SCIENTIST ADVANCES HYPOTHESIS. QUANTUM TELEPATHY? TELLS THE DOCTOR OF PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCES

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CIA-RDP96-00787R000500220001-4
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RIPPUB
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K
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14
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November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 11, 1998
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1
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April 22, 1977
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SG1A Approved For Release 2n00/08/07 : CIA- SCIENTIST ADVANCES HYPOTHESIS. QUANTUM TELEPATHY? TELLS THE DOCTOR OF PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCES Approved For Release-2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/D7_~CIA-RDP9.6-007878000500220001-4 DOC 7707 0307 PAGE SG1 A SOCIALIST INDOSTRY. Page 4. Scientist advances hypothesis. Quantum telepathy? Pella the doctor of psychological sciences professor 0. N. Pushkin. Paradox of Einstein - Podolskiy - RosEn. SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 ;CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CAA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 DOC = 7?010307 PAGE Until recently to. me it seemed that there is no another such science which xould contain so many mysteries and ri331~s, how mush psychology. I even to a certain degree was proud by this mysteriousness and complexity the chosen as ne specialty. In this. m? supported Einstein, Thom in 1927 in conversation with children?s psychologist Zh. Piaget about perception by the small children space exclaimed: "how psychology more complex the physicists" '. The complexity and the mysteriousness of psYchol~~Y i-ere presented to ma indisputable until I is introduced t~ Ana phenomenon of quantum physics. The specialists explained to me eynshteyna - podal?skiy Rosen?s paradox. According to it, the elementary particles. which possess one and the s3 me quantum. properties, turn out to oe inseparably bonde3 with each other.' On the positions of Iuantum mechanics,. such particles are one whole. And if we chan3a with the aid of the instruments of the characteristic of one pactivle, then- simultaneously is changed thus another particle..The 3i~stance betweaa them plays no role. Pzradox fount the completely determined experimental confirmation in aa~ted physicists experiments vu. in exp:~riments th~=s seperate3 particles behaved precisely in the manner that ras SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 ~: CIA-RDP96-OQ787R000500220001-4 DOC = 77010307 PAGE predictedz characteristics of one instantly changed ducin7 a change This reaction of the seperated particles seems by miracle, but the physicists assert that this. surprising reaction, to hawev~r wonderful. it it saemed completely it is placed in the sharp formulas of quantum mechanics. The psychologist. which allow/assumes the existence of the remote contacts between people (teles-patina) , proves to be in more difficult position. Hire there are no sharg formulas. Bat indeed the phenomenon- of telepathy is not more miraculously than the phenrsmanan of the reaction of elementary particles i~- quantum mechaaics ! "LAR COURT- OF JURORS". During Au3ust 1972 in Tokyo took puce XX the wor13 ~ongcess of psychologists.- ono fact then struck especially - in tha ~ampact, elegant publishes volume of tt-e materials of congres3 it render/shaxed report about ... telepathy. This Bras the dic?ct/straight disturbance/breakdaKn of SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 DOC = 77a1a3a7 PAGE u traditions. Earlier "telepathic reports were not included in the agenda of the international psychalag~,cal congresses. Telepathy was considered as not referring to scientific psychology. ? And the thus Japanese psychologists, the masters aE the XX worli congress, include/connected in description of the repot ~f. the director of the Laboratory of the sleep of fiaymonidskiy medical center in New-York do~tar Stanley Krippner. ? Than was caused this disturbance/breakdown of traditions? I;ow it d?id attract S. Krirpna.r~s report the Japanese res~acchers, whose exacting demand and scientific authority highly are estimated in all world? Before how to answer these questions, is necessary briefly to explain the sensy of experiments- about which it was communicated in :report, The skeletal diagram of S. Kripgner~s experience ~an~isted in the following. Thy min to whom had to be made the mental suggPStions (in experiments on the telepathy of such people usually-.they call percipients, that' placed an bed in the special chamoer in or3er that it could quietly fall a slee p. To head -were fastened -the. el ec.trodes of~ encephalograph with the aid of .which the experimenter, wno was: heing located in another room,. could control the special feature peculiarities of the sleep of tested. Approved -For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 DpC = 77010307 PAGE 5 -For mental suggestion was stared the set of the pi~tares vhich inductor (that .person whom it suggests) i~ could? sela~t in accidental order. Zt is knovn that the transition Eros aakefulness to sleep easily can be fixed on the. film/strip of the electroencephalagr;ph, which records the bioelactric.oscillation/vibrations of brain. ~iith sleeping the usual rhythms of oscillations, charactecisti~ for vakefulness, are changed by slow naves. [iental vnush~heni.ya began vhen completely distinctly designated sloe waves, i. e., when percipient it filled. At the torque/moment of experiment especially thoroughly they tracked the encephalogram of percipient. The fact is that the sloe naves characteci~e the sleep, deptived of dreams. vhen man begins- to dream, sloe naves they are changed by certain phase of activity. If xe in this oasa vake man sni to propose. to it to 3escribe seen, he escapable to barn 3escribe the parts of dcea~ vith sufficient completeness. In S. Krip~nar's laboratory the story about dream vas recard/vritten to magnetic recorder, and it subsequently possible it vas to analyze in detail.. The target/propose of experiments consistPd.af c~rrslatinq the Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : GIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-OQ787R000500220001-4 DOC = 77010307 PAGE content of -the suggested picture with tha content of the 3rea~e, described by pervipiant. This correlation was conductei i~cor3in3 to the principle of the "law court of jurors N. Accidentally they selected 12 people. Ta them were proposed picture ani story ab-out dream. Each of them had to evaluate the degree of the coincidence of the content of the suggested picture and content of dr~im in 100. point system. One hundred percent coincidences virtually were nat. However, the estimations which. would exceed fifty-percent coin~i3ance, render/showed sufficiantly much. Sihat does m33n this incomplete coincidence? To which degree it can be used for the proof of the existence of the dira~t/straight informational contacts between people? This can be. juiiei from this exa?ple. Is suggested the figure in which is depicted -the fish. in its story of percipient indicates that in sleep it six. the shore of sea. It 'goes over the shore of sea and sees, as the f.i3h~rmen dry grid/netxorks. Thus, two- informational contents: the figure of fish and the share of the sea it which are dried fishing grid/netvorks. Betwesn them common/geaeril/total it is small. end everythini ift~r a!1 it cannot be said Chit b: peen these two informational c~'t~ats entirely Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved -For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220.001-4 DOC = 77010307 PRGE 7 there is ao comaunicstion/connection, Maa sax in sleep s~nettring with the .determined m~ie .that bonded precisely with fish, but not xith .anything by athec, See lie could everything- anything. Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 DOC 77020307 PAGE SG1A In the investigatian of Krippner the majority of sscies turned aut to be succesafui. They testified to the presence of informational contac*., although the percipient. literally did not rzsaiv? thst which is transferred, but it realized its sepantic processing/treatment. These lines of sariausness and conclusiveness, vhich characterize the investigation of S. Kripp.ner, gave b~sas to the Japanese scientists, xho headed the wor13 forum of psychalogists in Tokyo, to inr;lude/connect wank in-the agenda of congrass By speaking about the experiments of 5. Krippner's American psychologist,`ona must not fail to say-and about the iav'astigations of Saviet schalacly L. L. Vasiliev, carried out in this s; me fie 13. The essc:nti31 torque/aoament, which draws togethac the investigations of L. L. Yasiliev with S. Krippner's works, is the Approved ForRelease 2000/ 8/07 :CIA-RDP96-0078780005002.20001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-OQ787R000500220001-4 DOC = 77020307 PAGE .2q'~ -1 fact that is both .cases was utili zed -one and the same ;tats, disconnecting-the consciousness of percipient, sleep. DiEPerance consists-only of the fact that in one case (L. L. Va~iliev} occurs the sleep suggested, hypnotic, and in the other ease (3. Krippner) suggestion was conducted in the state of natural sleep. Sut this 3ifference in this case not as is substantial, main is the very state of sleep. The presence of-this state is connected with the fact that the canal, whicL realizes a transmission of information, is ~cntcolled by the deeper levels of brain. The protocols of the experiments. of .L. L. Vasiliev, pupil of the greatest expert of V. H. f3ekhtereva~s nervous system, ;~~ read xith :vast interest. It is characteristic that. in its time pc4,isely V. t!. Sekhterev "blesses" L. L. Vasiliev to conducting expa_ciaents on the expla.natian of tha material basis of mental suggestion. G!E fiEGIN "IOLECULB5. By whatever but was mystzrious or surprisiny one phenamanon or the other,- if it really/actually exists, it-can or must a~ ~xplaina3 a~aterialist. The rid3le of the direct/straight bioinforanationa SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA'-RDP96:007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 DOC = 77020307 PAGE- ~''~ ~~ contacts with its-entire complexity is n.t exception. Pha matter here somewhat is facilitated by that fact that any information, whatever it was, it takes the material form of. existence. ~o, are completely material the books, the mucks of letters,. printed by typoyc-aphical color/paint, the asci~lations of acoustic. waves with .radio transmission and so an. The developm3nt of contemporary biology showed that within living ceLis theca is spawisl matter, which provides the transmissi~-n of the infor~eati~n, necessary for a control of vital processes. As this matter of bioinCOrmation are examined, as is known, the molecule of nucleic acids - DNA and the kNA. Analysis shows that matter not only in molecules as some chemical compounis. 6arye role, apparently, play. the finest biophysical processes, which in these molecules occur. Indeed chemical compounds can be located bath in living ana in the kille3 cells. Informational processes are .characteristic only t~ living organisms. .Hell, and if in living informational matter they do-occur the biophysical processes, which have quantux ciiacacter/nature? If in different living cells arN realized phenomena of the typz ~? laser? For example, electrons from their upper orbits transfer/convert-into SG1A Approved. For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-OQ787R000500220001-4 DOC = 77820307 FADE ~r laver. Indeed it is knavn that during the determined c~iacidence of the quantum pracasses between material particles there yin be the instantaneous land-range ir.teractians. If biaphysi:al processes i~~ hiving cells really/a~tially bear quantum character/natur e, then the directvstraight contact bE*txeen ce:11s very and is very feasible. Dut since in this case interacts. precisely the matter, bonded ?~..eh the coding of cellulae, infoemation, it is gassible to assume that under specific conditions Erom ane yell to another is reilizad the direct drive ~f information. Phis reaction .will be one--time and independent variable of the distan~~ between cells. This surprising possibility allavlassumes quantum mechanics in that, hoxever, case, if the informational processes, which os~ur in cell, in reality have quantum nature. Complexity vonsists first of all of that in ardec.t~ demonstrate that- the informational processes, which occur in cells, really/actually have as basis quantum physical processes. Some bases for a hypothesis about the quantum nature bioinformational processes are. SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96:007878000500220001:-4 SG1A Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4 Approved For Release 2000/08/07 :CIA-RDP96-007878000500220001-4