The Extrasensory-Aesthetics Research Working Group was founded in 2017. The current members include Jan Kolský, Vojtěch Märc, Matěj Pavlík, and Peter Sit. Their work is based on the ongoing research of Czechoslovak parapsychology as well as the conviction that art can become a tool of social learning. The group explores the limits of science and art and researches their often esoteric language. They relate to technologies and magic, their connections with art, their occasional indistinguishability, and various forms of rationality employed within these fields. They study the effect of extrasensory perception on contemporary art, perceived as part of the world which has been conjured away and conjured up again. Their research of phenomena like telepathy and telekinesis hopes to refine our attention towards non-standard ways of creation and transmission of information and peculiar methods of manipulation. The outputs of the Work Group were presented at Josef Sudek Studio during Fotograf Festival and at Cursor Gallery in Prague, at LOM in Bratislava, online as well as in a forest during a program run by the Institute of Anxiety.
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Listening Program - WE ARE WOODS: About Plant Intelligence and Interspecies Communication | 2019
26 – 28 July 2019 @ WOODS. Community for Cultivation, Theory and Art A forest plot near the village of Písečná, Ústí nad Orlicí, organized by: Institute of Anxiety more info
A listening program devoted to interspecies communication, especially between humans and plants through music. In addition to selected compositions, they will also present fragments from the history of relevant research, in part relating to the question of plant intelligence. Playlist: Stevie Wonder – 01 The Secret Life of Plants / 02 Mort Garson - Plantasia / 03 François Bayle - L'oiseau chanteur / 04 Jimi Hendrix - Vodoo Child (slowed down) / 05 Dalibor C. Vačkář - Rozvíjej se poupátko / 06 Chris Chafe - Oxygen Flute / 07 Albro T. Gaul – Sounds of Insect / 08 Jim Nollman – The Rattle



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Hand-Antennas: A trial for Areawide Shielding | 2019
March 2019 @ LOM, Bratislava
Exhibition Hand-Antennas: A trial for areawide shielding was the second presentation of ongoing research into czechoslovak psychotronics. This time the exhibition presented material connected to the phenomenon of energy or information extrasensory transfer and possibilities of its sensing. This topic was presented mainly through archival materials beginning with Bratislava reference and using it at one hand factually and on the other hand symbolically as a representation with its own extrasensory effect according to psychotronics research based assumption of active representations. In line with this framework the exhibition also presented “transmissions” made by Julius Koller and sound instalation by Jonáš Gruska.












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Geopathological Zoning | 2019
part of group exhibition: Conditions of Impossibility VII/VII: The Psychopathology of the Planet, CCA Prague, curated by Václav Magid
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Photograms show maps of deaths and serious illnesses in correlation with occurrence of geopathogenic zones.
Series of photograms works with depiction of phenomenon of geopathogenic zones which have, according to studies, negative effect on the living organisms. Photograms show maps of deaths and serious illnesses in correlation with occurrence of geopathogenic zones in specific locations spanning from public hospitals, private flats, and here though its depiction in the gallery itself to the nearby area of abruptly rising cost of living which is considered as a particular occurrence of pathogenity of the city as organism and of life in it. This artworks is based on the research into the phenomenon of geopathogenic zones which was also part of the czechoslovak psychotronics research. As part of the artwork we invited dowser to conducted demarcation of the geopathogenic zones in the exhibition space.





Localization of Geopathological Zones in Kurzor Gallery, Prague
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Exhibition view. Kurzor Gallery in Prague




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Telepathology and Parapsychogeography | 2018
Telepathology and Parapsychogeography Jan Kolský, Vojtěch Märc a Matěj Pavlík| ARTALK REVUE 2018
edite by Hana Janečková
The very nature of explored events has been a subject of lengthy discussions, especially in the Eastern Bloc, along the lines of official dialectic materialism. Individual researchers debated whether telepathic transmission is carried by electromagnetic waves or another form of physical or non-physical energy. In this context, the contrasting idea of Soviet researcher I. M. Kogan, arguing that the antennae of telepathically interconnected persons were actually their bodies, was widely applauded. From the psychotronic perspective, human, animal and vegetable bodies – aural and psychic ones – represent nodes within a network, spun out of organisms, energies and information. These bodies may show “regress of awareness” which “lost its power to think unconditionally and bear the conditional”8 or strive for “compensation to regain the lost beauty of life on this Earth by supernatural means.”9 During that process, they undergo an “adventure of modern rationality” which is “swallowing” and at the same time “vomiting” the “strange body called Telepathy,” “without being able to decide for the former or the latter.”10 Caught between distance and proximity, telepathic bodies are writhing in contractions of mystifying and de-mystifying of the world.

Phenomena labelled as parapsychological have been investigated in Czechoslovakia since the 1960s within the fields of psychotronics and psychoenergetics. The term psychotronics was borrowed by local researchers from French engineer Fernand Clerc, who coined it in the journal Vie des Métiers in 1954; the term was then popularized by the radio technology magazine Toute la radio in 1955. The apt question of “what does psychotronics want to be?” was answered by its leading Czech advocate Zdeněk Rejdák as follows: “A scientific discipline dealing with extraordinary human abilities which may appear occasionally and unwittingly, however, they may just as well be stabilized in some individuals by training after laboratory research. These abilities are a manifestation of certain specific neurophysiological and physiological processes of the human body. They are bound to a certain energetic form exteriorized by the human organism. This energetic form is able to transmit information from one person to another; in that case we speak of telepathy; or, one can receive information remotely; that would be telegnosis; and, thirdly, this energetic form, if appropriately modified, can perform tasks remotely and influence the movement of matter; that is what we call telekinesis (psychokinesis).”2 “Prof. Pobers from the Parapsychology Department at Utrecht University was sent to the Antilles to study the role of telepathy commonly used among the primitives. He found that when local women want to send a message to their man or son they turn to a tree and the father or son will bring what they asked for. One day, when Pobers witnessed the phenomenon and asked the rural woman why she would use a tree among anything else, her reply was both surprising and able to solve the entire modern problem of our instincts being stunted by the machines we rely on. Q: ‘Why do you turn to a tree?’ A: ‘Because I’m poor. If I was rich, I would have a phone.’”[1]

Documentation of an experiment by Robert Pavlita performing magnetization of organic, wooden material. Photo: Milan Smrž’s archive
Phenomena labelled as parapsychological have been investigated in Czechoslovakia since the 1960s within the fields of psychotronics and psychoenergetics. The term psychotronics was borrowed by local researchers from French engineer Fernand Clerc, who coined it in the journal Vie des Métiers in 1954; the term was then popularized by the radio technology magazine Toute la radio in 1955. The apt question of “what does psychotronics want to be?” was answered by its leading Czech advocate Zdeněk Rejdák as follows: “A scientific discipline dealing with extraordinary human abilities which may appear occasionally and unwittingly, however, they may just as well be stabilized in some individuals by training after laboratory research. These abilities are a manifestation of certain specific neurophysiological and physiological processes of the human body. They are bound to a certain energetic form exteriorized by the human organism. This energetic form is able to transmit information from one person to another; in that case we speak of telepathy; or, one can receive information remotely; that would be telegnosis; and, thirdly, this energetic form, if appropriately modified, can perform tasks remotely and influence the movement of matter; that is what we call telekinesis (psychokinesis).”[2]
Telepathy, or “remote feeling,” has been discussed since 1882 when this term was introduced by classic philologist, poet and school inspector Frederic Meyers, co-founder of the UK’s Society for Psychical Research. Similar societies to this one, founded at the time and later, especially in Europe and North America, started conducting controlled telepathic experiments as well as recording cases of spontaneous telepathy. The latter implied a connection between close people, where one of them was exposed to remarkable tension or danger at a specific moment. These experiments used primarily sets of special cards (including the Zener cards with five symbols and animal cards used by S. G. Soal among others). History’s most successful psychics include Pavel Štěpánek, who participated in more than 40 000 card experiments in the first half of the 1960s under the guidance of Czech researcher Milan Rýzl as well as a number of international experts. However, probably due to a certain exhaustion caused by the repetitive nature of the card experiments, these were gradually abandoned; since the 1970s, with regard to what is known as Ganzfeld experiments, the participants would transmit more complex signals, such as entire perceptions of a certain environment, rather than schematic symbols.

Documentation of an experiment by Robert Pavlita performing magnetization of organic, wooden material. Photo: Milan Smrž’s archive
The methodology of these experiments with “remote perception” was developed primarily by American researchers Harold E. Puthoff and Russel Targ, beginning in the 1970s, at the Stanford Research Institute International.
“A one-time manifestation of distance, however near it is,”[3] if near enough for us to sense it or even suffer from it, reveals telepathy as a “product of ambivalent modernity” where “spooky experiences of distance and relation, of traumatic severances and equally disturbing intimacies, have only intensified in an increasingly globalized and technologically saturated world.”[4] 19th century interest in telepathy was stirred up by the development of telecommunication and recording technologies, which enabled the transmission of the message across substantial temporal and spatial distances.
Technologies provided a certain parallel grounding around which both the scientific research into telepathy and popular notions of telepathy were coordinated. If we maintain that “mystical radiation is a modest anticipation of technical radiation,”[5] or admit that “any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic,”[6] it is probably true that “the difference between technology and magic is a thoroughly historical variable.”[7] Radiotechnological terminology even made it into the title of Upton Sinclair’s Mental Radio in 1930. Furthermore, several telepathy researchers came up with a direct professional “ethereal” experience; these included Bernard Bernardovich Kazhinsky, author of Biological Radio Communications, who explored telepathy in the USSR from the 1920s, and radio engineer Karel Drbal, a remarkable figure of Czech psychotronics.
The very nature of explored events has been a subject of lengthy discussions, especially in the Eastern Bloc, along the lines of official dialectic materialism. Individual researchers debated whether telepathic transmission is carried by electromagnetic waves or another form of physical or non-physical energy. In this context, the contrasting idea of Soviet researcher I. M. Kogan, arguing that the antennae of telepathically interconnected persons were actually their bodies, was widely applauded. From the psychotronic perspective, human, animal and vegetable bodies – aural and psychic ones – represent nodes within a network, spun out of organisms, energies and information. These bodies may show “regress of awareness” which “lost its power to think unconditionally and bear the conditional”[8] or strive for “compensation to regain the lost beauty of life on this Earth by supernatural means.”[9] During that process, they undergo an “adventure of modern rationality” which is “swallowing” and at the same time “vomiting” the “strange body called Telepathy,” “without being able to decide for the former or the latter.”[10] Caught between distance and proximity, telepathic bodies are writhing in contractions of mystifying and de-mystifying of the world.

One of the locations of telepathic experiment carried out by Jan Kolský, Vojtěch Märc and Matěj Pavlík, the bridge of Slovak National Uprising in Bratislava
[1] This quote from Jan Houska’s book is here to illustrate the relationship of traditional science to “Nature” and binaries of technology and magic. Jan Houska, Magie lidských smyslů (Praha: Nakladatelství L podniku služeb TESO, 1991), 71.
[2] Zdeněk Rejdák, ed., Telepatie a jasnovidnost (Praha: Svoboda, 1970), 7. [3] Walter Benjamin, “Umělecké dílo ve věku své technické reprodukovatelnosti,” Výbor z díla I: Literárněvědné studie (Praha: OIKOYMENH, 303), 303.
[4] Roger Luckhurst, The Invention of Telepathy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), 276.
[5] Theodor W. Adorno, “Teze proti okultismu,” Minima Moralia. Reflexe z porušeného života (Praha: Academia, 2009), 238.
[6] Arthur C. Clarke, Profiles of the Future: An Inquiry into the Limits of the Possible (New York: Harper & Row, 1973).
[7] Walter Benjamin, “Malé dějiny fotografie” in Co je to fotografie?, ed. Karel Císař (Praha: Herrmann & synové, 2004), 11.
[8] See Adorno, “Teze,” 235.
[9] Sigmund Freud, “Psychoanalysis and Telepathy,” in Psychoanalysis and the Occult, ed. George Devereux (New York: International Universities Press, 1953), 56–57. 10 Jacques Derrida, “Telepathy,” Oxford Literary Review
[10], no. 1 (1988): 38.
text available in pdf https://artalk.cz/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/AR-2-EN-125088.pdf
experiment https://luckypdf.com/arttalktest/
text available in czech here: https://artalk.cz/2018/06/25/telepatologie-a-parapsychogeografie/
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REPORT: Hands-Antennas: Protocols from Extrasensory Aesthetics | 2018
The presentation of ongoing research into the history of Czechoslovak psychotronics, its institutional and ideological context, as well as its potential overlaps into contemporary art and the search for possibilities of extrasensory aesthetics and understanding without words.
The exhibition presents a research focused on psychotronics in socialist Czechoslovakia in relation to material and spiritual conditions of the time. The term psychotronics has been applied in the local environment since the late 1960s, when it generally referred to the “theory of distant interactions between subjects and between subjects and objects,” and referred to phenomena such as telepathy, telekinesis and telegnosis. The exhibition suggests the historical context of psychotronics, in particular with an emphasis on its institutionalisation in the 1970s and 1980s, while utilising partial knowledge of psychotronics in its own strategy of exposition, which then opens up to the extrasensory perception.
https://artycok.tv/en/40640/anteny-ruce-protokoly-mimo-smyslove-estetikyVideo available with english subtitles
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Hand-Antennas: Protocols from Extrasensory Aesthetics | 2017
20/10–19/11 2017 Exhibition @ Josef Sudek Studio, Prague Part of Fotograf Festival 2017
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How to understand each other without words? How to perceive without the senses? How to change something from the inside? How to move someone remotely?
HAND ANTENNAS
When Vilém Flusser – in his book Do universa technických obrazů (To the Universe of Technical Images) – says that today, when the world has disintegrated into abstracted points, we do not take things in our hands but rather control them by pressing buttons and keyboards, he actually describes new manual economics and a new attitude toward the world booming with the expansion of digital technologies. Hands represent a model of simple tools. They are extended by the form and function of these tools. But what if some devices are similar to hands, whether morphologically or functionally? The RUKA (Hand) antenna, whose name is an abbreviation of the names of its Czech inventors, František Kahuda and Aleš Rumler, resembles a hand not only with its name. As its creators say: “All psycho-energetic experiments prove that the head and hands–palms are parts of the human body emitting the most radiation [...].” Under certain circumstances, “a hand with outstretched fingers acts like an antenna”. For “psycho-energetics” or “psychotronics”, the special relationship between the biological and the technical is symptomatic. Like Flusser’s buttons, psychotronic technologies and devices ask for a different way of dealing with things. The materialistic approach to seemingly immaterial phenomena brings unprecedented possibilities for communication and manipulation. In a way, the dreams of telepathy, telekinesis and telegnosis or clairvoyance come true in technical apparatuses available today. From the perspective of psychics, however, the current state does not mean meeting their goals, but rather a new challenge.
METHOD, DISCOURSE, INSTITUTIONS
Psychotronics is trying to establish itself as a new science and meet the methodological, discursive and institutional requirements to do so. In Czechoslovakia, the most ardent promoters of psychotronics included František Kahuda and Zdeněk Rejdák. The local parapsychological tradition adapted to new conditions, absorbing many ideas from the USSR. The very term of psychotronics expresses the intention to take a “more scientific” approach to the studied phenomena. While similar phenomena were historically explored mostly by curious individuals or interest groups, new professionalism reached official institutions as well. Since the late 1960s to the early 1990s, there was a number of psychotronic institutions in Czechoslovakia, including the Coordinating Group for the Research of Psychotronics, the Psychoenergetic Laboratory (PEL) at the Technical University (ČVUT) in Prague and later at the Institute of Chemical Technology (VŠCHT) in Prague (headed by Kahuda), the Research Institution for Psychotronics and Juvenology at the same institution (headed by Rejdák), the Section for the Research of Psychotronics at the Committee of Applied Cybernetics of the Czech Science and Technology Society (ČVTS), the Department of Experimental Psychotronics at the Research Institute of Animal Production, the Commission of Psychotronics of the Gerontological Society of the Slovak Medical Society, the Commission of the Slovak Council of the Czechoslovak Scientific and Technological Society for Psychotronics, and more. Since 1973, there were also conferences of the International Society for Psychotronics. The first edition was held in Prague on 18–22 June 1973.
In Czechoslovakia, the term psychotronics is promoted by Zdeněk Rejdák who refuses the term parapsychology. According to Rejdák, psychotronics includes telepathy, telekinesis and telegnosis. Rejdák also refers to his French colleague Fernando Clerc who says: “We already have electronics, cybernetics, stereotronics – and what do we still lack? We can suggest the term psychotronics for the phenomena using the energy emitted during the thought process and the energy carrying the impulse of the human will.” According to Clerc, “every one of us has the ability of certain, though extremely weak action at a distance. It will not be long before we can focus our will, safely protected from external influences, to run relays and servo motors.” František Kahuda distinguishes between the Western psychotronics, which tries to explain the phenomena studied with “known forms of energy”, and the Czechoslovak and Soviet psychoenergetics, which assumes the existence of a distinctive psychic or mental energy. However, Kahuda did not maintain this distinction consistently and even he later resorted to the concept of psychotronics. The idea of the specific nature of the Eastern concept of mental energy compared to the Western one is somewhat misleading: although the Soviet scientist N. I. Kobozev came with the theory of bio-energetic particles, the so-called psychones, the Soviets generally concentrated on physically explainable psychotronic phenomena (such as electrostatics and electromagnetism) and explored the relationship between parapsychological phenomena and the known types of radiation. Kahuda resonates with the Leninist theory of reflection, which sees the psyche “as an image (projection) of the objective reality”, as “the supreme product of the matter organized in a special way” which is “the result of the transformation of the energy of an external stimulus into to the fact of consciousness.” Moreover, Kahuda, referring to V. M. Bechterew and P. P. Lazarev, assumes that “the interactions in the process of thinking in the human nervous system energetically manifest themselves also outside the human brain”, as attested by cases of telekinesis or telepathy. The theory of mentions is supposed to complement scientific knowledge: it describes the “third signal system” (in addition to the two signal systems defined by I. P. Pavlov), “the fifth type of interaction” (in addition to the four types of interaction – nuclear, electromagnetic, weak nuclear and gravitational – studied by physics), and “the sixth sense” (called “temp” by Kahuda). Kahuda’s belief in the material mention character of mental energy is still a subject of disputes among those who are interested in psychotronics, as can be seen chielfy in the discussion about the nature of the telepathic transmission.
Rejdák describes psychotronics as an interdisciplinary discipline and puts it into the context with other sciences studying the aspects of psychotronic phenomena: physics, communication science, mathematics, cybernetics, psychology, psychiatry, medicine, neurophysiology, physiology, anthropology, geology, cosmobiology, sociology, and bionics. The “limit” nature of the studied phenomena asks for a certain interdisciplinary approach as the interdisciplinary dimension of research is emphasized both by Rejdák and Kahuda. Kahuda frames the discipline by the Marxist notion of “one science”, which includes physics, psychology and psychophysiology, biology and sociology. Like his Soviet colleague P. K. Anochin, he believes that the research on the brain must combine the findings of neurophysiology and behaviourism. He finds the “systemic approach” particularly suitable.
STR AND SHR
According to its proponents, psychoenergetics will substantially influence the ongoing scientific and technological revolution. Kahuda predicts “that the first half of the twenty first century will be the age of a new, yet unknown, though existing mental energy. Its control as the highest value of man should have the form of an active intervention into the confident shaping of mental processes to form the human for the benefit of the future society in a more rational way than ever before.” Scientific knowledge and rational application of this mental energy will then ensure “not only technical and economic development, but also the elevation of interpersonal relationships in the advanced socialist society to the highest attainable level. The scientific and technological revolution also and, perhaps above all, concerns the man and all workers who make it possible.” A different view is held by Břetislav Kafka, sculptor and hypnotist from Červený Kostelec, in his book Člověk zítřka (The Man of Tomorrow, 1947): “Technical sciences take the man away from the human. They confirm his notion that progress is about having more perfect machines, not about being better today than we were yesterday.” According to Kafka, “the aim of humanity” is “material and spiritual well-being. Industrial civilization defers this aim. Modern civilization sacrificed the sense to the matter. The man had become accustomed to his life by repeating the same movement every day, by processing one element.” Zdeněk Rejdák, who used to visit Kafka like many others, later speaks of the need for a “scientific and human revolution”, which should complement and counterbalance the ongoing scientific and technological revolution if we do not want to “flood the world in the next century with mechanical and human robots and enhance the alienation and social decay”. In Rejdák’s model, the man and mankind stand in opposition to the dehumanizing technology although they are complementary with it. Kahuda’s psychoenergetic dialectical materialism and Rejdák’s psychotronic socialist humanism are quite similar.
PSYCHOTRONICS, INFORMATION SCIENCE AND CYBERNETICS
Most generally speaking, psychotronics deals with unusual or unexplained types of information transmission. According to Valdemar Grešík, the last director of the Psychoenergetic Laboratory (PEL), closed in 1991, psychotronics “is based on the assumption that man is able to acquire and transmit information in other, so far unknown ways or paths. [...] To a great extent, diagnosing and looking for various objects and healing, all represent kinds of information transmission – in an energetic form, of course.” In this context, Kahuda speaks of “mental information science” which “lies in decoding the information encoded in substances. Such use of mental energy emitted by a psychic as a subject of an information process, when the energy has a similar role like the quanta of electromagnetic energy broadcast by an antenna in short wavelengths (radio microwaves) to the target subject, from which the wave is reflected and received in intermittent broadcast by an image tube which then receives the information about the observed object [...]. In this process, the quanta of mental energy function as a mental radar while the emitted clusters of mental energy are qualitatively directed to the object of the process, i.e. contain the required information in the form of instruction and query on the way to the target, and in the form of feedback response on the way back to the source (brain). The detection of the target during the mental reflection is not only about a mere physical reflection, but also about finding the qualitative characteristics of the detected object.” Moreover, according to Kahuda, the mentions – unlike the known particles – can penetrate any obstacle, which makes them suitable for the “action at a distance”. Before Kahuda, the striking parallelism of telepathy and radiocommunications was mentioned also by Upton Sinclair in Mental Radio (1930) and B.B. Kazinskij in Biological Radio communications (1962). The effort to clarify the physical nature of parapsychological phenomena and the recurrent recognition of similarities between these phenomena and technological apparatuses is also noteworthy.
Kahuda says that “the use of a variety of devices for contactless communication with both the living and nonliving matter, using a psychophysical method, will certainly be very important one day”. According to Kahuda, the role of mentions is to transfer “quality-oriented information in various types of nonverbal mention communication”, including communication with animals and plants. Mental energy is supposed to be useful “especially in the area of communication, control, management, influencing various events”. This statement is strikingly reminiscent of the definition of cybernetics by Norbert Wiener as a science of control and communication in living organisms and machines. Besides the contemporary fascination with cybernetics (developed in the Easter Bloc since the late 1950s), there is also a certain structural similarity attracting the psychics. If hands in the eyes of psychics resemble antennas, the second key part of the human body, the head – and namely the brain, is obviously associated with computers. This comparison often occurs in the texts. Kahuda concludes that “man is not [unlike computers] only a ‘product’ of the social environment, a passive object of the internalized (interiorized) effects of the external environment, but uses its own self-regulatory system to create and change the external stimuli, to exteriorize them with ideas and work, thus actively influencing the world and acting as an active creature”. At the First International Conference of Psychotronics, Rejdák presented his paper “Psychotronics reveals new possibilities for cybernetics” which concluded that psychotronics “can help cybernetics solve one of the most difficult tasks – to help teach machines to create”.
The context of psychotronics and cybernetics can be detected at multiple levels, as shown by American researchers Lynn Schroeder and Sheila Ostrander who described the state of Czechoslovak psychotronics in the late 1960s in Psychic Discoveries behind the Iron Curtain, describing the Czech experiment whose executors decided to “think of telepathy as a channel with such a high degree of noise that it almost drowns the entire message. Information theory knows the means to overcome the problem of noise, such as calculations indicating, among other things, how many repetitions of one bit of information is necessary for proper reception. The Czechs used these calculations when they asked two people to try to telepathically send messages in a binary code back and forth while the computer found the necessary formula according to information theory.” In the experiment, telepathy reportedly proved to be more reliable than a field radio.
PYRAMIDS AND GENERATORS
Although psychics announce the immense impact of their discoveries in the near future, the practical application of the research is limited to relatively marginal cases. In 1959, one of the most important representatives of Czech psychotronics, radio engineer Karel Drbal won a patent for the “method for maintaining shaving knives and razors sharp” using small pyramids, made from for example, cardboard or plastic. To achieve the desired effect, it was necessary to orient the pyramids of certain shapes with respect to the Earth’s magnetic field. Drbal’s repeatedly applied for the patent which was allegedly granted to him only after the sceptical director of the Patent Office successfully used the invention himself.
The present results exceed the expectations and concern. The most attention is raised by the possibility to use mental energy for military purposes. Psychotronics seems to be a very strategic weapon for the cold war. A CIA report says that psychotronic weapons would mean a “serious threat to the military, diplomatic and security functions of the enemy. Transmitted energy would be quiet and hardly detectable by electronics (although the Soviets claim to have developed efficient sensors of biological energy) and the only needed source of energy would be a human operator.” Given the scarcity of available information, the US agents took the East European psychotronic research very seriously.
In this regard, CIA reports and the StB (Czech state police) were considerably interested in the so-called psychotronic generators produced by Robert Pavlita in his workshop in Lázně Bělohrad since the 1940s. These are mostly metal objects of various sizes and shapes that can be charged with biological energy under certain conditions. The efficiency of the generator depends on the form and material. Pavlita sees his generators as a kind of bioenergetic batteries that can be effectively controlled and regulated thanks to this technical extension. Using the generators, he can, for example, magnetize wood in a scientifically inexplicable way. Pavlita, who works as a textile technician, suggests that the generators can be used to purify water heavily polluted, among other things, during the production of textiles. Pavlita and his daughter Jana demonstrated the generators at the First International Conference of Psychotronics in Prague in 1973 as part of the lecture titled “The inductive effect on the human body mass”.
DOWSING RODS AND COAL
In 1991, physicists Luděk Pekárek and Milan Rojko published an article where they wrote: “In the past few years, the promotion of dowsers on TV and the radio, in daily press and entertainment and popular magazines in our country has caused that the national committees issue trade licences even to dowsers. Recently, geopathic zones on land and in flats are marked not only by individuals but also cooperatives and private companies. During the First Republic, dowsing was not even listed as a recognized craft by the Trade Chamber.” Since the late 1970s and 1980s, The Psychoenergetic Laboratory (PEL) conducted research on the possible use of dowsers in coalfields, and carried out projects like “Research of non-traditional methods of searching of anomalies in the mining front and quarry foothills and non-traditional forms of care for people in the North Bohemian brown coalfield” (for the North Bohemian brown coal mine in Most) or “Research on the protection of people in difficult mining conditions using mental energy” (for the Research Institute in Ostrava-Radvanice). These projects reportedly belong to the most successful PEL projects. Based on one of Kahuda’s suggestions to “implement the psychoenergetic research in the 8th Five-Year Plan”, a “scientific and production telesthesic association Ostrava Most, with a joint scientific council and specialized workplaces in the Research Institute in Ostrava-Radvanice (VVUÚ) and the Research Institute of Brown Coal in Most (VÚHU)”, was supposed to be established. The attitude of psychics to dowsing is still far from clear and depends on its application, as evidenced by Zdeněk Rejdák who joined the discussion in the Education Club of the Revolutionary Trade Union Movement (ROH) on physics and modernized superstition, held on 16 February 1989 by the Prague branch of the Union of Czechoslovak Mathematicians and Physicists. He said that marking “pathogenic zones in flats and prefabricated houses is for absolutely ‘untrustworthy and nonsensical’ and he thought that such activities should not be allowed and one should against protest against their authorization.”.
AUTOGRAPHY AND ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY
The techniques deployed in psychotronic research also include photography. Attention is also paid to various forms of autography and electrography that makes invisible forms of radiation visible. In the Czech society, there were some prerequisites for such an interest, as evidenced by references to the pioneer of autography, Bartoloměj Navrátil, who discovered the “New kind of electrical patterns” (published in Časopis pro pěstování matematiky a fyziky in 1889). A special place belongs to Kirlian photography, which was the subject of lectures of many speakers at the First International Conference of Psychotronic in Prague in 1973, including the Kirlians themselves. According to Kahuda, to explain the Kirlian effect, though proven in many experiments, one needs the “materialistic mention theory of fundamental material radiation”. Kahuda’s materialism, however, still pays attention to the social dimension, stating that the intensity and colouring of pictures of human organs depend on the mental state of man and vary “particularly according to the function of the man in nature and the society”.
One of the PEL research groups attempts to capture the mysterious radiation from Pavlita’s bio-generators on photosensitive material and experimentally prove the existence of mentions. These experiments are inspired by the research led by psychiatrist Jule Eisenbud in the Colorado Psychiatric Hospital in Denver in the 1960s. Eisenbud worked with psychic Ted Serios who used his psychic powers to create “thoughtography” on Polaroid film. Milan Smrž describes a series of experiments trying to capture mental energy on photosensitive paper in his research report for the project entitled “Physical chemical detection of mental energy” carried out by the PEL in 1980. On some photographic materials, there were strange spots, including “characteristic colons”. Although the report, written by Milan Smrž, mentions a number of inconclusive tests and does not provide a definite conclusion about the origin of the mysterious patterns, Kahuda summarizes the experiment in the darkroom in the following way: “To avoid doubt that it is the interaction of aura, existing in the space around the head of the psychic, with the film emulsion, and not a direct contact of the emulsion with the head surface, a film strip was inserted into a ‘crown’ made of stiff/drawing paper and deposited in the emulsion to the outside circumference of the crown, so that the fundamental primary mention radiation first passed through a strong paper barrier, then ionized the air in the gaps before the film emulsion, and continuously exposed the film emulsion with the resulting secondary photon radiation. This action took place simultaneously in the space around the head of the emitter. Different colours in different places of the film strip indicate various actions and functions of the human brain tissue at the time of exposure under the psychological and medical condition of the emitter. This function of the human aura could also be used in practice to distinguish between different kinds of the brain activity, similarly to the AG and EG [...].”
Vojtěch Märc














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