Moon Rock Weirdness, Top Phenomena, Psi Fears
Friday November 28, 2008
Some interesting links I've found this week:• More Moon Evidence – How is it possible, this article asks, that certain rocks shown in official NASA moon photos are absolutely identical? It's not possible, so the photos have been doctored. Why?
• Top 10 Unexplained Phenomena – Paranormala presents a list of their favorite unexplained, mysterious and just plain weird happenings, including the Miracle of the Sun, Morgellons Disease, The Taos Hum, and more.
• The Fear of Psi – Dr. Stephen E. Braude reacts to the physical phenomenon of table tilting, which he found undoubtedly interesting... but it also scared the hell out of him. (PDF)
• All New Links
Photo: NASA


Comments
I found it difficult and boring to read Stephen E. Braude, Ph.D article on the subject of PSI. However: I plummeted on threw the article because I wanted him to explain how his experience with table tilting had anything to do with psi. In his description of the incident he explains that *they* connected with 3 spirits, 1 of which seemed to only answer the questions put forth to *it*. If his conclusion was psi…(someone who could have caused the table to move using psi) then how in the hell do you explain their questions being answered by the owner of the house? What am I missing here?
I found it difficult and boring to read Stephen E. Braude, Ph.D article on the subject of PSI. However: I plummeted on threw the article because I wanted him to explain how his experience with table tilting had anything to do with psi. In his description of the incident he explains that *they* connected with 3 spirits, 1 of which seemed to only answer the questions put forth to *it*. If his conclusion was psi…(it had something to do with the 3 people in the room) then how in the hell do you explain their questions being answered by the owner of the house? He never explained that part of it and I find that quite frustrating!
After I posted the link about the moon rocks, I figured out what was happening. It’s nothing sinister or unusual. What happened is that multiple photos were pieced together to create a panorama or larger photo. When they piece them together, there’s some overlap… but the photos don’t always overlap perfectly across the seam. So they match up perfectly on one part of the photo, but not all of it… so in parts they end up with duplicate areas of the image — like the rocks in the photo.