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Dr Shivam Garg MBBS (MD General Practitioner), Parapsychologist |
The intersection of neuroscience, parapsychology, and supernatural belief reveals how the brain constructs experiences often attributed to spirits or ghosts. Neurological research demonstrates that regions like the temporal lobes, limbic system, and prefrontal cortex play key roles in generating sensations of "presences," vivid hallucinations, or out-of-body experiences. For instance, temporal lobe epilepsy can trigger hyper-religious visions or encounters with perceived entities, while Parkinson’s disease and dementia frequently cause visual or auditory hallucinations misinterpreted as supernatural phenomena. These experiences arise not from external forces but from neural misfires, neurotransmitter imbalances, or cortical atrophy, particularly in conditions affecting sensory processing and reality monitoring in several cases these are associated with supernatural entities creating a parasitic resonance bond with your lymphatic system. We deeply need to understand either it is natural defects of neurology or it is a resonance bond of some supernatural being.
Parapsychological phenomena—such as ghost sightings or telepathic impressions—often overlap with symptoms of neurological and psychiatric disorders. While schizophrenia may involve delusions of spirit communication, and sleep disorders like REM intrusion blur dream-reality boundaries, such experiences aren’t inherently pathological. Cultural context heavily influences interpretation: a hallucination labeled as a "ghost" in one society might be deemed a psychiatric symptom in another, like a psychospritual case a Jin diagnosed by islamic Parapsychologist with neuro defects can be diagnosed as Yakshas with neuro defects by hindu Parapsychologist or Virgin Mary in other . Neuroimaging studies suggest that intuitive cognitive styles and reduced prefrontal inhibition increase susceptibility to paranormal explanations, linking brain function to belief formation.
Ultimately, the perception of supernatural entities reflects a blend of neurobiology and culture. The brain’s capacity to generate vivid, emotionally charged experiences—coupled with humanity’s evolutionary predisposition to pattern-seeking—creates fertile ground for attributing neurological events to spirits or ghosts but in few cases it is a bland of supernatural entities because universe runs on rules and signs and supernatural being follow that rule. Understanding these mechanisms demystifies such phenomena without dismissing their subjective reality, offering a bridge between neuroscience and the enduring human fascination with the paranormal.