The Delpasse-Effect

- 24 - The wire cage did certainly not constitute a hindrance to their CARRIER SUBSTANCE, whatever it is made of. The idea that telepathic messages travel as electro-magnetic waves can finally be eliminated. - This insight did however not bring clarity, on the contrary, it brought additional confusion. Research has actually verified that there must be some coherence with electromagnetism somewhere after all. • As we speak, nobody knows how a telepathic message reaches the brain. One can however accurately ascertain when it arrives there. Its arrival actually changes the brainwaves - the very electro-magnetic waves that the brain constantly emits. 2. 4 The subconscious stand-by wave Dr. Ipolit Kogan, the leader of the Popow-Group for Psychological Research in Moscow, had come up with the idea of measuring the brainwaves of Nikolajew and Kamenskij during a telepathic experiment. In this experiment, it took place across a distance of 650 km, one never told Nikolajew when Kamenskij would begin, nor when the experiment would be concluded. The result was a surprise: Nikolajews’s brainwaves showed the expected image: An alpha rhythm that corresponded with the relaxed state of rest of a non-sleeping person. At the exact moment Kamenskij began sending, Nokolajew’s brainwave curves changed suddenly - and this always a few seconds before Nikolajew became aware that he was about to receive a telepathic message. The similarity with the Grey-Walter experiments is obvious. There, the stand-by wave before the monitor was switched on and here, the movement of the brainwave curve before the telepathic message is registered by the consciousness. - Could it be that we are dealing in both cases with the same apparition, namely with a stand-by wave? A stand-by wave develops with the Grey-Walter experiment, because the test person is ready to do something, namely to switch on the monitor. Things are different with telepathy experiments. The receiver does not want to do anything. He is at most prepared to have something done with him - namely having a message transferred into his brain. He can therefore not have triggered the stand-by wave. The convincing fact that the wave develops before he becomes aware of the reception of the telepathic message speaks for this. So where does the stand-by wave come from? Could it be that the command to its induction within the brain is given by the sender? An attractive and enlightening thought - one could almost assume that the telepathic message simply travels from brain to brain on a stand-by wave. But this is unfortunately not possible, because the standby wave is also an electro-magnetic wave.

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