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      • Now the newly released list of Stranger Things 4 episode titles points to the show introducing Nina Kulagina, the real-life Russian woman who not only inspired Millie Bobby Brown’s Eleven, but whose claims of psychic powers led the U.S. government to launch its own research into telekinetic abilities.
      nerdist.com/article/stranger-things-4-eleven-real-life-inspiration-nina-kulagina/
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  2. Nina Kulagina, Ninel Sergeyevna Kulagina (Russian: Нине́ль Серге́евна Кула́гина, born Ninel Mikhaylova [1] [2]) (30 July 1926 – 11 April 1990) was a Russian woman who claimed to have psychic powers, particularly in psychokinesis.

  3. Her full legal name at birth was Ninel Sergeyevna Mikhailova. ‘Ninel’ (‘Lenin’ spelled backwards) was a popular name for girls in Leningrad at the time of her birth. In Russian media she was referred as Nelya Mikhailova; in the West she was known (erroneously) as Nina Kulagina.1

  4. psi-encyclopedia.spr.ac.uk › kulagina_nina-797Nina Kulagina - SPR

    • Characteristics
    • Inhibiting Factors
    • Film
    • Commentary
    • Criticism

    Typically, Kulagina sat at a small table and was observed to move small objects placed in front of her, without touching them, apparently by a process of mental concentration. The objects included such items as matchsticks, an empty box of matches, a cigarette, an empty metal saltshaker and a wristwatch, The usual starting distance between her and...

    Kulagina was able to successfully produce PK effects in some 80% of her attempts on average, Keil and his co-authors estimate. The presence of hostile observers inhibited her, but if she persisted she would eventually succeed. Screens made of various materials had no inhibiting effect. Notably, she was unable to move an object in a vacuum, although...

    Kulagina’s PK effects were filmed by many people, starting with her husband. Many clips can be found on YouTube, some shown here, showing the addition of hand movements, tests with the compass, and subjective sensations of heat. This video also shows experiments with what seems to be genuine heat used to mark plastic and cut cords, and her final te...

    In a paper on his neuropsychiatric model of psi, psychiatrist Jan Ehrenwald observes that psi apppears to extend the typical boundary between ego and non-ego (that is, what a person considers ‘I’ as opposed to ‘not I’) and in this respect is the mirror image of physical paralysis, in which something which was ‘I’ becomes ‘not I’ for all intents an...

    From the outset, critics in Russia and in the West argued that Kulagina used illusionists’ techniques such as hidden magnets, invisible threads and blown air on the objects. According to her husband, the first Soviet scientist to invite her into a laboratory, LL Vasiliev of Leningrad University, was open to the possibility that her abilities were r...

  5. Nov 9, 2017 · O March 10, 1970, Nina Kulagina, a housewife and former member of the Red Army tank regiment, stopped a frog’s beating heart using only her mind. Kulagina, who claimed to have psychic...

    • Nina Renata Aron
  6. Jan 5, 2016 · Ninel Kulagina's full legal name we can determine with some certainty because she used it in filing a successful defamation lawsuit in a Moscow court against a Russian magazine in 1987. It was Ninel Sergeevna Kulagina (Нинель Сергеевна Кулагина, alternate acceptable translation spelling: Ninel Sergeyevna Kulagina).

    • Was Nina Kulagina the real Nina?1
    • Was Nina Kulagina the real Nina?2
    • Was Nina Kulagina the real Nina?3
    • Was Nina Kulagina the real Nina?4
  7. Nov 8, 2021 · Now the newly released list of Stranger Things 4 episode titles points to the show introducing Nina Kulagina, the real-life Russian woman who not only inspired Millie Bobby Brown’s Eleven,...

  8. Tested by Vasiliev in the 1960s, Kulagina caused a compass needle to spin by holding her hand a few inches above it and also moved matchboxes at a distance. She was filmed demonstrating her ability to move small objects such as a pen or cigarettes without contact.

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