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  1. Extrasensory perception (ESP), also known as a sixth sense, or cryptaesthesia, is a claimed paranormal ability pertaining to reception of information not gained through the recognized physical senses, but sensed with the mind.

  2. Außersinnliche Wahrnehmungen (Abkürzung ASW; englisch extrasensory perception, Abkürzung ESP, oft auch Übersinnliche Wahrnehmung) ist ein Sammelbegriff für eine hypothetische Art von Wahrnehmungen, die nicht durch bekannte sinnliche Erfahrungen oder Wissensquellen erklärbar sind.

  3. 25. Mai 2024 · extrasensory perception (ESP), perception that occurs independently of the known sensory processes. Usually included in this category of phenomena are telepathy, or thought transference between persons; clairvoyance, or supernormal awareness of objects or events not necessarily known to others; and precognition, or knowledge of the ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 12. Sept. 2023 · Extra­sensory perception is a collective term for various hypothetical mental abilities that might be able to explain certain supernatural phenomenon. These purported abilities (along with other paranormal phenomena) are also referred to as psi. The major types of ESP are:

  5. 27. Apr. 2019 · The concept of extrasensory perception (ESP) or what we regard as the sixth sense is that a man can make contact or communicate with distant events and people by unknown procedures that does not engage the application of sensual organs.

    • John Nwanegbo-Ben, John Nwanegbo-Ben
    • 2019
  6. ESP is defined as an awareness of the world that occurs through some mechanism other than the known senses — mind reading, sensing when a far-off friend is in trouble, foreseeing the future, and other phenomena more commonly associated with illusion artists than with science.

  7. 24. März 2015 · We propose that this occurs across three stages: (a) perception of signals from an information carrier, based on psychophysical variability in a putative signal transducer; (b) cortical processing of the signals, mediated by a cortical hyper-associative mechanism; and (c) cognition, mediated by normal cognitive processes, leading to a response b...