Jeffrey Epstein asked to fund telepathy experiments — and had meeting with ‘spoon bender’

0



New Age guru Deepak Chopra discussed weird science experiments with Jeffrey Epstein — including tests on telepathy in autistic kids and clairvoyant reactions to “erotic/violent” images.

Emails released by the Justice Department show the disgraced financier regularly spoke to the “Ageless Body Timeless Mind” author, as well as other researchers interested in psychic abilities.

Jeffrey Epstein was in talks to fund paranormal experiments. AP

Epstein has long been known for his fascination with math and science — but his interests also included fringe fields such as telekinesis, clairvoyance and telepathy, according to the new docs.

Chopra forwarded the disgraced financier a mind-bending email thread in 2016 with the subject “proposal for a psi experiment,” the docs show. Paranormal researchers use the Greek letter “psi” to refer to psychic phenomena.

In one email in the thread, Stanley Klein, a professor of vision science and optometry at University of California, Berkeley, discusses experiments that used “erotic or other emotional stimuli.”

In 2017 Chopra forwarded Epstein emails discussing psychic experiments involving “erotic/violent” images and observing the pleasure and pain response of a clairvoyant. The email’s sender was redacted. 

Another experiment proposed having a clairvoyant guess numbers generated by a “quantum random number generator,” to prove their psychic abilities.

Parapsychologist Dean Radin sent Epstein a picture of a spoon he claims to have bent with his mind. New Thinking Allowed with Jeffrey Mishlove/YouTube

Other research focused on using autistic kids for telepathy experiments.

“I’ve been working with Diane Powell, MD and Deepak Chopra, MD on a project that is part of a long-standing clinical and research program of Dr. Powell’s, studying telepathy in autistic children,” Paul J. Mills, a professor of family medicine and public health at UC San Diego wrote in a 2017 email that Chopra forwarded to Epstein with a note, “FYI.”

Mills told The Post he was working with the Deepak Chopra Foundation at the time to secure funding for his studies, but they failed to secure funding.

“In truth, I didn’t even know who Epstein was until the last several years when he emerged in the news,” Mills told The Post.

Others too looked to Epstein to bankroll their research. In 2016, he was sent a proposal to fund a $90,000 project to prove psychic powers are real.

“If $90K were found to do a collaboration, I would be willing to oversee such a project,” famed parapsychologist Dean Radin wrote.

Radin, the author of “The Science of Magic,” later emailed Epstein a picture of a spoon he claims to have bent with his mind. 

“Here’s a photo of the holy s–t spoon I bent,” Radin boasted in an April 2, 2018 email with the subject line “The Spoon.” It is unclear if Epstein agreed to fund his research.

Deepak Chopra forwarded Epstein emails discussing paranormal experiments. Getty Images for SXSW London

Philosopher of consciousness Gino Yu, a retired associate professor at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, described Epstein in a 2018 email as someone with a keen interest in “people with special abilities.” other emails, Chopra and Epstein debated the nature of consciousness, time and psychic phenomena. 

But Epstein preferred rigorous scientific inquiry over mystical explanations for psychic phenomena.

“Mystical traditions were unable to cure diarrhea for the 50 years they tried, syphilis the same, these [sic] ancients arguements [sic] are silly at best,” Epstein wrote Chopra in August 2016.

The spiritual guru also emailed his friend about less esoteric subjects.

In a February 2017 for example, he invited Epstein to join him in Israel and to “bring your girls.“

“God is a construct, Cute girls are real,” Chopra sent in an email dated March 8, 2017.

The spiritualist told CBS News he was introduced to Epstein by Barnaby Marsh, former CEO of the Pennsylvania-based Templeton Foundation as someone who could potentially fund the research he was interested in.

“Some past email exchanges have surfaced that reflect poor judgment in tone. I regret that and understand how they read today, given what was publicly known at the time,” Chopra posted on X Thursday.

Chopra and Radin did not return The Post’s request for comment.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here