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A short video on the first scientific studies conducted on extra sensory perception. ESP, 6th sense mind over matter brainwaves J.B. Rhine Duke education Zenner cards experiment remote viewing
In 1937, a person could go to a newsstand and pick up a pack of cards for 10 cents. But these were no ordinary playing cards: They were Zener cards, developed to test one's friends for the presence of extrasensory perception, or ESP.
Dr. J.B. Rhine lecturing on psychokinesis (PK), ESP, telepathy, precognition, parapsychology and other psychic phenomena during his years as a professor and researcher at Duke University.
Master magician Harry Houdini and English ghost researcher Harry Price were true pioneers in both establishing skepticism and scientific methods in the newly created field of paranormal research. They set the foundation for future 20th Century researchers such as J.B. Rhine.
Bert Janssen explains the book ‘the Organizing Principle – There are No Coincidences’, which describes a principle that has a great impact on our lives (often on an unconscious level) and also shows the language it uses for this.
Extrasensory perception (ESP) is the purported ability to acquire information by paranormal means independent of any known physical senses or deduction from previous experience. The term was coined by Duke University researcher J. B.
J B Rhine (Joseph Banks Rhine) is widely considered to be the "Father of Modern Parapsychology."
Extrasensory Perception After Sixty Years: A Critical Appraisal of the Research in Extra-Sensory Perception, which was first published in 1940, represented the follow-up to parapsychologist Joseph Banks Rhine’s 1934 book, Extrasensory Perception.
Photo Credit: University of Southern California / Contributor / Corbis Historical / Getty Images