Post by contrastiktion on Nov 1, 2004 16:19:42 GMT -5
lil EVP history: www.mikepettigrew.com/afterlife/html/evp___itc_history.html
i've heard EVPs before that were pretty convincing... but it could always be rationalized as a "residual" haunting (if thats rational).. and not actual real time flesh to spirit communication... BUT... now there is this new shit i hear about
www.worlditc.org/h_07_spiri_000_007.htm
it sounds pretty riddiculous... but i heard it... and yes it could easily be reproduced, if faked... but i get the impression its real... im hopefully gonna get a copy to share w/ anyone interested... here is a good quick summary of the story:
George Meek was a wealthy engineer and highly paid board member of General Motors who quit his job in order to build an electronic device that would prove the existence of an afterlife. Meek was a man of unquestioned integrity whose only purpose in building the device was to help mankind grow spiritually. He had no plans for filing any patents or making any money from the project. He named his new organization Metascience, and the 300 megahertz generator he finally built was called the Spiricom. From the very start of his project Meek realized that in order for any electronic spiritual communicator to work, it had to be operated by someone who believed in higher spirits and had some degree of psychic powers. He finally found a spiritualist by the name of Bill O'Neill, who also happened to be a top notch electronics engineer.
The most interesting part about the Spiricom project is that the spirits of several departed scientists actually joined the staff! Professor Francis Gray Swann, head of the physics department at the University of Chicago who died in 1962; Lee De Forest, a pioneer in radio electronics, and several others—all spirits of dead scientists whose authenticity was repeatedly demonstrated by having them disclose the whereabouts of objects or facts that only they and their still living family members could possibly know. The most interesting spiritual consultant was George Jeffries Mueller, a university professor and NASA physicist who died in 1967. Mueller gave his job resume in a very interesting way. He told O'Neil his social security number, where to find his death certificate, and the secret phone numbers of high government officials—all of this information checked out exactly. In a classic incident, Mueller actually helped O'Neil build the Spiricom when a technical problem popped up. The tape recorders were still rolling when Mueller impatiently told O'Neil: "The fault lies in an impedance mis-match which can be corrected by using a 150 ohm half-watt resistor in parallel with a 0.0047 microfad ceramic capacitor."
atl-perimeter.hiexpress.com/pages/the_new_high_priests_of_science.html
i've heard EVPs before that were pretty convincing... but it could always be rationalized as a "residual" haunting (if thats rational).. and not actual real time flesh to spirit communication... BUT... now there is this new shit i hear about
www.worlditc.org/h_07_spiri_000_007.htm
it sounds pretty riddiculous... but i heard it... and yes it could easily be reproduced, if faked... but i get the impression its real... im hopefully gonna get a copy to share w/ anyone interested... here is a good quick summary of the story:
George Meek was a wealthy engineer and highly paid board member of General Motors who quit his job in order to build an electronic device that would prove the existence of an afterlife. Meek was a man of unquestioned integrity whose only purpose in building the device was to help mankind grow spiritually. He had no plans for filing any patents or making any money from the project. He named his new organization Metascience, and the 300 megahertz generator he finally built was called the Spiricom. From the very start of his project Meek realized that in order for any electronic spiritual communicator to work, it had to be operated by someone who believed in higher spirits and had some degree of psychic powers. He finally found a spiritualist by the name of Bill O'Neill, who also happened to be a top notch electronics engineer.
The most interesting part about the Spiricom project is that the spirits of several departed scientists actually joined the staff! Professor Francis Gray Swann, head of the physics department at the University of Chicago who died in 1962; Lee De Forest, a pioneer in radio electronics, and several others—all spirits of dead scientists whose authenticity was repeatedly demonstrated by having them disclose the whereabouts of objects or facts that only they and their still living family members could possibly know. The most interesting spiritual consultant was George Jeffries Mueller, a university professor and NASA physicist who died in 1967. Mueller gave his job resume in a very interesting way. He told O'Neil his social security number, where to find his death certificate, and the secret phone numbers of high government officials—all of this information checked out exactly. In a classic incident, Mueller actually helped O'Neil build the Spiricom when a technical problem popped up. The tape recorders were still rolling when Mueller impatiently told O'Neil: "The fault lies in an impedance mis-match which can be corrected by using a 150 ohm half-watt resistor in parallel with a 0.0047 microfad ceramic capacitor."
atl-perimeter.hiexpress.com/pages/the_new_high_priests_of_science.html