The receiving of a voice on audio tape for which there is no known physical source.
The electronic voice phenomena. EVP is controversial, EVP researchers believe that they capture on tape the voices of the dead, spirit beings and extraterrestrials, but skeptics contend that voices from. That
Skeptics contend that voices that come from radio, television and citizen band (CB) radio transmissions are imagined from static and white sound. EVP voices often are faint and difficult to understand, To some they seem more like Aural Simulclara thnn real voices. Meaning: Hyper-reality has often been described as the inability of perception to identify and distinguish reality from a simulation of reality.
EVP is the first high technology attempt to communicate with the dead and other disincarnate beings. Thomas Edison believed that an electronic device could be a built for such communication. He was fascinated by spirit photography and believed that if spirits could be captured on film, they could be reached electronically. Edison announced in October of 1920 in the issue of Scientific America that he was working on such a device, but it was not completed prior to his death in 1931.
In 1936,, Attila von Salay began experimenting with a record cutter and player in an attempt to capture voices on phonographic records. He said that he began to hear a tiny voice in the air near him in 1938. He believed the voice belonged to his dead son, who happened to be named Edison. The experiments yielded what sounded like male and female voices, whistles and rapping.
Continuing the effort, in 1950 George Williamson attempted to tape paranormal voices, particularly of extraterrestrials.
The EVP remained in obscurity until the unexpected discovery of Frederic Jurgensen, a Swedish opera singer, painter and film producer.
In 1959,, Jorgensen tape recorded bird songs in the countryside neared his villa. On playback, he heard a male voice discuss a nocturnal bird song in Norwegian. At first he thought it was interference from a radio broadcast, but nonetheless made other recordings to see if the same thing happened. Though we heard no voices during taping, many voices were heard on playback. The voices gave personal information about Jurgensen, plus instructions on how to record more voices.
Jurgensen wrote about his experiments in Voices from the Universe, published in 1964 with a record. In 1965, he met Konstantin. Raudive a Latvian psychologist and philosopher, who was so intrigued by the EVP that he devoted himself to researching it and recorded over the years more than 100,000 voices.
By the 1980, thousands of EVP researchers around the world were recording messages from the dead and from more evolved spiritual beings who had once lived as humans on Earth.
Many are engineers and electronics experts who have devised sophisticated experimental equipment for capturing the voices. In Germany, the Association for Voice Taping Research was founded in the 1970s., followed by a second organization a few years later, the Research association for voice taping. In 1982, Sarah Estep founded the American Association of Electronic Voice Phenomena in the United States.
EVP voices are not heard during recording. Only on playback. They typically speak in short, cryptic, and sometimes grammatically incorrect phrases. They speak in a variety of languages, regardless of the listeners, and sometimes sing indistinguishable lyrics. Sometimes the voices sound like natural and sometimes they sound mechanical. Sometimes one or two voices are heard, at other times a multitude of them. The voices are identifiable as men, women and children. Animal sounds have been recorded as well. Some voices have said they are able to communicate on tape through ectoplasm. Voices also report that they communicate through one of many central transmitting agencies on the other side.
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