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Would it be any easier to find "ghosts" in warmer temperatures or cooler temperatures? Or does it not matter at all.

2007-11-20 17:33:08 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Alternative Paranormal Phenomena

15 answers

Well, the touch of spirit is icy 'standing in the snow naked' cold, so you'd have to be in a fairly cold room in order not to feel a spirit around.

But there are other ways to tell, at least for me there is. I get the sense of another presence in the room with me (close your eyes and have someone walk into the room, but not tell you when they're doing it and to be really quiet about it--bet you can tell when they're there). The hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. I personally tingle where they touch me and/or a chakra begins to vibrate. Or I hear an outright voice.

2007-11-21 07:18:37 · answer #1 · answered by I'm just me 7 · 2 0

I have not found any correlation to temperature and paranormal happenings. I have seen paranormal effect the temperature though I have been in hot locations where the ambient air temperature was over 100 degree Fahrenheit and have recorded cold spots with a 50 degree drop in temperature.
BB

2007-11-24 08:19:45 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I haven't seen a real consensus among ghost enthusiasts, but a widely held premise is that warmth helps a ghost manifest itself, thus creating a cold spot by virtue of the energy exchange. So then your conclusion would make sense from this, and you would expect to see more ghost activity in warmer vs. cooler temperatures if the premise is valid. This might also suggest that the first line of defense for those who think their house is haunted is to turn down the thermostat a few degrees.

2007-11-21 01:07:58 · answer #3 · answered by John 7 · 3 2

Actually, it's the other way around...paranormal activity affects temperature, but I've experienced activity in extremely cold and hot environments.

2007-11-22 20:13:28 · answer #4 · answered by KeWr 5 · 0 0

according to some latest experiments ghosts appear in cooler temperature. Or rather the temperature of a room gets cool when a ghost appears.

2007-11-20 18:19:30 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

I think it's the other way around. I'm pretty sure it's the ghosts that affect the temperature. I'm almost positive anyways.

2007-11-21 02:23:12 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Good question but I haven't heard any instances of where climate effects the appearance or the occurrence of paranormal activity. However, vice versa seems to be the case that is paranormal activity has been cited to have changed the climate around those experiencing it.

2007-11-20 19:52:42 · answer #7 · answered by cspb 4 · 2 0

No it doesnt matter. It is acctually quite the oppisite. Ghosts affect the temperature.

2007-11-21 08:44:59 · answer #8 · answered by tolkeinfreak 2 · 1 0

When a ghost is trying to manifest itself, it has to draw energy. Sometimes it is by making the air colder. Sometimes it makes EMF (electric magnetic fields) detectors go to high readings like 7s or 11s or someting high like that. Sometimes they use the battery energy which can cause battery drainage. Hope this information helps you!!! :)

2007-11-24 13:19:13 · answer #9 · answered by animallover 2 · 0 1

It doesn't make any difference at all.

And the reason it doesn't make any difference at all is because ghosts don't exist.

No experiment, EVER, has demonstrated the existence of ghosts. Any that make this claim find that their results cannot be replicated by anyone else using properly controlled procedures. It's all a lot of bunk, and so is the alleged research. Gullibility, eagerness to become famous, neurosis, and wishful thinking are no substitute for properly conducted research.

Note: there are NO ghost "experts." At least not any who believe in them. The only experts are the ones who understand human psychology and know these things to be myths and folklore combined with a pervasive, uncritical, money-grubbing, sensationalist mass media, and a popular attitude that anything is possible and truth is democratic. You have yours and I have mine, right? Wrong.

So you should consider that anyone who presumes to be able to actually answer that question is blowing a lot of hot wind. (Or cold, depending on what kind of ghosts they believe in.)

Edit: Like I said, all you people who presume to know the answer to this question are blowing a lot of hot air. You don't have a clue what you are talking about, as every imaginible contradictory answer is being made with equal confidence. You can tell sometimes, when people use expressions like "energy molecules." Everyone who answered on the presumption that ghosts exist is either deluded, lying, or blindly apeing what they heard someone else say.

What's up, TR? Did you get bumped?

2007-11-20 18:21:50 · answer #10 · answered by Brant 7 · 2 6

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