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Thoughtography is also known as nensha (念写, meaning thought copying), or projected thermography. Practitioners claim the ability to copy images from their mind onto various surfaces, or in to the minds of others. The study of thoughtography is a fairly new, and there are three main people known in the field. At one time or another, each of these have been denigrated as frauds. Tomokichi Fukurai In 1910, this associate professor in psychology studied a woman named Ikuko Nagao. Earlier that year, he had experimented with a clairvoyant named Chizuko Mifune, though the experiments were unsuccessful. Nagao claimed to be skilled in nensha (spirit photography). In time, she was labeled a fraud. She died from a fever shortly after. Fukurai was undeterred and continued his studies. In 1913, Fukurai met with a woman named Sadako Takahashi, who claimed to have clairvoyant and nensha powers. Fukurai published a book called Clairvoyance and Thoughtography which outlined his theories. He later worked with Koichi Mita, who claimed to have created a thoughtographic picture of the dark side of the Moon. Unfortunately, Fukurai’s theories were unpopular. He resigned his post at the University of Tokyo in 1919 so he could continue his studies. The … Continue reading Thoughtography →
The post Thoughtography appeared first on Richard Cassaro.
Richard Cassaro is a journalist, speaker and author of “Written In Stone: Decoding The Secret Masonic Religion Hidden In Gothic Cathedrals And World Architecture.” The book uncovers a lost Wisdom Tradition that was practiced globally in antiquity, found memorialized in pyramids, Triptychs, and identical images worldwide. The central tenets of this tradition have been perpetuated in Western Secret Societies. The most visible of these is the so-called “Masonic Fraternity,” an age-old chivalric Order whose ranks have included Europe’s Gothic cathedral builders and America’s Founding Fathers. Richard has two websites: www.DeeperTruth.com and www.RichardCassaro.com