Meditator’s Non-contact Effect on Cucumbers | Chapter 04 | Theory and Applications of Physical Science Vol. 3
We clearly show a non-contact effect in
which the “presence” of a test subject (meditator) inside a pyramidal structure
(PS) affects biosensors without making any physical contact. This is the
world’s first report to show this type of effect by scientific measurements. We
used edible cucumber sections as the biosensors and measured the concentrations
of gas emitted from the sections by a technique developed by our group. The
concentrations of gas emitted from biosensors were measured for a total of 1152
sample petri dishes; each dish contained four cucumber sections so that a
statistically meaningful comparison could be made. We found that there was a
statistically significant difference (p=8.7×10-9, Welch’s t-test,
two-tails) in the concentration of emitted gas depending on whether the
meditator was present or absent in the PS. Our experimental results clearly
indicated that there was a scientifically measurable effect on biological
objects with which the meditator had no direct physical contact.
Author(s) Details
Osamu Takagi [Ph.D. (Sci.)]
International Research
Institute (IRI), 1108-2 Sonno, Inage, Chiba 263-0051, Japan.
Masamichi Sakamoto
[M.A.Sc.]
Aquavision Academy, 1228-3
Tsubuura, Narita, Chiba 287-0236, Japan.
Hideo Yoichi [M.A.]
International Research
Institute (IRI), 1108-2 Sonno, Inage, Chiba 263-0051, Japan.
Kimiko Kawano [Ph.D.]
International Research
Institute (IRI), 1108-2 Sonno, Inage, Chiba 263-0051, Japan.
Mikio Yamamoto
[Ph.D.(Med.), Ph.D.(Engin.)]
International Research
Institute (IRI), 1108-2 Sonno, Inage, Chiba 263-0051, Japan.
View Volume: http://bp.bookpi.org/index.php/bpi/catalog/book/134
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