Derek Ogilvie says he can read the minds of infants who are too young to communicate verbally. In this film he agrees to undergo a series of controlled experiments to test the limits of his alleged abilities. He even faces the ultimate sceptic in the form of James Randi, an investigator of the paranormal who has offered $1million to anyone who can provide evidence of the supernatural.
Watch part 2 of this documentary here…
Digg
StumbleUpon
Twitter
del.icio.us
Facebook
Google Bookmarks
Blogosphere
Fark
Google Buzz
MySpace
Reddit
Technorati
LinkedIn
Ping.fm
Slashdot
MSN Reporter
Upnews
Mixx
Yahoo! Buzz
email
Add to favorites
RSS





James Randi is the guy who had hounded Prof Benveniste for demonstrating that water does
have a memory. As a professional magician Randi lacks both the credentials and the qualification to comment on and much less judge any cutting edge scientific research. He would have been more successful as a spin doctor or perception manager, where you present half truths as the gospel truth.
Benveniste happened to be on the right track as is borne out by the work of Professor Luc
Montagnier, a virologist in France, who won the Nobel prize in 2008 for his discovery of HIV,
with two other associates.
In June 2010, Montagnier created a flutter at a gathering of 60 Nobel Prize winners and 700
others scientists, at the Lindau Nobel laureate meeting in Germany, when he endorsed
the memory of water while presenting a novel method to detect viral infection, akin to
homeopathic principles. The conference was deliberating the latest breakthroughs in medicine, chemistry and physics.
Montagnier like Benveniste anounced that solutions, even after being stripped of every molecule of the solute through extreme dilutions, “could emit low frequency radio waves” that imprints the medium, making it behave as if it has a memory.