to a very small portion of this man’s prodigious work, that part which has some bearing on the subject of this book and that is his studies and theories regarding “body and soul” known as Cartesian Dualism” which are covered in detail in two of his published works “Passions of the Soul” and “The Description of the Human Body”.

Previous to Cartesian Theories any interaction between mind or soul to the body was perceived to be only a one-way relationship that is the mind influences the body and not the reverse.

Descartes is proposed the following:

MIND ( SOUL ) >–< BODY

During the next century the famous German philosopher Immanuel Kant who

wrote “Critique of Pure Reason” proposed the controversial idea that human thoughts should not be influenced by external forces for example by the monarchy or the church. He believed there can be “existences or entities” beyond human sensory perception impossible to scientifically prove or disprove but he believed they can exist.

Kant attempted to blend together reason and experience in order to progress beyond the limitations of traditional philosophy and metaphysics.

He stated:

“It always remains a scandal of philosophy and universal human reason that the existence of things outside us … should have to be assumed merely on faith, and that if it occurs to anyone to doubt it, we should be unable to answer him with a satisfactory proof”

As well the well-known scientist Albert Einstein said:

“A human being is part of the whole called by us universe, a part limited in time and space. We experience ourselves, our thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest. A kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from the prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. The true value of a human being is determined by the measure and the sense in which they have obtained liberation from the self. We shall require a substantially new manner of thinking if humanity is to survive.”

With regard to my particular gifts, there are no contemporary scientific theories reasons etc. that can explain how I do what I am able to do nevertheless I am able to do it and I can do it repeatedly because there are no theories and there is no known mechanism does that mean it is impossible to do? Obviously not “the proof indeed is in the pudding”

My idea of what or who human beings are is the following, we’re like a small part of a watch, say a second hand cog wheel turning around inside a whole complex of parts. We possess not a comprehensive view, but a myopic one in that all we realize is we are moving around and around and we don’t have any idea that we are only a very very small part of the whole watch, we don’t see the watch it all!.