Video de anciano chino con supuestos poderes de telequinesis

Hemos descubierto este video de un anciano chino de 84 años que demuestra supuestos poderes para mover objetos sin tocarlos (telequinesis o telequinesia), la noticia ha sido publicada en una televisión china y abra que estar atentos para ver si es cierto, opinen ustedes:

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7 Respuestas a “ Video de anciano chino con supuestos poderes de telequinesis ”

  1. Based on personal experiences, I’d have to say this type of thing’s perfectly possible but taking, for example, the part of the video where the guy supposedly hammers the green stick-like implement through his throat, if you watch it carefully, as a sequence of tiny paused stages, you’ll see the ’stick’ actually flies ‘out’ his back before he’s even had a chance to finish shoving it ‘in’ his throat!

  2. Barring any magic tricks, I always wondered if this was possible after a life long practice of Qigong.

  3. Would that it was true but alas it (very very) probably is not.

    The founder of Hapkio (Korean Ju Jitsu) Yong Sool Choi, a legendary martial artist, practiced and demonstrated a similar technique - called the “breathing technique” in his later years, before his death. He would allegedly cause strong men to fall over and faint by hitting them with a sudden burst of air from from his lungs. He could reputedly blow out candle flames across a large room from a burst of air from lungs emitted with Kiyaa (Yell). I don’t know whether that was real or not.I know Martial Artists and Students of Master Choi who swear they witnessed this phenomena.

    Was it real or was it fake? If I were a betting man, I’d bet on a combination of both. I don’t really doubt he could put out the candle flame from across the room.

    However, in this case, the Chinese Martial Art master in this video probably has a couple of tricks up his sleeves. I can think of a couple of ways to accomplish the telekeneisis but I wont go into an explanation. Magicians do not reveal tricks. The rest, the breaking pointed stick, the knife that will not cut are just old side show martial art feats that are commonly performed by Martial Art demonstrators.

    Just the same, 84 years old or not, I have no doubt that you wouldn’t want to be the 18 year old mugger that tries to take this old guy’s guy’s wallet.

    Tufr

  4. You’ll note the table ‘has’ to be covered with a tablecloth so you can’t see what’s underneath it. The bricks could easily contain steel rods and be moved by magnets beneath - their movements are suggestive of an electromagnetic field at work beneath the table.

    If the man really had telekinetic powers - why not levitate the objects a few centimetres? The answer is - he hasn’t. His stunts with the stick in the throat and the knife across the belly are exactly that - ’stunts’. James Randi nwould have a field day exposing this guy. :)

    cheers

    SS

  5. About the stick, it’s this weird concentration technique, anyone ccan actually do it, its ot actually going through him at at all…They might have mentioned that if the whole video wasn’t in chinese, but its not a trick or anyting. Just testing the strength of our skin because the rod didnt go trough.

  6. Let’s see this in a controled environment… This just screams fake.

  7. This is China and the conditions are, according to Western standards, poor. I wouldn’t think there would be any great technology or magnets involved in performing these tricks, if they are tricks.

    Yes, the stick in the throat is a trick. The stick actually breaks, but this is nothing. Anyone can learn to do this. It’s not magic. As matter fact, the knife in the gut is also a trick, but sometimes I’ve seen this done so cleverly and up close (on me!) that I can’t help but feel there is something more to this than just a trick.

    The bricks moving toward the magician could be a trick, but moving away? That’s more difficult to explain, that is, if it indeed is a trick.

    There is no reason why a clever performer, magician, whether or actual, wouldn’t combine tricks with the real stuff.

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