No. This isn’t magic, esotericism, or a performance.
It’s a
real phenomenon of the human psyche, repeatedly documented, researched, and even recognized in court.
"In 1987, the People’s Court of Moscow ordered a journal of the USSR Ministry of Justice to officially retract
false claims about Ninel Kulagina — a woman who demonstrated telekinetic abilities.
Academicians of the USSR Academy of Sciences, including Y. Gulyaev and Y. Kobzarev, gave their testimony under oath.
They stated: "
We observed objects moving without threads or magnets. This isn’t
a trick, but an
unexplained natural phenomenon."
They added: there was
no mysticism in the experiments, and Kulagina herself was "a clear‑thinking person, not inclined toward esotericism."
Scientific laboratories tested:
- electromagnetic emissions from the human body;
- reactions of objects unaffected by magnets;
- physiological parameters of operators in altered states.
The results were so significant that they
became the foundation for laboratories within the USSR Academy of Sciences. Moreover, some scientific institute staff began to demonstrate telekinesis after training.
What is this, if not magic?
It’s a
lost skill of interaction between the psyche and the physical world.For a long time, it remained outside the scientific worldview — not because it was false, but because science wasn’t ready to explain it.
Today, it is.
Today, you can
learn this skill at the Institute of Biosensory Psychology, where it’s taught using
precise methods and decades of research."A scientific hypothesis exists. Mysticism does not."
— Y. Gulyaev, Academician, Director of the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, USSR Academy of Sciences