16 May 2008
Gay marriage may not happen for California
 ENG   RUS   PT   ITA 
Photo Forum Articles News All news Feedback Advertising
Search the site:
Married couple ignores washing and haircutting for 16 years   Cat mothers fox-cub (photos)   Bull-terrier swallows L-size leather raincoat
Example: Yushchenko, Putin, Bush

The front page   
 Russia   World   Society   Science   Hotspots and Incidents   Opinion   Business 

Photo galleries
Pipeline fire in Nigeria kills about 100
Pipeline fire in Nigeria kills about 100
BMW X6 Passion and lust of lingerie

LATEST NEWS
Dish Network loses hacking lawsuit against News Corp’s NDS
Verizon Communications to provide Department of Homeland Security with IP and security services
FDA approves use of products made of bisphenol A
Health officials link outbreak of Salmonella infection to dry dog food
Education determins life span
Orange County welcomes Relay for Life Friday
Aliph releases new Jawbone model
Google urged to retouch Street View pictures
New study links education gap with death rates
Marijuana may break your heart


NEWS OF THE WEEK
Dmitry Medvedev becomes Russia's new President
These are the results of the sexual revolution
Oil prices to jump to 200 USD per barrel if USA invades Iran

Article

Modern science still turns a blind eye on levitation

29.02.2008 Source: Pravda.Ru
Increase font size
  Decrease font size   print version  
Pages: 123

The best-known ‘flying man’ is Joseph Desa (1603-1663), named Saint Joseph of Cupertino after his native village in South Italy. He had been unusually pious since his childhood and tortured himself to reach religious ecstasy. After he joined the Order of St. Francis, he started to levitate in a state of ecstasy. It once occurred in front of the Head of the Catholic Church. Joseph came to Rome and was granted an audience with Pope Urban VIII. When he first saw that, he was so exalted that he soared in the air until the Head of the Order of St. Francis had brought Joseph to senses.

Modern science still turns a blind eye on levitation
Modern science still turns a blind eye on levitation
BREAKING NEWS
Russia signs billion-dollar deal with Saudi Arabia
Mammoth earthquake hits China
It was only the USSR that defeated Nazism
Freak of nature: Giant jellyfish
More...

Scientists of that time observed his levitations more than a hundred times and left behind official evidence of their research. The flights embarrassed the faithful. They ordered him to move out from Assisi to a remote monastery in 1653. Afterwards, he continued his journey moving from one monastery to another. Finally, Joseph was transferred to the monastery in Osimo, where he fell ill seriously in the summer of 1663 and died the same year in September. He was canonized in four years.

According to church records, there were about 300 people who exercised the art of levitation in front of the eyes of the faithful. Seraphim Sarovsky and John, an archbishop from Novgorod and Pskov, belong to Russian levitators. Moscow chronicles tell of Basil the Blessed, who was carried by unknown power over the Moskva River in front of crowds of people.

The most prominent levitator of the 19th century was Daniel Douglas Hewm. The editor of an American newspaper described his first well-known flight as follows: “Hewm suddenly began taking off the ground, which came as a surprise to all the people around. I took his hand and saw his legs. He was lifting a foot away from the ground. It was a confounding variety of feelings – alternate fear and rapture made Hewm quake and he seemed speechless at that moment. Some time later he got down and then up again. For the third time he reached the ceiling and touched it with his hands and feet.”

Later on Hewm learned to levitate at will. For forty years he showed his gift to thousands of spectators, among whom there were such famous people as William M. Thackeray, Mark Twain, Napoleon III, well-known politicians, doctors and scientists. He was never accused of swindling.

Daniel Douglas Hewm was not he only one to bewilder scientists. In 1934, Maurice Wilson of England, who adopted yogis’ approach and trained levitation for years, resolved to soar up in great leaps and reach Everest. Next year his frozen body was found in the mountains. He almost reached the top of the world.

Discuss this article with others on Pravda.ru forum

Digg!
Pages: 123
print version e-mail


Readers' Top
Scientists examine collosal squid (PHOTO)
Skull size measures human intelligence?
Super successful fishing



FUNNY NEWS STORIES :
All news About Pravda.Ru Site map Export news News partners STATISTICS
© 1999-2006. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of PRAVDA.Ru's editors..
Rambler's Top100 Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru