Reviews

Entangled Minds: Extrasensory Experiences in a Quantum Reality by Dean Radin

isabellaoberbec's review

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medium-paced

4.5

___puddin's review

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4.0

If only I had bought this first I would have saved so much space on my bookshelf.
He covers and summarises works of Russell Targ, Rupert Sheldrake, himself and so many more beautifully and concisely. Its the only book you need for someone curious about psi.

sarahconnor89757's review

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3.0

Sparknotes version: Science be trippin'

Too much commentary and not enough substance. Still, worth reading if you don't like reading text books and haven't yet read anything on this subject.

cetian's review

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4.0

This books achieves different (very important) things at once. That probably haven't been presented as substantially in one single work before, or even separately. It goes through the history of the most scientifically relevant studies in psychic phenomena, since their inception. It investigates and presents evidence (reserch, not just arguments) about why psychic phenomena have been traditionally regarded as an exotic, to say the least, field of research, and usually there is very little, close to zero funding and "serious researchers" avoid getting close to it, so their careers and reputations don't get contaminated. It goes on showing what are now the main fields of research, in psychic phenomena, the names and findings to look for. And it gives a clue for a theory that can explain, in a global way, extrasensory experiences. That is where the name came from. Entagled Minds came from the quantum physics expression "entaglement" and it sugests that, since particles are entangled, entaglement is what could explain such things as telepathy.
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