The science of telepathy

The Science of Telepathy is part memoir, part metaphysical field guide, and part argument for treating telepathy as an electrical, biological, and social reality rather than a superstition or pathology. Author Barry Aubin begins with his own awakening, including the striking childhood and adult experiences that led him to understand himself as a “Telepathic Icon,” then moves through an ambitious architecture of ideas: linear telepathic processing, telecasting, remote viewing, dream casting, auras, telekinesis, anti telepathic rooms, legal reform, psychiatry, crime, climate change, and the future of global health. The book’s central claim is simple but immense: thoughts are electrical signals, consciousness is electronic, and humanity will change once it accepts that minds are not sealed rooms.

I enjoyed the book most when Aubin writes from direct experience, because those passages carry a strange, candid pressure. The scene of asking a neighbour for the time across an alleyway, then checking the clock and finding the answer correct, has the quiet force of a private revelation. So does the recurring image of him driving, hearing music, voices, and radio presences as part of a telepathic weather only he can fully describe. What moved me here was not merely the insistence that telepathy exists, but the loneliness beneath that insistence. Aubin writes like someone trying to build a vocabulary for sensations most people are trained to dismiss. His language can be rough, urgent, and looping, yet that very repetition sometimes feels less like a flaw than a record of pressure against silence. He’s not polishing mystery into prettiness. He’s trying to drag it into daylight.

The ideas are often bold. I found the sections on telepathic etiquette, answering the sixth sense with the sixth sense and ordinary speech with ordinary speech, especially persuasive as lived wisdom. The chapters on double speaking, hear blocking, and transferring tastes and smells also have a practical intimacy that makes them memorable. Other claims, particularly those involving organized crime, molecular damage, cloning, and large-scale institutional infiltration, are more unsettling. Still, the book retains a moral seriousness I respected. Aubin keeps returning to safety, conscience, hospitals, self-care, and the need not to act destructively on inner voices. That grounding matters. The writing is not conventional science prose; it’s closer to testimony crossed with speculative systems building, and at its best it feels like a mind mapping an invisible continent by lantern light.

I came away from The Science of Telepathy feeling that I had read something sincere, intense, and brave. It’s a book with conviction, and a rare willingness to speak from inside an experience that most public conversations flatten into fantasy. Its finest achievement is not that it settles every question, but that it asks readers to imagine a future in which the electronic, the spiritual, the medical, and the ethical can be discussed in the same room. I’d recommend it to open-minded readers interested in telepathy, consciousness, anomalous perception, spiritual science, or first-person accounts that challenge the boundaries of accepted reality.

Pages: 60 | ASIN: B0C5K2JKK6

Buy Now From Amazon
Unknown's avatar

About Literary Titan

The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on June 23, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from LITERARY TITAN

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading