The Gift: The Extraordinary Experiences of Ordinary People
In the 1930s J.B. Rhine launched a series of experiments focusing on
extra sensory perception (ESP) at Duke University's Parapsychology Lab.
To both accolades and criticism from the scientific community, he argued
that the ability of a statistically significant number of subjects to
accurately guess the order of randomly arranged cards established ESP's
existence. Rhine's daughter Feather, an experimental and clinical
psychologist and director of the Rhine Research Center, with the
assistance of Schmicker (Best Evidence), draws on a database of
thousands of reported cases to present a variety of intriguing, if not
fully convincing, accounts that, she says, can't be explained except as
instances of ESP. There are three types of stories: precognitive (the
ability to foresee an event), clairvoyant (witnessing an event at a
distance as it occurs) and telepathic (reading another's mind). There
are harrowing tales of mothers who sense that one of their children is
in danger, as well as young children apparently able to sense what a
parent is thinking. Feather includes a number of examples of people who
claim to have had a premonition of 9/11. Although the author strains for
an open-minded approach, she states clearly that she accepts the
validity of psychic experiences. This collection of anecdotes will
appeal most to those who share her convictions.
ISBN-13: 978-0312997762








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