In Oriental
mythology gods have one distinguishing feature – they could fly. But ancient
legends, and even the records, left by respectable historians and scientists of
the past, mentioned that some people were able to fly, not far, not high, but
still were able. For example, some Indian Brahmans, yogis, saint hermits,
magicians, and fakirs were reported as being able to master the art of
levitation, contrary to the known laws of gravitation and without any
visible agency.
Historical Records
The Indian Vedas
(translates as knowledge from Sanskrit) contain even practical
guidelines to levitation. However, most ancient Indic words and concepts lost
their meanings through the years, which make it impossible to translate the
priceless ancient texts into modern languages, and get useful advice on how to
be able to beat the Earth gravity. As to ancient levitators, they could raise
themselves up to 90 centimeters above the ground because the position with feet
above the ground was more comfortable for them to perform spiritual rituals.
In ancient times
levitation was practiced in India and Tibet. Buddhist texts say that in 527
A.D. Hindu founder of Zen Buddhism, Bodhidharma, visited the Tibetan Shaolin
Monastery and taught the monks to control the body energy, which is a mandatory
condition for levitation. Buddha himself practiced levitation too, as well as
his mentor Sammat who could stay in the air for hours.
Levitation was observed
in Europe as well. Medieval European levitators also possessed their own
peculiar feature. They could fly above the ground in religious ecstasy without even
being aware of it. St. Theresa, a Carmelite nun, is one of the first officially
documented levitators. 230 Catholic priests witnessed her flight. She described
her unusual gift in her autobiography dated from 1565. “Levitation comes like a
blow, sudden and sharp,” she wrote “and before you collect your thoughts and
come to your senses, you feel taken away by a cloud and a grand eagle…I was
aware of myself hanging in the air… I must say that when the levitation ended,
I felt unusual lightness in my body as if I was weightless.”
One of the most
famous European levitators of the past was Joseph Desa (1603-1663), named Saint
Joseph of Cupertino after his native village in South Italy. He had been fanatically
religious since his childhood and tortured himself to reach spiritual ecstasy. He
started to experience levitation capabilities after joining the Order of St.
Francis. Once, he soared in the air in the presents of Pope Urban VIII in Rome.
Once flew up into a tree and perched on a branch which quivered no more
than if he had been a bird. There
were multiple records, describing his journeys, but his flights were not well
accepted by official Church, and he was sent to a remote monastery in 1653.
Fr. K. A. Schmöger recounted the statement of stigmatist Anne Catherine Emmerich (1774-1824): "When
I was doing my work as vestry-nun, I was often lifted up suddenly into the air,
and I climbed up and stood on the higher parts of the church, such as windows,
sculptured ornaments, jutting stones; I would clean and arrange everything in
places where it was humanly impossible. I felt myself lifted and supported in
the air, and I was not afraid in the least, for I had been accustomed from a
child to being assisted by my guardian angel."
The most
prominent levitator of the 19-th century was Daniel Douglas Hewm. The editor of
an American newspaper described his first well-known flight as follows: “Hewm
suddenly began taking off the ground, which came as a surprise to all the
people around. I took his hand and saw his legs. He was lifting a foot away
from the ground. It was a confounding variety of feelings – alternate fear and
rapture made Hewm quake and he seemed speechless at that moment. Sometime later
he got down and then up again. For the third time he reached the ceiling and
touched it with his hands and feet.”
Later on Hewm
learned to levitate at will. For forty years he showed his gift to thousands of
spectators, among whom there were such famous people as William M. Thackeray,
Mark Twain, Napoleon III, well-known politicians, doctors and scientists. In
spite of the multiple attempts of the skeptics, he was never accused of
swindling.
Daniel Douglas
Hewm was not the only one to confuse the scientists with his capabilities. In
1934, Maurice Wilson of England, who adopted yogis’ approach and trained
levitation for years, flew away in great leaps to reach Everest. Next year, it
was reported that his frozen body was found in the mountains.
Current Records
There are modern
claims that the state of levitation can be practically achieved through
transcendental meditation approach, developed by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. In 1971
the new Messiah founded his university in Fairfield, Iowa, then the European
research centre in Switzerland and training centers in Germany, England, India
and other countries. Multiple experts were invited there – physicists,
connoisseurs of the Indic philosophy, mathematicians, doctors, engineers and
psychologists - united by the goal to make man happy. One of the tasks of the
transcendental meditation was to teach people levitation.
The London Evening News (May 16, 1977) stated that 12
individuals had just graduated from the first six-month course in levitation.
One of them, Mrs. Albertine Haupt, stated: "I suddenly found myself six
feet above the floor and thought, 'Heavens, I've done it.' “Although the floor
was covered with foam rubber, she landed precipitately, and other students,
equally successful in levitating, sustained bruises. Haupt stated: "It is
just a matter of learning to control the power."
Theories of
Levitation
Anti-Gravity
Phenomena
Scientific interest in anti-gravity phenomena goes back many
years. Documenting variations of the gravitational field of the Earth was
performed as early as 1672 by Jean Richer, and the first practical gravity
meter was invented in 1833 by Sir John Herschel.
The repulsion effect of aluminum to electromagnetism is well
known, and in 1914 the French inventor M. Bachelet demonstrated a working model
of his Levitated Railway system. A Bachelet Levitated Railway Syndicate was formed
to promote a full-scale layout, but the development was abandoned at the
outbreak of World War I.
Scientists in various countries have conducted secret
researches in "electro-gravities," the science of anti-gravity
effects, and some devices have been constructed in which levitation of
disk-like forms has been achieved in laboratory tests. Little has so far been
published on such work, and conjecture exists that some UFO reports may
concern such levitated devices. The Gravity Research Foundation of New Boston,
New Hampshire, which was founded by Roger W. Babson, investigated various
aspects of scientific inquiry into gravity and its anomalies. Recently the
principle of magnetic levitation has been revived in novelty advertising
displays. In Germany and Japan, researchers have investigated the feasibility
of creating high-speed magnetic levitation railroads, while in Britain, a
section of magnetic levitation railroad is operating at Birmingham
International Airport.
Some researchers
consider that levitation is the result of the biogravitational field that is
created by special mental energy radiated by the human brain. Doctor of
Biological Sciences, Alexander Dubrov, supports this hypothesis. He points out
that a levitator deliberately creates the bio-gravitational field, he is able
to control it and change the direction of his flight.
Until recently,
many respectable scientists did not take levitation and antigravitation
seriously and harshly criticized it. Now they have to reconsider their
position. In March of 1991, Nature magazine published a sensational picture:
the director of the Superconductivity Research Laboratory in Tokyo was sitting
on the dish of superconducting ceramic material. There was a gap of air between
him and the floor. The total weight of the director and the dish was 120
kilograms, which did not prevent him from levitation.
Later this
phenomenon was dubbed as the Meissner effect. It is the expulsion of a magnetic
field from a superconductor. Walther Meissner and Robert Ochsenfeld discovered
the phenomenon in 1933 by measuring the flux distribution outside of tin and
lead specimens as they were cooled below their transition temperature in the
presence of a magnetic field.
The Cantilever
Theory of Levitation
Some investigators have attempted to explain human
levitation on the same basis as movement of objects by psychic force (telekinesis
or psychokinesis ). Between 1917 and 1920, Dr. W. J. Crawford of
Belfast, Ireland, investigated the phenomena of the Goligher Circle. He
studied alteration in weight of the medium Kathleen Goligher during levitation
of a table, and claimed that the levitation was effected by "psychic
rods" of ectoplasm emanating from the medium, which found leverage in the
medium's body, acting as cantilevers. He obtained flashlight photographs of
these psychic structures.
The parapsychologist René Sudre believed that
Crawford's cantilever theory accounted for the movement of distant objects by
the extrusion of elastic and resisting pseudopods from the body of the medium
and thus sufficiently explained levitation: "From a theoretical point of
view, the levitation of a person is as easy to understand as that of an object.
The teleplastic levers have naturally their fulcrum on the floor. Their shape
is not definite; it may be that of a simple stay, of a cloudy cushion, or even
a complete human materialization. The force of gravity is not eluded, but
simply opposed by a contrary upward power. The spent amount of energy is not
above that required for the production of the phenomenon of telekinesis."
According to Crawford, however, the sphere of action of
pseudopods was limited to about 7 feet, the extreme mobility of the levitated
body had to be accounted for, and the cantilever structure was very sensitive
to light. Therefore such ectoplasm hardly lent itself as a mechanism for
daylight levitation as in the case of Home or saints and stigmatics. (Later
Crawford's observations were called into question due to fraud in the Goligher
Circle.)
The Effect of Willpower
The possibility of the effect of willpower on levitation was
suggested by Capt. J. Alleyne Bartlett in a lecture before the London
Spiritualist Alliance on May 3, 1931. He often had the feeling that he
could lighten his weight at will. He stepped on a scale and willed that his
weight should be reduced, and the scale indicated, in fact, a loss of several
pounds. To make such observations unobjectionable, the possible pressure of
cantilever structures on the floor around the weighing machine ought to be made
a matter of control.
The loss of weight in the levitated body may be an
appearance due to the effect of a force which lifts or, if internally applied,
makes the body buoyant. The best evidence as to the alleged extraordinary
lightness of the bodies of saints and ecstatics is furnished in a case quoted
by Col. Rochas of an ecstatic who lived in a convent near Grenoble. Three
eyewitnesses, a parish priest, a university professor, and a student of the
polytechnic school, stated that "her body would sometimes become stiff and
so light that it was possible to lift her up like a feather by holding her by
the elbow." According to some hypnotists, the phenomenon could be
accomplished by simple hypnotic suggestion. During the early 1980s the question
of possible paranormal changes of weight was the subject of experiments by
parapsychologists John B. Hasted, David Robertson, and Ernesto Spinelli.
Special Breathing
Techniques
Breathing exercises that form an important part in
Eastern psychic development are believed by some practitioners to have a
curious effect on the weight of the human body. According to Hindu yoga
teachings, they generate a force that partially counteracts gravitation. They
say that he who awakens the Anahata Chakra (a psychic and spiritual
center situated in the region of the heart) "can walk in the air."
The psychic researcher Camille Flammarion believed
that by breathing, even the ordinary sitters of a circle release a motor energy
comparable to that which they release when repeatedly moving their arms. Hereward
Carrington 's experiments with the "lifting game" seemed to show
that, for some mysterious reason, rhythmical breathing may considerably reduce
the weight of the human body. At the third International Psychical Congress in
Paris in 1927, Baron Schrenck-Notzing described the case of a young man
who claimed that by breathing exercises he had levitated his own body 27 times.
In Alexandra David-Neel 's With Mystics and
Magicians in Tibet (1931 etc.), there is a description of a practice that
especially enabled its adepts to take extraordinary long hikes with amazing
rapidity. It is called lung-gom and it combines mental concentration
with various breathing gymnastics. Meeting a lung-gom-pa in Northern
Tibet, she noticed: "The man did not run. He seemed to lift himself from
the ground, proceeding by leaps. It looked as if he had been endowed with the
elasticity of a ball and rebounded each time his feet touched the ground. His
steps had the regularity of a pendulum."
The breathing exercises of the lung-gom-pa had to be
practiced for three years and three months during strict seclusion in complete
darkness. It was claimed that the body of those who trained themselves for
years became exceedingly light, nearly without weight: "These men, they
say, are able to sit on an ear of barley without bending its stalk or to stand
on the top of a heap of grain without displacing any of it. In fact the aim is
levitation." One of these exercises was described as follows: "The
student sits cross-legged on a large and thick cushion. He inhales slowly and
for a long time, just as if he wanted to fill his body with air. Then, holding
his breath he jumps up with legs crossed, without using his hands and falls
back on his cushion, still remaining in the same position. He repeats that
exercise a number of times during each period of practice. Some lamas succeed
in jumping very high in that way."
Some initiates asserted that "as a result of long years
of practice, after he has traveled over a certain distance the feet of the lung-gom-pa
no longer touch the ground and that he glides on the air with an extreme
celerity." Some lung-gom-pas wore iron chains around their body for
"they are always in danger of floating in the air."
David-Neel discovered that during their walk the lung-gompas
were in a state of trance. They concentrated on the cadenced mental recitation
of a mystic formula with which, during the walk, the in and out breathing must
be in rhythm, the steps keeping time with the breath and the syllables of the
formula. The walker must neither speak, nor look from side to side. He must
keep his eyes fixed on a single distant object and never allow his attention to
be attracted by anything else. The use of a mystical formula, or mantra,
as an adjunct to levitation recalls the legends of sacred words in the
Judeo-Christian tradition.
Mirrors Theory
In The Metal Benders, John Hasted also
reports that: "In 1977 a young Soviet physicist, August Stern, defected to
the West and related some of his experiences in parapsychology. He had worked
in the Siberian science city of Novosibirsk," with about fifty scientists,
who induced levitation by enclosing a subject "within a cube of mirrors.
The multiple images, apparently stretching in all directions to infinity, have
the effect of disorienting the subject, who then levitates if he has the
ability." Hasted tried the same experiment using Stern as the subject but
was unsuccessful.
Summary
As you noticed, all the provided materials are presented for
levitation support. However, as of today, I was not able to find any
respectable confirmation records, that human levitation is possible. There is
nothing people saw which cannot be reproduced by modern illusionists. Review
the video clip of the modern levitation between two buildings in Las Vegas.
Performed by American illusionist Christopher Nicholas Sarantakos (stage name Criss Angel).
If and when the levitation existence will be proven by
future researchers, I will happily change my personal point of view, that it is
a pure fiction. If that will be the case, it definitely would not be the first
time science could be forced to accept something it had previously rejected.
Sources and Additional Information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levitation_(paranormal)
1 comment:
I have been to India at an ashram in South India. Paramahamsa Nithyananda explains about levitation and has many people levitating. Seen it numerous times. Swamiji does two way conferencing around the world and through my travels have seen the levitation through this means as well.
Science of Levitation by Nithyananda
http://youtu.be/YBR1R3Q_dd0
Scientific Research on Levitation
http://youtu.be/JlQAQiDNgro
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