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Articles & You Tubes I find interesting...

I like keeping up with what is happenning around the place regarding spirituality, latest medical and quantum science breakthroughs (love it when science can meet spirit) and movements in consciousness. So, in this space, I will try to post some of the most interesting articles and youtubes I have come across. 

Drop me a line at info@suebishoponline.com if you have any fantastic sites that I can recommend readers to check out. Please scroll down to find the new addtions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Nocebo Effect is the opposite to the Placebo effect. Brilliant quick talk worth listening to to see how the power of negative suggestion can, and does, affect your health.  

Always fascinating to listen to quantum physicist Dr. Michio Kaku. You'll still see the relevance of metaphysics...

http://www.dailygrail.com/Spirit-World/2013/12/New-Study-Finds-Mediumship-May-Be-Distinct-Mental-State

 

A new study co-authored by (among others) Dean Radin and Julie Beischel has found that electrocortical activity during mediumistic 'communication' is distinctly different than during other contemplative moments such as thinking about living or imaginary people. The resaerch was done to explore two questions: possible orrelations between the accuracy of mediums’ statements and the electrical activity in their brain; and the differences in mediums’ brain activity when they intentionally evoked four different subjective states.

To do so, the researchers collected psychometric and brain electrophysiology data from "six individuals who had previously reported accurate information about deceased individuals under double-blind conditions" (ie. mediums - or more accurately, mediums previously accredited by Julie Beischel's Windbridge Institute). Each experimental participant performed two tasks with eyes closed. In the first task, the medium was given the first name of a deceased person and asked 25 questions, after which they were asked to silently perceive information relevant to the question for 20 seconds and then respond. These responses were then scored for accuracy by individuals who knew the deceased persons. Researchers found that of the four mediums whose accuracy could be evaluated, three scored significantly above chance (p < 0.03). One of the mediums also showed a highly significant correlation between accuracy and brain activity in frontal theta.

In the second task, participants were asked to experience four mental states for 1 min each, a process that was repeated three times: (1) thinking about a known living person, (2) listening to a biography, (3) thinking about an imaginary person, and (4) interacting mentally with a known deceased person. Interestingly, statistically significant differences in electrocortical activity among the four mental states were found in all six participants, leading the researchers to conclude that the differences in electrocortical activity "suggest that the impression of communicating with the deceased may be a distinct mental state distinct from ordinary thinking or imagination".

Here's the conclusion of the paper, in the authors' words:

To conclude, we believe the results for Medium 1, correlating accuracy with electrocortical activity, qualify as a robust finding. The results regarding differences in gamma power bands between different mental states remains puzzling as the gamma difference we observed seems to arise, at least in part, from eye or muscular activity. The characterization of the exact nature of this difference in the gamma frequency band, and assessing whether any of this activity originates from the brain, calls for additional research. Taken together, the study’s findings suggest that the experience of communicating with the deceased may be a distinct mental state that is not consistent with brain activity during ordinary thinking or imagination.

For more information on scientific research into mediumship, check out my recent book Stop Worrying! There Probably is an Afterlife and also Julie Beischel's memoir on her work, Among Mediums: A Scientist's Quest for Answers.

Link: "Electrocortical activity associated with subjective communication with the deceased"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.wakingtimes.com/2014/03/22/brain-create-consciousness/ 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Scientist prove that DNA Can Be Reprogrammed by Words and Frequencies

The Brain Does Not Create Consciousness

Graham Hancock - Entangled, Supernatural, Shamanism, The Origins of Consciousness & The Destiny of America

How to Prove the Paranormal: Scientists Discuss

 

 

by By Tara MacIsaac | Epoch Times

 

How to Prove the Paranormal: Scientists Discuss2014 03 28By Tara MacIsaac | Epoch TimesA growing number of scientists are calling for a shift in scientific methods to acknowledge phenomena commonly experienced but difficult to study according to conventional methods.Here’s a look at some insights from scientists who explore paranormal phenomena or matters related to human consciousness. They discuss how science can move forward.

 

1. Dr. Gary SchwartzDr. Gary Schwarz (Screenshot/YouTube)Dr. Gary Schwartz received his doctorate from Harvard, taught psychiatry and psychology at Yale, and is now a professor at the University of Arizona. He has studied individuals who say they are able to predict the future. “If you’re going to test someone who claims to do extraordinary things, it’s essential that you design the experiment to be as close as possible to what they actually do,” said Dr. Schwartz on his website.” And if you don’t design an experiment around their actual skills, you can end up asking people to do things that they actually can’t do or that don’t really represent what they do.”Schwartz tailors the tests specifically to the individual abilities instead of imposing a cookie-cutter test of precognition. Not everyone who can predict the future can predict it in the same way, he says. He has found people he considers “the real deal.”

 

2. Dr. Bernard BeitmanDr. Bernard Beitman, a psychiatrist at the University of Virginia, proposes the establishment of a transdisciplinary study called “Coincidence Studies.”He wrote in a 2011 paper: “One of the biggest challenges in the development of the new discipline of Coincidence Studies is providing a systematic place in scientific research for subjectivity and for human consciousness. Meaningful coincidences depend upon the mind of the observer. The question of how to develop methods and an accompanying technical language that includes and respects the subjective element built into the fabric of coincidence needs to be answered.”

 

3. Dr. Alan SandersonDr. Alan Sanderson is a psychiatrist, hypnotherapist, and spirit-release therapist. He founded the Spirit Release Foundation in 1999, an organization dedicated to the clinical treatment of spirit possession.Dr. Sanderson wrote in a 2003 paper: “I want to stress that the concept of spirit attachment and the practice of spirit release are not based on faith, as are religious and mystical beliefs. They are based on the observation of clinical cases and their response to standard therapeutic techniques.”“This is a scientific approach, albeit one that takes account of subjective experience and is not confined by contemporary scientific theory.”He noted that this field of study still faces some obstacles, though he hopes to see those clear as it progresses.

 

The discipline is relatively new; much “suspicion, ignorance, and misinformation about the subject” exists; and funding is an issue.How Do You Form a Control Group for ESP?In their 1973 book “The Challenge of Chance,” Alister Hardy and Robert Harvie explore a widely publicized test of extrasensory perception (ESP). The experiment did not provide strong evidence for ESP, but perhaps the methods didn’t fit the subject.

People were asked to read other people’s minds and draw what they saw. For the small portion of pictures that seemed to match, the researchers were tempted to say it may truly have been because of telepathy. But they stopped short of that admission, in part because the success rate in the control group was high compared to the group being tested.

 

But what if not all the people in the test group who claimed to have the ability did, while a few were genuine? What if many people have ESP and a random sampling of people are actually able to sense to some degree what another person is thinking on without necessarily having felt in the past that they had some special abilities?Future ExperimentsCollective consciousness app. (Screenshot/Indiegogo.com)Smartphone apps are being used to study collective consciousness and the phenomenon of coincidence. Users report their experiences in real time and the wealth of data collected helps researchers.Stanford Physicist William A.

 

Tiller has developed what he says is a method of physically detecting human intention. He has discovered a powerful realm in the space between particles that contains an energy our conventional instruments cannot usually detect. Tiller has realized, however, that human consciousness or intention can activate that mysterious energy, making it interact with the substances we are able to detect. He can thereby study the physics of human intention and this energy.In the age of mass communication, anecdotes and amateur investigators can often provide a starting point for more in-depth investigations.

 

Here’s an example of a netizen who tested his friend’s paranormal ability and shared it on Reddit:“[My friend] claimed he was able to leave his body during sleep and basically travel around in his spirit form. I took it with a grain of salt for obvious reasons, but I didn’t dismiss him right off the bat because I knew him pretty well and he wasn’t the type of kid that would try to troll me about these things.“At the end of the night [of hanging out at my place], I told him hey, why don’t you prove to me that you can really fly around as a spirit and come to my room tonight [traveling from his house to mine during sleep].

 

“I came up with the idea that I would write a note on a post it and he would have to guess what I wrote. He agreed.“Fast forward to the next morning. I get a call from him telling me that he had … read the note. … He got it right.“This experience has really blown my mind. I know it would be hard for most of you to believe me, but this really happened and I am 100 percent positive that there was no way he could have seen what I had written on that post it.”Article from: theepochtimes.com

Astronomer Says Spiritual Phenomena Exist in Other Dimensions  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

04 07 By Tara MacIsaac |2014

 

Epoch TimesAstronomer and mathematician Bernard Carr theorizes that many of the phenomena we experience but cannot explain within the physical laws of this dimension actually occur in other dimensions.Albert Einstein stated that there are at least four dimensions. The fourth dimension is time, or spacetime, since Einstein said space and time cannot be separated. In modern physics, theories about the existence of up to 11 dimensions and the possibility of more have gained traction.Carr, a professor of mathematics and astronomy at Queen Mary University of London, says our consciousness interacts with another dimension. 

 

Furthermore, the multi-dimensional universe he envisions has a hierarchical structure. We are at the lowest-level dimension.“The model resolves well-known philosophical problems concerning the relationship between matter and mind, elucidates the nature of time, and provides an ontological framework for the interpretation of phenomena such as apparitions, OBEs [out-of-body experiences], NDEs [near-death-experiences], and dreams,” he wrote in a conference abstract.

 

Carr reasons that our physical sensors only show us a 3-dimensional universe, though there are actually at least four dimensions. What exists in the higher dimensions are entities we cannot touch with our physical sensors. He said that such entities must still have a type of space to exist in.“The only non-physical entities in the universe of which we have any experience are mental ones, and … the existence of paranormal phenomena suggests that mental entities have to exist in some sort of space,” Carr wrote.

 

The other-dimensional space we enter in dreams overlaps with the space where memory exists. Carr says telepathy signals a communal mental space and clairvoyance also contains a physical space. “Non-physical percepts have attributes of externality,”he wrote in his book “Matter, Mind, and Higher Dimensions.” He builds on previous theories, including the Kaluza–Klein theory, which unifies the fundamental forces of gravitation and electromagnetism. The Kaluza–Klein theory also envisions a 5-dimensional space.

 

In “M-theory,” there are 11 dimensions. In superstring theory, there are 10. Carr understands this as a 4-dimensional “external” space—meaning these are the four dimensions in Einstein’s relativity theory—and a 6- or 7-dimensional “internal” space—meaning these dimensions relate to psychic and other “intangible” phenomena.

 

Article from: theepochtimes.com

Physicists Discover ‘Clearest Evidence Yet’ That The Universe Is A Hologram
 

A team of physicists have provided what has been described by the journal Nature as the “clearest evidence yet” that our universe is a hologram.

 

The new research could help reconcile one of modern physics’ most enduring problems : the apparent inconsistencies between the different models of the universe as explained by quantum physics and Einstein’s theory of gravity.

The two new scientific papers are the culmination of years’ work led by Yoshifumi Hyakutake of Ibaraki University in Japan, and deal with hypothetical calculations of the energies of black holes in different universes.

The idea of the universe existing as a ‘hologram’ doesn’t refer to a Matrix-like illusion, but the theory that the three dimensions we perceive are actually just“painted” onto the cosmological horizon – the boundary of the known universe.

If this sounds paradoxical, try to imagine a holographic picture that changes as you move it. Although the picture is two dimensional, observing it from different locations creates the illusion that it is 3D.

This model of the universe helps explain some inconsistencies between general relativity (Einstein’s theory) and quantum physics. Although Einstein’s work underpins much of modern physics, at certain extremes (such as in the middle of a black hole) the principles he outlined break down and the laws of quantum physics take over.

 

The traditional method of reconciling these two models has come from the 1997 work of theoretical physicist Juan Maldacena, whose ideas built upon string theory. This is one of the most well respected ‘theories of everything’ (Stephen Hawking is a fan) and it posits that one-dimensional vibrating objects known as ‘strings’ are the elementary particles of the universe.

Maldacena has welcomed the new research by Hyakutake and his team, telling the journal Nature that the findings are “an interesting way to test many ideas in quantum gravity and string theory.”

Leonard Susskind, a theoretical physicist regarded as one of the fathers of string theory, added that the work by the Japanese team “numerically confirmed, perhaps for the first time, something we were fairly sure had to be true, but was still a conjecture.”

For more information on this research, click here to read the original release.

Credits: Independent


Read more at http://higherperspective.com/2014/05/physicists-discover-clearest-evidence-yet-universe-hologram.html#zJkZ6fFM5Izx0ser.99://higherperspective.com/2014/05/physicists-discover-clearest-evidence-yet-universe-hologram.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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David Icke - the nature of relality that we are experiencing

IFor the first time, scientists have been able to send a simple mental message from one person to another without any contact between the two, thousands of miles apart in India and France.

Research led by experts at Harvard University shows technology can be used to transmit information from one person’s brain to another’s even, as in this case, if they are thousands of miles away.

"It is kind of technological realization of the dream of telepathy, but it is definitely not magical," Giulio Ruffini, a theoretical physicist and co-author of the research, told AFP by phone from Barcelona.

"We are using technology to interact electromagnetically with the brain."

For the experiment, one person wearing a wireless, Internet-linked electroencephalogram or EEG would think a simple greeting, like "hola," or "ciao."

A computer translated the words into digital binary code, presented by a series of 1s or 0s.

Then, this message was emailed from India to France, and delivered via robot to the receiver, who through non-invasive brain stimulation could see flashes of light in their peripheral vision.

The subjects receiving the message did not hear or see the words themselves, but were correctly able to report the flashes of light that corresponded to the message.

"We wanted to find out if one could communicate directly between two people by reading out the brain activity from one person and injecting brain activity into the second person, and do so across great physical distances by leveraging existing communication pathways," said co-author Alvaro Pascual-Leone, professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School.

"One such pathway is, of course, the Internet, so our question became, ’Could we develop an experiment that would bypass the talking or typing part of Internet and establish direct brain-to-brain communication between subjects located far away from each other in India and France?’"


Ruffini added that extra care was taken to make sure no sensory information got in the way that could have influenced the interpretation of the message.

Researchers have been attempting to send a message from person to person this way for about a decade, and the proof of principle that was reported in the journal PLOS ONE is still rudimentary, he told AFP.

"We hope that in the longer term this could radically change the way we communicate with each other," said Ruffini.

 

Source: news.msn.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The universe is full of mysteries that challenge our current knowledge. In "Beyond Science" Epoch Times collects stories about these strange phenomena to stimulate the imagination and open up previously undreamed of possibilities. Are they true? You decide.

If you heard a child give detailed information about a dead man’s life that he could not seemingly have known through normal means, would you believe he is that man’s reincarnation?

Psychologist Dr. Erlendur Haraldsson, professor emeritus at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik, has long studied reincarnation. Hehas highlighted a case he began investigating in 2000 in which a boy named Nazih Al-Danaf gave many correct details about his purported past-life incarnation.

Dr. Haraldsson worked with a local researcher, Majd Abu-Izzeddin, in Lebanon to interview the boy’s family members and the family of the deceased man Nazih may have been. All witnesses were interviewed multiple times several months apart, and the story remained by and large the same. The most striking testimony came from the dead man’s wife, who tested the boy’s knowledge of her life with her husband.

 

First Talk of Another Life

 

At the age of about one and a half, Nazih told his mother, “I am not small, I am big. I carry two pistols. I carry four hand-grenades. I am ‘qabadai’ (a fearless strong person). Don’t be scared by the hand-grenades. I know how to handle them. I have a lot of weapons. My children are young and I want to go and see them.”

MORE:

  • Are Children With Reincarnation Memories Just Making It Up?

  • When a Prominent Medical Journal Published a Reincarnation Article Matter-of-Factly

He used words his parents didn’t expect him to know at that age, showed an unusual interest in cigarettes and whisky, talked of a mute friend who had only one hand, said he had a red car, and said he died when people came to shoot at him. He said he was taken in an ambulance to the hospital, and was given an anesthesia shot in his arm on the way. He asked to go to his home in Qaberchamoun, a small town that is about 10.5 miles (17 kilometers) away.

Nazih has family near Qaberchamoun, but had never been in the town itself and didn’t know anyone from the town. After years of pestering, his parents finally took him to Qaberchamoun when he was 6 years old, in 1998. Some of his sisters went too.

 

Finding the House, Talking to His ‘Wife’

They arrived at an intersection of six roads in Qaberchamoun. Nazih pointed to one and said to follow it. He then instructed his father to wait for the next fork in the road, then go up to where his house is. His father, Sabir Al-Danaf, did as the boys said. He was eventually forced to stop the car, because the road was wet and became difficult to drive on. Nazih jumped out and ran on ahead. His father followed him, and the women got out to talk to a local man while waiting for Nazih and Sabir to return.

As the women described what Nazih had told them, the man was stunned. The details matched his deceased father. Dr. Haraldsson interviewed this man, Kamal Khaddage, whose father, Fuad Assad Khaddage, had died many years earlier.

Nazih was unable to recognize any of the houses ahead, so he and his father returned to the car. Khaddage asked his mother, Najdiyah, to come speak to the boy. Having heard that the boy may be her husband’s reincarnation, she tested him.

She asked him: “Who built the foundation of this gate at the entrance of this house?” Nazih replied: “A man from the Faraj family.” This was correct.

 

 

She asked him: “Who built the foundation of this gate at the entrance of this house?” Nazih replied: “A man from the Faraj family.” This was correct.

 

She asked him if she had had any accident when they were living at the house in Ainab. Nazih said she had dislocated her shoulder one morning. He took her to the doctor when he got home from work, and she had a cast on for a while. This was correct.

She asked him if he remembered how their daughter, Fairuz, had become ill. He said, “She was poisoned from my medication and I took her to the hospital.” This was correct.

MORE:

  • Screenwriter of ‘Gone With the Wind’ Reincarnated in the Midwest?

  • Woman Speaks Foreign Language Without Learning It—as It Was Spoken 150 Years Ago: Past Life Memories?

Nazih went to a particular cupboard of his own accord and said that that’s where he had kept his weapons, though none were in there at the time. That was where Fuad had kept his weapons. The boy asked Fuad’s widow if she remembered how their car had stopped twice on the way from Beirut and Israeli soldiers had helped them start it again. This had indeed happened. The boy mentioned a barrel in the garden he used to teach his wife to shoot, and ran out to see if it was still there. It was.

Najdiyah showed Nazih a photograph of Fuad and asked: “Who is this?” The boy replied: “This is me, I was big but now I am small.”

Follow @TaraMacIsaac on Twitter, visit the Epoch Times Beyond Science page on Facebook, and subscribe to the Beyond Science newsletter to continue exploring ancient mysteries and the new frontiers of science.

 

 

http://www.theepochtimes.com//n3/1212089-do-you-believe-in-reincarnation-boy-gives-detailed-verified-information-about-past-life/


’Telepathy’ experiment sends 1st mental message
 

From: news.msn.com

Do You Believe in Reincarnation? Boy Gives Detailed, Verified Information About Past Life

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