Dream telepathy research

https://youtu.be/GbHQDHaM6eo

I’ve experienced this too much myself for me to even question it. But not everyone has the same experience:

Filmmaker in Residence Ronni Thomas–director of The Midnight Archive–introduces the newest episode of his Morbid Anatomy Museum Presents film series. Entitled “Transmitting Thought: The Maimonides Dream Lab,” this short film introduces us to psychologist Dr. Stanley Krippner’s provocative explorations of telepathic sensitivity and the dream state undertaken in 1960s Brooklyn.

It is easy to subscribe to a set of rules when those rules are set by science rather than religion. But science lives with a bias — that in order for an idea to be explored it must be observable, measurable and repeatable. Yet the irrational is part of our world, especially when it comes to the subject of human consciousness. Current scientific thinking brings an almost religious devotion to debunking anything that appears “irrational” or outside the rules and norms of core science.

But such an approach leaves tremendous gaps in our understanding — especially in questions of ESP, precognition, and other queries into non-physical intelligence. But this was not always the case. For a brief time, from roughly the 1930s to the 1960s, the field of academic parapsychology flourished in the United States. And at the forefront of the field was the American psychologist Dr. Stanley Krippner. In this film, Krippner discusses his research at the Maimonides Dream Lab in Brooklyn, NY in the 1960s. There, he and his colleagues conducted studies that explored the use of telepathy within the altered state of dreaming.

Through numerous experiments, including one with the rock band The Grateful Dead, the Maimonides team produced substantial scientific research on the topic of ‘dream telepathy,’ until the demise of the lab’s funding. Learn what we know — and what we lost — in Transmitting Thought : the Maimonides Dream Lab.