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do you have frends if so Plant perception (paranormal)From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchCleve Backster in 1969, a notable proponent of paranormal plant perceptionThis article is about theories regarding paranormal emotion and perception in plants. For the physiology of normal perception in multicellular plants, see Plant perception (physiology).Plant perception or biocommunication is the paranormal idea that plants are sentient, that they respond to humans in a manner that amounts to ESP, and that they experience a range of emotions or parapsychological states. Since plants lack nervous systems,[1][2][3][4] paranormal claims regarding plant perception are considered pseudoscience by the scientific community.[1][2][5][6]Such paranormal claims are distinct from the ability of plants to sense and respond to the environment via chemical and related stimuli.Contents1Early research2Later research3See also4References5Further reading6External linksEarly researchIn 1811, James Perchard Tupper authored An Essay on the Probability of Sensation in Vegetables which argued that plants possess a low form of sensation.[7][8] He has been cited as an early botanist "attracted to the notion that the ability of plants to feel pain or pleasure demonstrated the universal beneficence of a Creator".[9]The notion that plants are capable of feeling emotions was first recorded in 1848, when Gustav Fechner, an experimental psychologist, suggested that plants are…
Plant perception (paranormal)From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to search Cleve Backster in 1969, a notable proponent of paranormal plant perceptionThis article is about theories regarding paranormal emotion and perception in plants. For the physiology of normal perception in multicellular plants, see Plant perception (physiology).Plant perception or biocommunication is the paranormal idea that plants are sentient, that they respond to humans in a manner that amounts to ESP, and that they experience a range of emotions or parapsychological states. Since plants lack nervous systems,[1][2][3][4] paranormal claims regarding plant perception are considered pseudoscience by the scientific community.[1][2][5][6]Such paranormal claims are distinct from the ability of plants to sense and respond to the environment via chemical and related stimuli.Contents1Early research2Later research3See also4References5Further reading6External linksEarly researchIn 1811, James Perchard Tupper authored An Essay on the Probability of Sensation in Vegetables which argued that plants possess a low form of sensation.[7][8] He has been cited as an early botanist "attracted to the notion that the ability of plants to feel pain or pleasure demonstrated the universal beneficence of a Creator".[9]The notion that plants are capable of feeling emotions was first recorded in 1848, when Gustav Fechner, an experimental psychologist, suggested that plants are capable of emotions and that…