I’ve heard my fair share of spooky stories growing up—who hasn’t? Whether you’re religious or not, most of my friends, at least, believe in some form of the supernatural to varying degrees. It’s not just about ghosts or gods—think luck, qigong, hypnosis, or other strange abilities. I’m a bit of a believer myself. Some experiences defy scientific explanation, leaving you teetering between skepticism and curiosity, desperate to figure out what’s really going on.

Plenty of scientists have tried tackling these mysteries with rigorous methods. Any supernatural phenomenon or special ability that impacts the physical world should, in theory, be testable through science. I admire the researchers who take this on—their courage and persistence are inspiring.

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What follows is an excerpt from The Science of the Spirit World: Dr. Lee Si-Chen’s 25 Years of Scientific Proof, a bestseller dominating book charts everywhere. Written by Dr. Lee, a former president and a professor of Electronic Engineering Department from Taiwan’s top 1 university, NTU, this book chronicles decades of theorizing and experimenting with the supernatural and special abilities. It’s a perfect lens to explore whether science can truly study these enigmatic phenomena.


A Cosmic Mystery Unveiled: The Information Field (The Spirit Realm)

Human abilities like telepathy, remote viewing, and telekinesis have been documented throughout history, mysteries tied to the human scale in the vast universe. In the West, formal scientific study kicked off in 1882 in Britain under the banner of parapsychology. After 130 years and heaps of published papers, it’s still brushed off by mainstream science—especially physicists.

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In the East, China began exploring phenomena like finger-reading and telekinesis in 1979. But since finger-reading defies modern scientific frameworks, it too gets sidelined. Yet its significance might outshine even the discovery of dark energy or dark matter.

Finger-Reading and Telekinesis: A Macro Mind-Matter Connection

Starting in 1996, I replicated China’s experiments from 1979, training kids in finger-reading and telekinesis. I tested dozens of teens aged 9 to 17, confirming that by touching folded paper strips with text or images, they could “see” the contents in their minds.

In their brains, the text or images sometimes appeared bit by bit, other times all at once on an internal “screen” (the third eye). With practice, a few kids even developed telekinesis, bending wires with their minds. We see this as a macroscopic fusion of mind and matter.

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In 1999, we made a breakthrough. With nearly ten physicists as witnesses, we found that when we used sacred words or symbols tied to religion or historical figures—like “Buddha,” “Bodhisattva,” “Jesus,” “Confucius,” “Laozi,” “Om Mani Padme Hum,” the swastika, or the Taiji symbol—folded into paper, the teens saw lights, glowing figures, temples, crosses, shadowy shapes, or heard sounds through their third eye.

This was totally unlike the 800+ experiments with ordinary text or images. But if we altered the sacred words—say, removing a stroke from “Buddha” or tweaking it into something else—the visions vanished, and they’d only see the modified text. It’s like a website URL: sacred words act as an address linking to a specific “site,” hinting at a network-like world beyond ours.

To rule out the kids’ reverence for these figures causing hallucinations, we tested with sacred terms they didn’t know, like Tibetan or Hebrew script. The results held—lights, glowing rings, etc.—and broke down when the words were altered. This proved the visions weren’t just brain tricks.

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By 2004, after five years of experiments, we concluded there’s a realm beyond our four-dimensional spacetime—a place I called the “information field,” or what’s commonly known as the spirit realm. It’s populated by highly intelligent entities, each with their own “website” you can visit. These sacred words are like URLs, connecting to specific sites. Whether a kid can “click” the link and retrieve info depends on their brain’s capabilities.

Think of it like a browser: high-functioning kids—those with accurate finger-reading—have the latest version, accessing a wide range of sites. Less adept ones have an outdated browser, limited to older, simpler “pages,” triggering fewer visions. This led us to see the material universe and the information field as a complex, interconnected network.

Visiting Paradise and the Buddha’s Site

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If spirits have websites in this realm, and human sites are rich with content, then spirit sites—crafted by pure consciousness—might be even more elaborate for our minds to explore. So, we decided to take a virtual tour.

The catch? Sacred words only get you to the “homepage”—lights or glowing figures. It gets old fast. How do you dig deeper? Like human websites, we tried adding a slash and a subpage address after the main URL.

The Glowing Cross Gate

On January 13, 2002, we asked Ms. T, who has finger-reading power, to use her ability on the phrase “Jesus/SAM.”

“Jesus” was the homepage URL for paradise, and “SAM” was short for Samuel, which, according to Webster’s dictionary in Hebrew, means “God’s name.”

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Our goal was to catch a glimpse of God. She first saw a green cross—empty, with a bright light behind it, like a grand doorway, likely paradise’s homepage.

I urged her to step through the cross gate. She approached the glowing green cross, trying to reach the vast, radiant cross beyond, but couldn’t get in. Then it hit me—think Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves. You need a password, like “Open Sesame!”

I’m not Christian, so I didn’t know the right phrase, but I recalled that prayers often end with “Amen.”

I told Ms. T to say it. She did, and poof—all the glowing crosses vanished. Turns out “Amen” is a closing word, signaling the end of the session.

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I consulted a Christian friend. “What should I say?” He suggested “Hallelujah”—praise the Lord!

So, on February 28, we tried “Jesus/SAM/Hallelujah.” She reached the cross gate again but still couldn’t enter. When she said “Hallelujah,” the cross spun around, passed through her body, bathed her in light, and spat her out the back.

I wondered: Does she need to be Christian to get in? On May 2, we tested “Jesus” again, connecting to the bright cross gate, but entry remained elusive. The answer wouldn’t come until August 7, 2004.

Turns out, you can’t just waltz into someone else’s domain—spiritual websites are like human ones. Later, we wrote “Jesus/” followed by “Can I enter paradise/heaven?”

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A glowing gatekeeper let Ms. T’s third eye in. She saw a road bathed in light, lined with radiant figures—silent, serene, probably angels. From then on, we knew the rules for visiting spirit sites and could explore the realms of the gods.

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