dlorde
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2007
- Messages
- 6,864
Still waiting for the citations.Recent events and displays of well researched data has indicated to me, that 'telepathy' or the ability to extend one's consciousness beyond one's cranium is a real measurable phenomena, that has its basis in natural selection...
Prey animals have a vested interest in scanning their environs for predators, particularly the directions and areas from which predators are likely to attack (downwind, nearby scrub, etc). One would be surprised if they did not often look in the right direction.Prey animals who can sense being watched, OFTEN look in direction of their stalker.
Not so, as the research actually cited in this thread shows. However, neuroscientist Mario Sigman says that the sensation of being watched that makes us turn our heads results from specialised neural maps that trigger on unusual or unexpected sensed peripheral activity; these triggers are subconscious and trigger the diversion of the focus of attention, so becoming conscious.If you look at the back of someone's head, more often than not they will turn and look right at you.
Very probably; this will be why we are so sensitive to peripheral activity and would account for the HADD (Hyperactive Agency Detection Device) that likely also accounts for superstitious beliefs in spirits, faeries, little people, angels, gods, etc.Animals and humans who could identify the direction of an incoming predator were and are more likely to escape.
It also occurs to me that if such a remote sensing capability had evolved between prey and predator, the resulting evolutionary 'arms race' would have made it outstandingly obvious.
No reason to think so - basic flocking & shoaling behaviours require only 3 simple rules. Don't disturb Bill Ockham, he's shaving.Fish and birds 'might' be using a single conscious rather than local physical inputs to alter direction.
A very crude neural activity 'image' is formed in the visual cortex, mainly used to update and correct the seemingly detailed internally generated model that we think we 'see'.When we see...light bounces off an object, is received by our retinas, flip-turned-right side up, and a picture is formed. But is that picture in our heads, or is it projected outward, outside of us, and by simply observing it, can we alter or change it, without touching it...?
As for mechanism, only electromagnetism has the range and strength to be relevant but is still totally inadequate; there's a reason even the most sensitive EEG requires electrodes in direct electrical contact with the scalp - the skull and associated brain wrappings are very effective insulators. EM signals strong enough to penetrate either direction would be easily detectable and we'd be disturbingly swamped with EM radiation from the multiple electrical and electronic devices that saturate the urban environment.
Last edited:
