The claims made about the so-called scientific studies in the links below are 
not credible from the neurophysiological standpoint. Electroencephalography  
(EEG) cannot tell us whether there is deception or not. It cannot also tell us 
whether there is self-deception or not. The purported scientific results in 
this case have not been published in any scientific journal. In fact, the 
scientist whose name is mentioned in these links has not published any research 
paper on EEG in general in the peer-reviewed medical scientific literature.

As far as Medjugorge is concerned, there are only two brief letters referring 
to this place in the medical literature. Both of them have to do with damage to 
the eyes of some pilgrims caused by gazing at the sun for long periods of time, 
hoping to see the miraculous apparitions.

Cheers,

Santosh

--- On Sat, 8/14/10, Dr. Ferdinando dos Reis Falcão <[email protected]> 
wrote:
>
> Any scientific person in this fora who has better better
> knowledge to refute this claim?
>
> http://deaconjohn1987.blogspot.com/2010/03/medjugorje-visions-proven->not-deception.html
>
>  And more tests:
>
> http://www.medjugorje.com/medjugorje/scientific-studies/627-specific-tests-administered-to-the-medjugorje-visionaries-and-their-results.html
>
> Dr. Ferdinando dos Reis Falcão.
>


      

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ISSUES BEING DEBATED: In East Africa, despite colonialism,
the British afforded the Goan a sliver of a socio-political
voice. Read *Into The Diaspora Wilderness* by Selma Carvalho.
Soon to be available in Toronto. Pp 290. Via mail-order from
[email protected] http://selmacarvalho.squarespace.com/

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