The Mind at Large: Clairvoyance, Psychics, Police and Life after Death: A Polish Perspective by Weaver Zofia & Janoszka Krzysztof

The Mind at Large: Clairvoyance, Psychics, Police and Life after Death: A Polish Perspective by Weaver Zofia & Janoszka Krzysztof

Author:Weaver, Zofia & Janoszka, Krzysztof [Weaver, Zofia]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781786772138
Publisher: White Crow Books
Published: 2023-02-07T00:00:00+00:00


Motivated psi

Better kind of evidence for survival would be “motivated psi hypothesis” (Braude, 2020, p. 184), showing that the needs being satisfied are not those of the living but something still relevant to the discarnates; that the communicator has an agenda and initiates clairvoyant contact. It would also demonstrate continuing awareness of, and interaction with, the physical world (Braude, 2020, p. 203), by responding in appropriate manner to the appropriate living communicators and their situation. In other words, we need evidence of discarnate intent.

Unfortunately, in experiments the intent comes from the experimenters and participants, while the assumed discarnates are the target. But there are accounts where the intent seems to come from somewhere else: spontaneous cases and “drop-in communicators”. The latter produce messages not aimed at making contact with anyone, but these messages turn out to be verifiable 36 .

We also have accounts of spontaneous cases that are less spectacular but closer to the kind of inter-human encounters we are familiar with: they have a clear purpose, and demonstrate the ability to remember, plan and perform (organise) things not possible in this life. Such an account comes from Russell Targ, physicist and one of the originators of remote viewing. It concerns his daughter Elisabeth, who was a mind/body researcher as well as a Russian translator. She died of a brain tumour at the young age of 40. A week after her death her husband was sent a letter by a nurse who had worked with Elisabeth. The nurse had a dream in which Elisabeth dictated to her a few words, one syllable at a time, for the nurse to copy and send on. Neither the nurse nor Elisabeth’s husband knew what the groups of syllables meant, but Targ recognised it as two lines of Russian which, translated, simply said “I see you” and “I adore you”. As Targ says, “If the nurse had simply spoken the English sentences to Mark on the phone, we would not be relating this story. It required the imagination of Elisabeth, who was a fluent Russian speaker, to find a unique way to communicate so as to send a message that would be understood as unambiguously from her.” (Targ, 2012, 194-195; Katra, 2017). In its own way, this is a perfect case: a simple emotional message using a skill (knowledge of a specific foreign language) that identifies the departed intelligence, delivered by a third party. Such examples are few, but perhaps few are made public. We also have other well-documented reports of dreams in which the dreamer is urged to take action involving a third party. The famous medium Eileen Garrett who established the Parapsychology Foundation had a dream in which the deceased psychic investigator, Hereward Carrington, urged her to take care of his widow who needed help. As no action was taken, the following night she had the same visitor in a dream, this time very angry. The Foundation staff set out to track down Carrington’s widow through psychical researchers in England, eventually found



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