Dazing is a way beyond science to find treasures and mineral waters. There is, of course, no scientific evidence that the Dasing result is accidentally correct. The only tool needed for this is a stick in the form of the English word Yegre (Y), which is called "Dazing Wood", which is also known as the "Magic Wood".
The Dazing method appeared during the Renaissance in Germany, and since then it has found its own fans, the people who do this are called Dazer.
Dazing throughout history
Historians believe that Dazing was created in Germany since the fifteenth century when the fever of precious metal was hot, but in 1662 this method was introduced as an act of superstition and an evil act because a number of German judges believed Which is the evil force that guides the wood. However, it was not long before announced that since the guidance of the wood by the devil has not been proven, this method is not forbidden, and thus Dazing once again was used as a common way to find subterfuge.
In the seventeenth century, Dazing also opened the gap between the police and the detectives, and the French used this method to arrest criminals and outlaws, but the abuse of Dazing and the accusation of the innocent led in 1701 to "the law prohibiting the use of Dazing in Criminal and Police cases ". In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the farmers and herders in the South Dakota in the United States used the Dazing method to find water and grassland.
But the use of Dazing was not common in agriculture and herding. Perhaps not believing, but during the Vietnam War, some US Army soldiers used the Dazing method to find ammunition slums and enemy weapon tunnels. Even in 1986, when 31 NATO troops crashed into one of the Norwegian mountains, the Norwegian Army was helped to find them out of ordinary shape.
Although the science of Dazing has not been proven, even today, many farmers in Europe and the United States do not consider any method more appropriate than Dazing to determine the location of the water.
Forging
Dazing Equipment
In the traditional way, the most commonly used wood in Dazing is a wooden, forged or fork, that separates it from the branches of the trees. Some "dazers" prefer to pick their desired wood from a particular tree branch. For example, in Europe, the use of hazelnut branch, peach and mustard is very common. Two branches of the wood are hand-shaped and the third part of the tail is held directly. Then Dazer slowly starts to walk in different places, and after a while, he stops walking and says that there is water in the basement.
Dasers claim that at such points, the branch is pulled down or begins to jump short. This technique is also known as the "Magic Wand".
Metal bar
Many modern dazers have abandoned the use of Eagry's wood, and instead, they have two L-shaped metal bars. Each of the bars is held in one hand and the short part of the luminous object is kept upright.
Dares on the method of finding water and objects using this method claim that when the dazer approaches the object under the soil, the bars bend each other and form the X-shape.
In addition to metal bars, dazers also use plastic and glass bars. Smooth bars are also suitable for this, but they were not used until the early nineteenth century.
A pendulum
is also used to daze the crystalline pendulum, iron, or other metal that is hanging from a chain.
To do this, at first Dazer determines which pendulum movement the "yes" sign and at what point is the "no" sign. He then asks for questions from someone who holds the pendulum. The person holding the pendulum should be asked where it can move it in the center, when the pendulum moves, a response is asked.
Dazing in the Modern World
Today in the modern world, the police of some countries use dazing wood-like equipment, but also more advanced, which, of course, have not been scientifically proven. In addition, several bomb detection devices have been used by police forces in different laboratories, although none have been successful in scientific experiments.
For example, in 2013, a bombing device called the ADI 561 was used to bomb it in Iraq, but its outcome was unsatisfactory.
In April 2013, Jim MacCarmic, director of the US Army's Technical Equipment Division, called the device a scam. Meanwhile, the British government had previously banned the import of "bomber" devices.
Dazing Scientific Assessment
In 1948, in a scientific study, the ability of 58 dasers to detect underground water sources was tested. The result of the experiment was: "Dazers were happily found water."
In 1979, Dazing down again to find water was studied more closely, and the result was that the water source was a chance shot.
The 2006 study of graves found by the Dazing method showed that in these cases, the Dazers accidentally found dead bodies, and there is no scientific basis for this.
The Daising study in Germany
in 1990, in Kassel, Germany - the country where Dazing arose - the Scientific Society of Paleontology decided to review Dazing. A member of the Association, James Randy, awarded the $ 10,000 Award for Daisery to succeed.
In this three day trial, 30 dazers were selected. They had to figure out in which tube the water was flowing through several plastic tubes that passed through the underground. The pipes were 50 cm below the ground, and the path of each of the pipes was marked by a colored rope. All the Dazers believed that this test was very honest and that the answer would be perfectly correct, although the honesty of the test was really confirmed: "None of the Dasers were won."
Experiments by Dieter Betse
Hans Dieter Betse and several other German scientists during the 1987-1988 experiments on extraordinary abilities of 500 Dazer performed experiments known as "Munich Test".
Out of these dazers, 43 people, who were likely to have extraordinary strength, were selected for the final round.
In this experiment, the water flowed into a pipe in the basement of a two-storey storage, before each experiment, the pipe was pulled to one side, and on the top of the floor, Dazer should recognize the path of the pipe.
During the two years, 843 experiments were conducted. Of the 43 deseases tested, 37 of them reported their inability to do so, and only six people succeeded in making the route clear.
The result of the experiment was stated: "If we give up the chance, only a handful of the work has succeeded, which, of course, seems to have succeeded in their success, not their extraordinary powers."
Five years after Munich's studies, Professor Psychologist Jim Enriot claimed that the test result was not clear. He believed that the bets experiment by the Dazers themselves rejected the claim that they had extraordinary powers.
Possible explanations and justification of Dazing
in the early scientific justifications for Dazing, many believed that the objects that the Dazars discovered would give them underground rays that Dazers could absorb.
British physician William Prince has a strange justification for this. "When Dazer approaches the mineral, the number of blood cells in his body increases, which makes the tip of the wood bend and locate the object in question,"
he says . " Of course, he says: Occasionally, the unpleasant smell of burying objects in the underground causes Dazer to easily find the object. Although Perce's explanations seem convincing, they are not scientifically approved.
A 1986 article on this issue was published in the journal Nature. It was written in this article that Dazing has been reported to date as an abnormal phenomenon, but it can be explained with the help of orthodox science. People who support Dazing believe that there is no supernatural power in Dazing, but a phenomenon called "deep emotion" is effective.
Their statement summarizes this: "The unconsciousness of individuals without being aware of them affects their bodies, and this causes Dazing the individual to lead the person to the source."
Einstein's theory
Albert Einstein believed that Dazing was a real phenomenon. "I know very well that many scientists look at Dazing as they were in the past looking at astronomy," he says. Today, they think of Dazing as a kind of ancient superstition, but, according to what I know, such a theory is not so fair. Dazing wood is a very simple device that responds to the human nervous system against certain elements. How this may be explained by contemporary science. "
Dazing In ancient times,
paintings on the walls of caves in Spain show that in 40 to 50 thousand years BC, , The ancient people used the Dazing method.
Even paintings in the Iraqi caves have been discovered that depict Dazing and dates back to eight thousand years ago, as well as an object similar to Dazing has been discovered in the tomb of Pharaoh's Tote Anh-Ammon. There are two famous Dazing Woods in the world, one of which is in China, and it is said to have been used two thousand years before the birth of Christ (AS). The second timber belongs to the British, which in 1530, English miners helped find the minerals. At the time of Queen Elizabeth I, German miners were sent to England to teach Dazing to English miners.
Another famous case about Dazing has been recorded in history. By 1630, a bloody crime occurred in France this year, during which a businessman and his wife were murdered. The French police, in this case, helped a dazer to solve the riddle of this crime, and it is strange that Dazer led the police to the killer.
Sensory resemblance to the sense of birds
According to some researchers who have studied Dazing, there is a sense of dancing in birds, fish, and animals to find food and water. They say that salmon fish return to their hometown with the help of the same sense, or swaddlers seek water and food. It is not believable, but royal butterflies can even return to their ancestral home, even after three generations of their ancestral birthplace.
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