9 HUMANS WITH AUTHENTIC ‘SUPERPOWERS’
THAT COMPLETELY BAFFLE SCIENTISTS
ARJUN WALIA
AUGUST 27,
2016 Collective
Evolution
Whether they are savants who can paint a
masterpiece blindfolded in seconds, geniuses who can calculate
numbers only a computer could, or regular people who can remember
every single detail of their lives down to the date and time,
humans with special abilities seem to be abundant in society. But
special abilities go far beyond what many savants are doing today,
and science has been studying these abilities for decades, despite
the fact that the results are not always emphasized by mainstream
academia. Below are a few of many examples that will make you stop
and question what you think you know.
Remote viewing is the ability of a person to
describe a remote geographical location up to several hundred
thousand kilometers from their actual physical location. It’s not
just one person who can do this, but multiple human beings can and
this is a verified fact. The CIA and NSA, in conjunction with
Stanford University, were involved in the scientific study of
parapsychological phenomena that that lasted more than two decades,
which also included remote viewing.
In
these experiments, multiple individuals were able to describe
distinct objects that were located in a separate room, and at other
remote physical locations from where their body was
not.(source
1)(source
2)(source
3)
It’s kind of like projecting your
consciousness outside of your body to another location that is,
again, away from your current physical location.
As
reported by a publication in the
Journal Scientific
Exploration, one
of the study’s participants, Ingo Swann, was able to successfully
describe and view a ring around Jupiter that scientists had no idea
existed at the time. (source
1) Ingo has gone on to
write about remote viewing the moon and other strange anomalies
within the realm of parapsychology.
Remote viewing was actually used by
intelligence agencies, which is why they spent large amounts of
money, time, and years investing in the
program. Who knows what
information still remains classified from it?
Another great example comes from the work of
professional aerospace engineer and physicist Jack Houck. He,
alongside Army Colonel J.B. Alexander, was responsible for holding
a number of sessions to test the validity of psychokinesis (moving
objects with the mind). In these sessions, attendees were taught
how to initiate their own PK events using various metal objects.
Individuals were able to completely bend or contort their metal
specimens with no physical force being applied whatsoever.
(source)(source)
There have also been reports of individuals
(mostly children) being able to “teleport” full physical objects
from one location to another. (source)
One notable individual was Psychic Uri Geller,
who, during a talk he gave at the U.S. Capitol building, caused a
spoon to curve upward with no force applied. The spoon then
continued to bend after he put it back down and resumed speaking.
(source)
Regardless of whether you think this is a
hoax, or question the validity of what happened with Uri Geller,
the fact that consciousness has some sort of measurable affect on
our physical material world is now, at least some scientists
believe, firmly established in scientific literature.
The quantum double slit
experiment is one great example out of many. Although
science has observe these types of phenomenon, it can’t explain it
yet. Perhapsquantum
entanglement has something to do with it?
For a selected list of downloadable
peer-reviewed journal articles reporting studies of this type of
phenomena, mostly published in the
21st century, you can
clickHERE.
Stephen Wiltshire, diagnosed with autism at
the age of 3, is an artist who draws and paints detailed
cityscapes. He’s most known for his ability to observe accurate
representations of cities for seconds, and then depict them with
remarkable precision.
Below is a video of Wiltshire drawing the
Singapore skyline from memory.
Wim Hof raised the eyebrows of many scientists
after he was able to use meditation to stay submerged in ice for
almost two hours without his core body temperature changing one
bit. This is remarkable, and adds to the growing body of evidence
that points to the important role consciousness plays in our
body’s reaction to certain situations/ailments.
Since Wim was able to successfully maintain
his core body temperature in such a harsh environment, he’s since
gone on to climb Mount Everest in his shorts, resist altitude
sickness, complete a marathon in the Namib Desert with no water,
and proven under a laboratory setting that he’s able to influence
his autonomic nervous system and immune system at will.
Almost everything this man has done was
thought to be impossible by most. Below is a documentary done on
Wim by VICE news if you are interested.
Listen to the Podcast we did with
Wim HERE.
During a visit to remote monasteries in the
1980s, Harvard professor of medicine Herbert Benson and his team of
researchers studied monk living in the Himalayan Mountains who
could, by g Tum-mo ( yoga technique), raise the temperatures of
their fingers and toes by as much as 17 degrees. This is very
significant, and it’s still unknown how the monks are able to
generate such heat. (source)
It
doesn’t stop there, the researchers also studied advanced
meditators in Sikkim, India, where they were astonished to find
that these monks could lower their metabolism by 64
percent.(source)
In
1985, the Harvard research team made a video of monks drying cold,
wet sheets with body heat alone. Monks spending winter nights
15,000 feet high in the Himalayas is also not uncommon.
Can yoga, meditation, and other similar
practices unleash our inherent supernormal mental
powers?
Just over a year ago, I wrote an article
regarding meditators collapsing quantum systems at a distance, you
can read that HERE.
There is no shortage of literature when it
comes to Buddhist monks, and monks from all over the world, who
possess “supernormal” abilities.
If
you’re further interested in this subject, I recommend reading
“Supernormal: Science, Yogo,
and the Evidence for Extraordinary Psychic
Abilities” by Dr. Dean
Radin, Chief Scientist at the Institute of Noetic
Sciences.
In
2004, Daniel
Tammet gained a lot of public attention when he
recited the mathematical constant Pi (3.141…) from memory to 22,414
decimal places in 5 hours, 9 minutes, without error. The recitation
took place at the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford and
set a European record.
He
was diagnosed with high-functioning autistic savant syndrome that
same year, as he is able to perform a number of complex mental
tasks, and learn at the rate another “normal” mind could
not.
This is common among “autistic” people, and
Daniel emphasizes himself that the differences between savant and
non-savant minds have been exaggerated by the medical industry.
According to him, his astonishing abilities are not the result of a
genetic quirk, but are rather the results of a highly rich and
complex associative form of thinking and imagination. According to
him, autistic thought is an extreme variation of a kind of thinking
that all of us do, from daydreaming to the use of puns and
metaphors. (source)
“Among
the most marvelous, most frightening and certainly most
unbelievable possibilities suggested by psychic folklore is that
human beings may be able to exert an observable influence upon the
physical world — simply through the power of conscious intention;
or unconscious intention, or; by some accounts, through the
assistance of spiritual intelligences; 0r as a result of a
mysterious principle known as synchronicity. Some scholars – such
as Stephen Braude, professor of philosophy at the University of
Maryland — take such reports very seriously, claiming that no
honest person can examine the case study reports and easily dismiss
them.”
–
Jeffrey Mishlove, from his newest
book, The PK
Man: A True Story of Mind Over Matter
Jeffrey Mishlove is currently serving as Dean
of Transformational Psychology at The University of Philosophical
Research. His book tells the story of a 20 year field
investigation he conducted on a man who had extraordinary
psychokinetic/precognitive abilities. As many other researchers
have done, he calls attention to Nina Kulagina, a citizen of
the former Soviet Union who has apparently demonstrated
psychokinetic influence on physical objects. She caused quite a
stir at the time, and in 1968 Western researchers attending a
conference were shown a video of her in action:
The
Russians claimed that this woman, also known as Nelya Mikhailova,
had been studied by some forty scientists, including two Nobel
laureates. They also reported that, like Serios, Madame
Kulagina was able to cause images to appear on photographic
film. The communist scientists, who were by no means inclined
to take a spiritualistic world view, felt that they had encountered
a new force in nature.
Below is some footage from 1970, where more
researchers conducted experiments. Many have examined Kulagina, and
for the last 20 years of her life she was subjected to academic
research by the USSR.
A
study published in the American Journal
of Chinese Medicine, as seen in the the US National Library of
Medicine, demonstrated that a women with special abilities was and
is able to accelerate the germination of specific seeds for the
purposes of developing a more robust seed stock. As
the study states:
Chulin
Sun is a woman with exceptional powers (Shen and Sun, 1996, 1998;
Sun, 1998). A member of the Chinese Somatic Science Research
Institute, she is a practitioner of Waiqi. Waiqi is a type of
qigong that teaches the practitioner to bring the qi energy of
traditional Chinese medicine under the control of the mind. Chulin
Sun can induce plant seeds to grow shoots and roots several cm long
within 20 min using mentally projected qi energy (Fig. 1). This has
been demonstrated on more than 180 different occasions at
universities as well as science and research institutions in China
(including Taiwan and Hong Kong) as well as other countries (e.g.,
Japan, Thailand, Malaysia, etc.) (Ge et al., 1998; Qin et al.,
1998; Lee et al., 1999). We took part in and repeated the qi
germination experiments seven times, and five of them succeeded (Ge
et al., 1998). This remarkable effect on seed development has drawn
widespread attention (Tompkins and Bird, 1973; Lee, 1998), but the
biological mechanisms that underlie this phenomenon are
unknown.(source)
Pretty remarkable isn’t it? How does Sun do
it? Apparently, she enters into a deep trance-like state, and from
this place, she is able to advance the time required for sprouting
dry seeds from their usual 3 to 4 days , to 20 minutes, generating
a sprout growth of 3-4 inches. After a genetic analysis, scientists
confirmed this to be the case, hence, the using of the word “rapid”
in the title.
The abstract of
the study also states,
It was
thought preliminarily that qi energy changed the structure of a
germination-correlated gene site speeding up expression and
advancing it in time.