kill_them_all533
Sep 16 2004, 03:23 AM
ever since i was about 5 i was facinated by telekinesis though i never saw it happen(i wonder why) i always hoped it could. about 8 hours ago i was messing with a 12 volt batterie and some copper wire i electricuted myself for a second was halfway knocked out(like when the doctors put u in gas and u get little dizy) and it hit me. literaly i smacked my head on the keybord of my computer and poped up a search on goodle by accident. i saw for a brief second "proof of psi" in the description before i closed out the window. naturally being as curious asi am nosey i searches random words relating to pis and found an interesting web site on psi. some guy tested the amount or energy produced by brainwaves eerytime your brain sends a signal to a part of your body and found that if at more than 3/4 of the brain was active at once the energy was readable on a scale like static being pulsed "outside" of the body and if taught from birth by age 31 a person should have figured out how to manipulate this energy (telekinesis) though the guy said it would be VERY weak and have no plausable purpose other than a partie trick, the fact is he thinks he can proove telekinesis to be real. what do you think?
ROGER
Sep 16 2004, 03:53 AM
When I was a young man( over a quarter of a centry ago) my self and two friends
did a report on telekinisis for debate. That weekend there was a carnivile in town and one of the games was a simple ball through a hoop,ball landing on a certin color gave a prize. Since we had talked about the report we thought we would try
on the game.We all conentrated on the color brown(best prize) but the ball landed on blue. THEN IT MOVED, UP HILL, AGAINST GRAVITY AND CENTRIFICAL FORCE,
TO LAND ON BROWN. Scared the willies out of us. I dont know wich one of us did it or if it was a combined effort. But we never tryed it again. Some people still believe in witches around here, and we took on chances of being BURNED OR DUNTED, or something. So I have seen it once!
Roger
kill_them_all533
Sep 16 2004, 03:58 AM
thats kool

now if only i could get it to happen
aquatus1
Sep 16 2004, 05:09 AM
A neuron fires when there is a 20 millivolt difference between itself and the external environment. That's the difference (literally) between a mere 20 metal ions in your neural system. It regulates the voltaic difference through the use of Sodium and Potassium ions. Anywhere from 90% to 95% of the brain is actively sending pulses at any given time, depending on your activities. If only three-fourths of your brain were active, that would signal some serious brain damage. Even if every neuron fired off in your brain at the exact same time, the sum total would be a little less than 3 volts, or two somewhat used AA batteries.
These minute electrochemical pulse, however, can be sensed through ECT, CAT, and other devices designed for the medical examination of the human mind. They can be sensed, the same way any form of physical energy can be sensed. This no more implies that the electrochemical pulse radiates outside the human body than the human heartbeat, which, while detectable with the proper instruments, simply does not have the power to go beyond the human skin.
Even if we assume that the sum total of of the mind could somehow miraculously fire off all 3 volts of its power at one time and not leave the subject a vegetable, even using electric (which neural energy is not; it's electrochemical) to magnetic conversion (the most efficient energy conversion we know of), that still means that you have a magnet so weak it could not even pick up a paper clip.
The argument is simply not credible. One would have to assume three events that could never occur to achieve an result so low it is often considered a percentage of error.
Ultimately, assuming that because a person has some electrical power in the mind, and could therefore use it to move physical objects is an error of multiplication akin to claiming that, because a person can lift 20 lbs, then they should also be able to lift 20,000 (using the milli difference).
XPyromaniacX
Sep 16 2004, 05:11 AM
Will somebody please post something i can understand...
TheOracle
Sep 16 2004, 05:57 AM
To put what Aquatus has said into simpler terms the human brain is 90 - 95% active at any one time using electrical energy produced by the brian. This energy amounts to around 3 volts (bugger all). If we were able to fire off all the electrical energy at once, not only would it most likely leave you a vegetable as your brain would cease to function but there would not be enough power to do anything with anyway.
Please let me know if I have that wrong Aquatus
XPyromaniacX
Sep 16 2004, 06:44 AM
Thank you very much Oracle.
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