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The moon and psychic ability

Folklore suggests that psychic ability increases during full and new moons. So what do we know scientifically?

The earliest published study on this topic was conducted in 1965 by neurologist Dr. Andrija Puharich. Working from the hypothesis that psychic ability is affected by the gravitational pull of the full moon, Puharich conducted telepathy experiments every day over a single lunar cycle. Puharich’s tests confirmed that psychic ability rose during the full and new moons, although the highest scores occurred during new moons.

More recently, psi researcher Dr. Dean Radin has conducted a great deal of research into the impact of the moon on psychic ability. His earliest investigations occurred at the University of Nevada where he carried out an intriguing analysis of payouts at a Nevada casino to see if they tracked any lunar cycle. He also attempted to determine whether this cycle appeared to influence the earth’s geomagnetic field (GMF). In this study, he analyzed payouts from roulette machines, keno, blackjack, craps, slot machines and a combination of all five games.

Radin demonstrated a relationship between the earth’s geomagnetic field and the lunar cycle—at times of a new moon or a full moon, the earth’s GMF was at its quietest. He then analyzed casino data from between 1991 and 1994 to determine whether the highest payouts happened during days of geomagnetic calm and full moons. Overall he examined data for about 50 lunar cycles.

Results were significant. Payout percentages were at their highest (78.5 per cent) during full moons, and at their lowest a week before and after the new moon. “Gambling on or near days of the full moon, and by avoiding the casino on or near days of the new moon, over the long-term, gamblers may be able to boost their payout percentage by about 2 per cent,” writes Radin.

The relationship between a higher payout and geomagnetic calm was close to being significant. Radin then went on to examine the relationship between the lunar cycle and specific games. For slot-machine winnings, the highest payouts occurred precisely at the time of the full moon. Over the four years, four of the six jackpots occurred within one day of the full moon. “We found that the peak average payout rate for blackjack occurred three days before the full moon, for craps three days after the full moon, for keno one day after the full moon, and for roulette one day before the full moon,” writes Radin.

But does the moon operate on its own or in relationship to solar geomagnetic flux? The gambling evidence suggests the latter. Radin decided to look at lottery winnings during a year where the lunar cycle correlated with a high geomagnetic field—that is, when the GMF was high during times of full moons. During that year, he discovered, lottery winnings were not at their highest during full moons. Russian studies also show a relationship between a calm GMF and higher payouts.

But what is the effect due to? The most likely explanation is a subtle geomagnetic effect, or some influence of the moon on the sun’s well-established geomagnetic effect. During a full moon, the earth sits between the moon and the sun so that both enter our geomagnetic field; during a new moon, the moon sits between the sun and the earth and is furthest away from our GMF. It is likely that the moon’s placement actually impedes or amplifies the geomagnetic pull of the sun and the earth’s GMF, making it stronger or weaker. It’s also wise to remember that the lunar synodic month (29.5 days) is approximately the same length of time as the full rotation of the sun.

Studies by Stanford University geophysicist Anthony Fraser-Smith shows a relationship between the moon and the earth’s GMF during lunar eclipses. Furthermore, studies of lunar samples brought back from the Apollo flights show evidence of strong magnetic fields in the rock. Researchers believe this material could cause a magnetic shift when the moon passes through the earth’s geomagnetic ‘tail’, as happens during the new moon.

Psychic researcher Stanley Krippner has also examined whether the lunar cycle has any effect on our ability to pick up extrasensory perception during dreams. In a study at the Maimonides Medical Center in New York, Krippner showed differences in score results, depending on the phase of the moon.

One other fascinating bit of evidence that the moon’s phases affect our psychic ability concerns the effect of the moon’s cycles on the stock market. The Technical Securities Analysts Association (TSAA) of San Francisco has gathered copious evidence showing that financial boom and bust crises follow a 56-year cycle, which closely correlates with the cycles of the sun and moon.

Ultimately the evidence to date suggests that human potential is at its greatest when the earth, the stars, the moon and the sun are all in energetic harmony. The folk who wrote the lore must have known something after all.


Lynne McTaggart is a journalist and the award-winning author of the bestselling book The Field. Her latest book is The Intention Experiment. She also publishes several alternative health and spirituality newsletters. For more information: livingthefield.com & theintentionexperiment.com

 

 
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Plasma in the Lab and in Rock Art

by David Talbott

The ancients were not just doodling when they spent millions of man-hours carving rock art forms around the world.  They were reproducing dramatic plasma discharge forms seen in their spectacular sky.

At high energy levels, the current within a plasma circuit plasma will develop instabilities that can be studied in the laboratory. The flow of charged particles generates electromagnetic forces that in turn affect the flow of particles. This feedback effect produces plasma behavior that is not linear and is often unexpected. Theoretical predictions must be frequently checked against laboratory observations. The non-linear behavior at low energies, such as the alternating light and dark segments in a gas-discharge tube, becomes even more complex. High energy discharges in plasma laboratories exhibit intricate structures, and these evolve through a sequence of quasi-stable forms with intermediate stages of violent transformation.

Anthony Peratt, a researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory, has studied the evolution of these instabilities for several decades. One evolutionary sequence is the development of the "warped disk" form, which can involve many variations on the underlying pattern. (See Thunderbolts of the Gods, Chapter One, page 21.) A continuous discharge channel will break up into a string of spherical cells, usually seven to nine in number. These cells contract further into toroids (donut-shaped rings) stacked along the axial channel. The toroids flatten into disks, and then the edges of the disks warp upward or downward. When viewed from the side (perpendicular to the axis), the greater thickness of plasma along the axis and in the plane of the disks appears as a glowing line figure—a vertical line with cross bars.

Peratt described this sequence at an interdisciplinary conference on plasma in the solar system in September of 2000. David Talbott, another presenter at the conference, remarked on the similarity of the line form to images seen in ancient rock art. The pictograph on the left above, from Kayenta, Arizona, illustrates a late stage in this sequence. Peratt remarked that the detailed correspondence with the laboratory discharge sequence is precise. This Kayenta image was, in fact, the first pictograph that Talbott sent to Peratt, and it inspired Peratt to investigate the correspondence further. (The identification of the discharge components comes from Peratt’s later paper on the subject. According to Peratt, the configuration is about to undergo an intensely energetic transformation that could be deadly for humans exposed to its radiation.)



In the transitional phase, the top disks fold over each other to form a bulb shape; the next disk bends into a cup shape; the middle disks often merge; and the lower disk bends down into the shape of an inverted cup. The bottom of the axial current often develops a trident shape. When viewed from the side, the line figure takes on the appearance of a squatting stick person with his arms in the air. The central toroid appears as two dots or, if bright enough, as a bar under the "stick man’s" arms. The trifurcated bottom end of the axial current is commonly interpreted in rock-art lore as the "stick man’s" genitalia. Peratt calls this a "basic form" taken by discharge instabilities, and significantly it is an image common to rock art around the world. (See image above.)

Peratt’s investigation of rock art led him to collect hundreds of thousands of digital photographs of petroglyphs (images scratched or pecked into rock) and pictographs (images painted on rock). He has classified them into 84 categories that correspond with the quasi-stable forms of the laboratory plasma discharges.

"Many petroglyphs, apparently recorded several millennia ago, have a plasma discharge or instability counterpart, some on a one-to-one or overlay basis. More striking is that the images recorded on rock are the only images found in extreme energy density experiments; no other morphology types or patterns are observed," Peratt writes, "The inward rise on axis along with the upward folding of the outer edges of the carved lines and transition to edge curling, a phenomena [sic] recorded in intense electrical discharge radiographs, could not have been known to prehistoric man unless he witnessed the same event in the sky."

Peratt and his assistants and collaborators also recorded the fields of view of the ancient artists and the locations of the images with GPS instruments. By plotting this data on computerized topographical maps, he can calculate where the various forms occurred in the Earth’s ancient plasmasphere (what astronomers call the magnetosphere).

Peratt surmised that a surge of power in the currents driving the auroras had set off the sequence of instabilities. The entire pre-historical sky around the globe would have appeared to come alive with a shimmering, shining "enhanced aurora" that stretched from pole to pole. It would have featured exactly those abstract figures and stick men and strange animal-like shapes that appear only in rock art and in high-energy plasma discharges. He contends that the ancient artists were witnesses to this "enhanced aurora" and that they recorded what they saw on the most durable "recording device" available—rock surfaces.

From the difference in scale between a laboratory spark and an auroral discharge, Peratt estimates that the ancient displays would have lasted "for at least a few centuries if not millennia." Radiocarbon dating of material overlying some buried petroglyphs provides a time for the occurrence of the displays at 4,000 to 12,000 years ago.

The curious phenomena that our space-age sensors are detecting in space, phenomena that can be explained directly in terms of the electrical behavior of plasma, are now reflected in the forms of ancient rock art. The new universe of plasma requires not only a new vision of the present but also a new vision of the ancient past. Discoveries in space, ancient drawings of the sky, and controlled laboratory experiments converge to revolutionize our understanding of the cosmos. Plasma and electricity make possible a unified perspective, a goal that is fundamental to the scientific quest.


David Talbott, is the co-author Thunderbolts of the Gods and The Electric Universe For more information go to www.thunderbolts.info

 








   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


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