View Full Version : Top Ten Unexplained Phenomena


trav dog
10-17-2007, 11:05 AM
well since this forum is so lame i see it as my duty , to give you tards something interesting to look at

http://images.livescience.com/template_images/top10/ls_phenom_intromain_465x261.jpg

10

The Body/Mind Connection

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_mind_body.jpg


Medical science is only beginning to understand the ways in which the mind influences the body. The placebo effect, for example, demonstrates that people can at times cause a relief in medical symptoms or suffering by believing the cures to be effective - whether they actually are or not. Using processes only poorly understood, the body's ability to heal itself is far more amazing than anything modern medicine could create.

9

Psychic powers and ESP

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_psychic.jpg

Psychic powers and extra-sensory perception (ESP) rank among the top ten unexplained phenomena if for no other reason than that belief in them is so widespread. Many people believe that intuition (see #3) is a form of psychic power, a way of accessing arcane or special knowledge about the world or the future.

Researchers have tested people who claim to have psychic powers, though the results under controlled scientific conditions have so far been negative or ambiguous. Some have argued that psychic powers cannot be tested, or for some reason diminish in the presence of skeptics or scientists. If this is true, science will never be able to prove or disprove the existence of psychic powers.


8

Near-Death Experiences and Life After Death

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_near_death.jpg

People who were once near death have sometimes reported various mystical experiences (such as going into a tunnel and emerging in a light, being reunited with loved ones, a sense of peace, etc.) that may suggest an existence beyond the grave.

While such experiences are profound, no one has returned with proof or verifiable information from "beyond the grave." Skeptics suggest that the experiences are explainable as natural and predictable hallucinations of a traumatized brain, yet there is no way to know with certainty what causes near-death experiences, or if they truly are visions of "the other side."

7

UFO's

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_ufo.jpg

There is no doubt that UFOs (Unidentified Flying Objects) exist - many people see things in the skies that they cannot identify, ranging from aircraft to meteors.

Whether or not any of those objects and lights are alien spacecraft is another matter entirely; given the fantastic distances and effort involved in just getting to Earth from across the universe, such a scenario seems unlikely. Still, while careful investigation has revealed known causes for most sighting reports, some UFO incidents will always remain unexplained.


6

Deja vu

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_dejavu.jpg

Deja vu is a French phrase meaning 'already seen,' referring to the distinct, puzzling, and mysterious feeling of having experienced a specific set of circumstances before. A woman might walk into a building, for example, in a foreign country she'd never visited, and sense that the setting is eerily and intimately familiar.

some attribute deja vu to psychic experiences or unbidden glimpses of previous lives. As with intuition (see #3), research into ,human psychology can offer more naturalistic explanations, but ultimately the cause and nature of the phenomenon itself remains a mystery.


5

Ghosts

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_ghost.jpg

From the Shakespeare play "MacBeth" to the NBC show "Medium," spirits of the dead have long made an appearance in our culture and folklore. Many people have reported seeing apparitions of both shadowy strangers and departed loved ones.

Though definitive proof for the existence of ghosts remains elusive, sincere eyewitnesses continue to report seeing, photographing, and even communicating with ghosts. Ghost investigators hope to one day prove that the dead can contact the living, providing a final answer to the mystery.

4

Mysterious Disappearances

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_disappearance.jpg

People disappear for various reasons. Most are runaways, some succumb to accident, a few are abducted or killed, but most are eventually found. Not so with the truly mysterious disappearances. From the crew of the Marie Celeste to Jimmy Hoffa, Amelia Earhart, and Natalee Holloway, some people seem to have vanished without a trace.

When missing persons are found, it is always through police work, confession, or accident never by 'psychic detectives'). But when the evidence is lacking and leads are lost, even police and forensic science can't always solve the crime.

3

Intuition

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_intuition.jpg

Whether we call it gut feelings, a 'sixth sense,' or something else, we have all experienced intuition at one time or another. Of course, gut feelings are often wrong (how many times during aircraft turbulence have you been sure your plane was going down?), but they do seem to be right much of the time.

Psychologists note that people subconsciously pick up information about the world around us, leading us to seemingly sense or know information without knowing exactly how or why we know it. But cases of intuition are difficult to prove or study, and psychology may only be part of the answer.

2

Bigfoot

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_bigfoot.jpg

For decades, large, hairy, manlike beasts called Bigfoot have occasionally been reported by eyewitnesses across America. Despite the thousands of Bigfoot that must exist for a breeding population, not a single body has been found. Not one has been killed by a hunter, struck dead by a speeding car, or even died of natural causes. In the absence of hard evidence like teeth or bones, support comes down to eyewitness sightings and ambiguous photos and films. Since it is logically impossible to prove a universal negative, science will never be able to prove that creatures like Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster do not exist, and it is possible that these mysterious beasts lurk far from prying eyes.


1

The Taos Hum

http://images.livescience.com/images/top10_phenomena_Taos_Hum.jpg

Some residents and visitors in the small city of Taos, New Mexico, have for years been annoyed and puzzled by a mysterious and faint low-frequency hum in the desert air. Oddly, only about 2 percent of Taos residents report hearing the sound.

Some believe it is caused by unusual acoustics; others suspect mass hysteria or some secret, sinister purpose. Whether described as a whir, hum, or buzz and whether psychological, natural, or supernatural no one has yet been able to locate the sound's origin.



:owned:

lancaster
10-17-2007, 12:42 PM
Thanks for playing, but that's a pretty poor top 10. Number 1 is the Taos Hum. WTF? I've never even heard of that. What about the more intersting phenomena such as the Nazca lines or even the Bermuda Triangle.

Neo_Pop
10-17-2007, 05:06 PM
I'd like to add the phenomenon of fat women with kids. Who fucks these women?

Evil
10-18-2007, 02:28 AM
I'd like to add the phenomenon of fat women with kids. Who fucks these women?

Future Jason.

Resin
10-18-2007, 05:20 AM
thanks for copying pasting non sense.

Rynoplasty
10-18-2007, 05:23 AM
I'd like to add the phenomenon of fat women with kids. Who fucks these women?

People that are very drunk.

Rynoplasty
10-18-2007, 05:23 AM
People that are very drunk.

Oh yeah and blicks if they are fat and white.

Aussie
10-18-2007, 07:50 AM
I'd like to add the phenomenon of fat women with kids. Who fucks these women?

hahahahaha

trav dog
10-18-2007, 07:58 AM
thanks for copying pasting non sense.

how dare you attemp to downplay my intelect

Jim
10-19-2007, 03:00 PM
Bigfoot is cool.
Imagine making some footage of a hairy manbeast that fools heaps of people & so called experts alike.
Its the ultimate pwn.

InternetHero
10-20-2007, 12:46 PM
It doesn't take a UFO nut to know what happened to Hoffa.

Cool list though. I should start a psychic scam where noobs call me up for mystic spirt insight at 5$ a minute.

Pwn!

StonerMcStoned
11-27-2007, 08:18 PM
:popcorn:

mastamatt
01-04-2008, 09:06 PM
I'd categorize bigfoot and all the other monsters in one category.

erxgli
01-05-2008, 08:44 AM
Eh...I like the subject, but I'm not very impressed. Many of them are related, and for that I suggest following the second link I present at the bottom of this post. My critique:

10. Easy. Reality is yours for the shaping. Think it, believe it, live it, be it. Put a little energy in the right place and the improbable becomes possible.

9. I think it's definitely related to
(edit...what the fuck was I doing here? :stupid:)

8. Dr. Rick Strassman wrote a book called DMT: The Spirit Molecule which links near-death and mystical experiences with DMT and the pineal gland. I suggest doing some research or going out and buying the book (it's fairly new and I wasn't able to find it at local libraries). It's a great read...I even gave an oral presentation about it at my school.

7. Anyone remotely interested in the concept of UFOs should definitely hear Terence McKenna's thoughts on this subject. This is a very interesting video.
<object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Pkck99hyYWk&rel=1"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Pkck99hyYWk&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object>

6. Again, this is part of a grand set of emotions and mysteries that I think can be explained with the aid of some alternative belief (http://deoxy.org/deoxy.htm).

5. Possibly related to Terence McKenna's UFO theory...

Interesting, it is, that in the first Matrix movie, Morpheus says that anomalies like vampires and ghosts are glitches in the system. I just now realized that if you look at the Matrix as a metaphor for our "distracted bubble" society, this applies almost perfectly to the McKenna explanation. Word.

4. Meh...I originally wasn't going to comment on this, but "the grid" is not a work of magic. One of our cultural obsessions these days is having that ego-security of knowing every little detail. From a governmental point of view it means the individual private lives of citizens, but fortunately for us, we aren't all microchipped at birth to be locked in and tracked every second of our lives...yet. But I generally agree with this one. Hopefully it isn't seen as justification for the microchips.

3. Malcom Gladwell wrote a book called Blink: The Power of Thinking without Thinking, which is all about intuition and what he calls the adaptive subconscious. It has changed my mind and my life, for the better, I believe. Check it.
http://www.gladwell.com/blink/

2. Are you kidding me, this deserves to be number 2? There is an uncountable (synonym, anyone?) number of species that exist now of which we are unaware. To me, that's just common sense (did I just make a paradoxical statement?). As far as a big hairy man or a reptilian sea creature in Loch Ness...either it exists or it doesn't (obviously). Among the latter category are (mass) hallucinations and conspiratorial manipulation through the mass media frenzy that follows the "discovery" or "sightings" of such unexplained phenomena.

1. No comment/lancaster said it perfectly.


Further studies/references/interesting shit:
http://deoxy.org/winlose.htm
http://deoxy.org/meme/New_Definitions_for_a_New_Way_of_Thinking

The film What tнe #$*! Dө ωΣ (k)πow!?:
<object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/5T7biBBC3zk&rel=1"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/5T7biBBC3zk&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object>
(Note: be aware of it's reception (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_the_Bleep_Do_We_Know%21%3F#Reception), the good & the bad)

That's it for me on this one.

I just spent way too much time on that.

May
01-06-2008, 05:38 AM
People disappear for various reasons. Most are runaways, some succumb to accident, a few are abducted or killed, but most are eventually found. Not so with the truly mysterious disappearances. From the crew of the Marie Celeste to Jimmy Hoffa, Amelia Earhart, and Natalee Holloway, some people seem to have vanished without a trace.

When missing persons are found, it is always through police work, confession, or accident never by 'psychic detectives'). But when the evidence is lacking and leads are lost, even police and forensic science can't always solve the crime.


natalee holloway has only been gone like 3 years. its just Missing White Woman Syndrome (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missing_white_woman_syndrome). give it a lil more time and they'll find the body

MMA4ever
01-12-2008, 05:24 AM
I'd like to add the phenomenon of fat women with kids. Who fucks these women?

Thats not as bad as the phenomenon of fat guys with hot skinny chicks whats up with that.

hotnewton
01-12-2008, 06:44 PM
I hate Deja Vu... the movie was kinda cool though... I hate when people say "It's like Deja Vu all over again"