On Thu, 12 Apr 2018 21:47:15 -0400, Richard Aiken <xxxxxx@gmail.com>
wrote:
>On Wed, Apr 4, 2018 at 1:18 PM, Jeff Zeitlin <xxxxxx@freelancetraveller.com>
>wrote:
>
>> 13. Different people have different levels of sensitivity to the presence
>> of a ghost - for some, they may never have more than a 'feeling' of
>> something (the ghost) being nearby (this often expresses itself in the
>> same sort of nervousness that unconscious exposure to a 14Hz tone
>> does); others may only see a mist; still others can see more definite
>> manifestations, or be communicated with (if the ghost is of
>> sufficiently high volition). Those who can 'hear' ghosts do not
>> actually hear a true sound; it is more accurately describable as a
>> mental impression of the voice and words.
>>
>>
>In CT terms, this might mean that only those with an active Psionic
>attribute could sense ghosts.
That had occurred to me as a possibility - my half-formed ideas on this
basically said "In this setting, ghosts - no 'psionics'". It may be a bit
more complicated than merely a straight-up "PSI equals how you perceive
ghosts", though, because ghosts fade away over time (and under certain
electromagnetic influences), so there might be something about the _ghost_
that affects how a given person perceives it.
It would be interesting to try to figure out what the Hivers (who are
canonically psi-blind) would say about the human ability to directly
perceive these 'ghost' things that Hivers are insensitive to - and how they
explain the readings they get from detecting the 'non-existent [to them]'
ghosts using apparatus built to human-developed spec.
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