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Just a few recent hits from the web: After you psychonauts have been introduced to Project Hermes, that old Borderland psychic stimulation project, it may prove useful to scan some studies on using brain imaging to test for psi or follow up with some reading on the connection between the psychedelic and the psychic.

Photo: “Hermes” via Trois Têtes (TT)

ledgergermane says: “God Helmet” Inventor, Dr. Michael Persinger Discovers Telepathy Link in Lab Experiments

  • Claims of telepathy, ESP and other psi phenomena are a mainstay of popular culture but taboo in neuroscience research circles.  Fortunately, Dr. Michael Persinger of Canada’s Laurentian University has never been afraid to venture where other researchers fear to go. In the 1980’s Persinger made headlines with his “God Helmet”, a device that stimulates temporal lobes with a weak magnetic field in order to produce religious states.
  • Now, Persinger has discovered the same type of brain stimulation can create metal states conducive to human telepathy. “What we have found is that if you place two different people at a distance and put a circular magnetic field around both, and you make sure they are connected to the same computer so they get the same stimulation, then if you flash a light in one person’s eye the person in the other room receiving just the magnetic field will show changes in their brain as if they saw the flash of light. We think that’s tremendous because it may be the first macro demonstration of a quantum connection, or so-called quantum entanglement. If true, then there’s another way of potential communication that may have physical applications, for example, in space travel.”
  • While Persinger’s experiments could prove groundbreaking, he remains doubtful about his controversial findings reaching his colleagues, “I think the critical thing about science is to be open-minded. It’s really important to realize that the true subject matter of science is the pursuit of the unknown. Sadly scientists have become extraordinarily group-oriented. Our most typical critics are not are mystic believer types.  They are scientists who have a narrow vision of what the world is like.”

Image: Jack Kirby, Fantastic Four #85 (via MindlessOnes)

(this post was reblogged from ledgergermane)