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The Extraordinary Telepathic Abilities of Animal-People, Part 2 of 4

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In 2008, Dr. Rupert Sheldrake, a biologist from Cambridge University, decided to explore the idea of telepathy in animal-people by conducting field studies on both wild and domesticated animal-people.

One of the major studies Dr. Sheldrake conducted was on animal-people who know when their caretaker will be home. By eliminating sensory factors that would normally signal to a dog-person when their caretaker is coming home, Dr. Sheldrake suggests the possibility that their premonition is based on a super-sensory, paranormal ability, like telepathy. Here we will watch Jaytee, Pam’s dog-person awaiting her arrival in an experiment with one of the most consistent findings. “Watch the timecode figures at the bottom of the screen and see what happens. ‘OK, OK, Let’s go.’ Almost exactly. How could the moment that Pam got up to go home send Jaytee to the window?”

One of the most extraordinary cases in which Dr. Sheldrake became involved was the case of a talking psychic parrot. And this parrot picks up his owner’s thoughts and intentions and actually senses them. After extensive research with animal-people, Dr. Sheldrake focused on human telepathy. The significant positive scores in his experiments confirm that the feeling of being stared at is a real phenomenon that depends on factors yet unknown to science. Another common natural phenomenon Dr. Sheldrake described was mothers who know when their child needs them.
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