Spiricom .They called it "the device to talk to the hereafter", a mechanism that aspired to accomplish what many people have always wanted: to communicate with their lost beings, with deceased people.
We know that something like this gives us a certain chill, a certain grimace of skepticism.We also know that most of us are aware that there is a natural barrier between the world of the living and those who simply are gone, that is not worth overcoming.
Death is and will continue to be a dimension full of painful voids, fears and enigmas that religion, science and all those more supernatural tendencies, try to explain within their respective frames, that each of us will be free to assume or not.
However, It is easy to understand that many people throughout history have wanted to create different mechanisms to try r approach that "other side".And the Spiricom , was one of the best known attempts.Do you dare to discover it with us?
The foundation "Metasciencie" and the Spiricom
You may find it curious, but people like Alexander Graham Bell or Thomas Alva Edison, developed their own machines to communicate with the spirits, as we explained in Mysterious .Why not? Modern times were opening where technology, suggested new possibilities, new mechanisms where the human mind, always hungry for knowledge, wanted to advance in a little bit darker and more disturbing.
If new ones were opened throughout the 19th century paths in the field of the "supposed voices from beyond", it was not until the mid-twentieth century when the so-called technicians or specialists of the »EVP», electronic voices or simply, psychophonies , explained that to be able to communicate with presences from the other side, that is, deceased people, a mechanism with energy or electricity was clearly needed to be able to register words or short phrases.
It was in the 70s when he began to Strengthen the work carried out by the so-called «Metascience Foundation», one or Nonprofit organization that addresses within the field of parapsychology, all these areas, all these concerns from its headquarters in Kingston, Rhode Island .In 1982, he was one of the foundation's electronic technicians Bill O´neill, who managed to develop a sophisticated device through which, to come into contact (supposedly) with the hereafter.It was the Spiricom, capable of bringing up to 20 consecutive hours of voices from the other side.
Well, at this point many of our readers have either let out a sigh of skepticism or possibly felt the caress of a chill.20 hours of conversation with the dead? That was at least what they claimed in the foundation.It was a system they first called Mark IV, and it worked through simple transistors, amplifiers, valves, generators...and of course, a psychic medium that made « signal collector ». As a kind of battery that receives the energy from beyond, and that in turn, starts the machine to record the message.Emphasize that sometimes, they came to use also quartz crystals as energy receptacles, also giving them a good result.
You may wonder how this Spiricom was able to build this technique.The fact is really curious: for a while he was receiving a male voice in some of his electronic devices, a presence that was indicating to him in which frequencies he had to tune his machine to be able to communicate more effectively with the beyond.This voice was identified as Dr.Muller. When they investigated that name, they discovered that it was a NASA technician who died in 1967.
And what happened to Spiricom ? Was this technique continued to be developed that supposedly worked so well to communicate with the dead? Well, the truth is that little by little, the recorded voices were losing intensity until they disappeared.They tried it with new frequencies, but nothing worked. The voices were silenced forever and nobody could get back on March the machine.That is why the technicians left open the plans of the device, so that anyone who wanted it, started the project if he wanted to.
We, for our part, invite you to know, if you dare, 3 games to invoke the spirits.
Image: Mark Nye, Jorge Bernal, Rudolf Getel
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