Could Einstein use TELEPATHY? Shock claim after experiment with Freud REVEALED

Albert Einstein is most famous for his groundbreaking theory of relativity. However, on the subject of telepathy, he famously said: “I close these expositions, which have grown rather lengthy, concerning the interpretation of quantum theory with the reproduction of a brief conversation which I had with an important theoretical physicist. “I am inclined to believe in telepathy.”

The theoretical physicist called entanglement – the way two objects remain connected through time and space without communicating in any conventional way – “spooky action at a distance”.

In Amazon Prime’s The Secret KGB Paranormal Files, host Roger Moore reveals that within uncovered KGB files, a man named Wolf Messing, known in Germany as the most famous European psychic in the 1920s and 1930s, completed a couple of “famous tests”.

The host describes how one test in particular was tested by Einstein and Freud in a “historic meeting”.

The alleged story is that Messing was invited to demonstrate his mental abilities in Einstein’s apartment and Messing said: “OK Dr. Freud, send me a telepathic message of what you want me to do.”

Mr Moore explains how Freud thought for a minute, went into the bathroom and opened the cupboard, took out some tweezers and went back into the living room.

Messing then went up to Einstein and said “oh excuse me Herr Professor” before plucking a hair out of his moustache.

Mr Moore said: “Freud said that was exactly what he had asked him to do.”

Wolf Messing became world-famous for his psychic abilities and even went as far as to predict the outbreak of war between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union.

He also predicted the end of the war to the month and the death of Adolf Hitler.

In “Mental Radio” by Upton Sinclair, the book, published in 1930, reveals a preface written by Albert Einstein on the subject of telepathy.

Einstein writes: “I have read the book of Upton Sinclair with great interest, and am convinced that the same deserves the most earnest consideration.

“The facts here set forth rest not upon telepathy, but upon some unconscious hypnotic influence from person to person.”

source: express.co.uk