TELEPATHY — OUR LOST SENSE

Neuroscience sheds light on ESP

Forthcoming book by Dr Dianne Cartwright

Telepathy our Lost Sense Neuroscience sheds light on ESP book cover with purple, blue and yellow graphic representation of brain.

“… Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.”

Marie Curie

Telepathy — Our Lost Sense tells the wonderful story of how we communicate with another person by sending or receiving a ‘thought message’.

Many people have telepathic abilities but there has been great fear, misunderstanding, and persecution of such people over the centuries leading to the loss of this sense from our human repertoire.

Modern neuroscience has revealed that our electrical and magnetic brainwaves carry information within our brain generating thoughts and actions.

ELF waves — very low frequence electromagnetic radiation — envelop our planet. They are identical to our brainwaves and can carry our thoughts from one mind to another.

We recognise the person sending the thought through their unique ‘brain fingerprint’.

As Marie Curie said “Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.”

Paperback scheduled for publication in 2024.

Telepathy our Lost Sense: Neuroscience sheds Light on ESP

About the author

Dr Dianne Cartwright is a Brisbane girl who landed on the planet at the end of the Second World War and was a founding member of the Baby Boomer generation.  Girls were definitely second-class citizens at that time, so her great desire to become a member of the medical profession was denied.  She studied biology at the University of Queensland instead, followed by post-graduate study in the Faculty of Rural Science at the University of New England, Armidale.   Her science degree and post graduate research came in very handy in deciphering the neuroscientific literature for this book.

Articles

Telepathy and extrasensory perception (ESP) intrigue millions of people all over our world. Surveys show that belief in these phenomena is widespread and stories concerning them permeate our culture in books, film, and television.