Monday, July 6, 2009

Ghost. Seen One Yet ?

Scientists theorised that all humans have electromagnetic brain waves. The earth is enveloped by the same frequency. When a person dies, the wave remains in the atmosphere. Ghosts are just brain waves without a body. The waves go right through your skull and make you see what looks like a ghost.
Your eyes see a living being, then your brain. With ghosts, your brain sees them directly.


One who has a frequency of brain wave ,which a part of it is produced by the oscillation of the organales in our brain called 'crystal ' , exactly resonant with the ghost's electromagnetic waves frequency, see ghost.





Most scientists dismiss the vast majority of ghost sightings as hoaxes. But researchers in Canada, England are exploring what happens in the brain to create the illusion that something is "haunted." So far, they have found evidence that some apparitions may be brain benders caused by spiking EMFs (electromagnetic fields), and possibly even extremely low-–frequency sound waves (known as infrasound) so subtle that the ear does not register them as noise.



Michael Persinger, a neuroscientist at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, has conducted research on the topic.
In 2001 in Perceptual And Motor Skills chronicles the experiences of a teenager who in 1996 claimed to be receiving nocturnal visits—one sexual—from the Holy Spirit. The 17-year-old girl, who had sustained mild brain damage at birth, said she also felt the presence of an invisible baby perched on her left shoulder.
When Persinger and his colleagues investigated (at the behest of the girl's mother), they found an electric clock next to the bed that was about 10 inches from where she placed her head when she slept. Tests showed that the clock generated electromagnetic pulses with waveforms similar to those found to trigger epileptic seizures in rats and humans. When the clock was removed, the visions stopped. Persinger determined that the clock, in combination with the girl's brain injury, were highly likely to have been contributing factors to the perceived nocturnal visits.


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