Telepathy and German battleship Bismarck: Difference between pages

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'''Telepathy''' (literally "distant perception/feeling") refers to the supposed ability to communicate information from one mind to another, and is one form of [[extra-sensory perception]] or [[anomalous cognition]].
This information is generally reported as being "received" in the same form as that from the conventional senses.


German [[battleship]] in [[World War II]], named after [[Otto von Bismarck]].
Some, for example Spider Robinson in the book ''Deathkiller'', have envisioned neurological research leading to technologically assisted telepathy.


Design of this ship started in [[1934]]. During the design process it turned out that the standard displacement was 42,600 tons, which was well over the allowed 35,000 tons, as laid down in a naval agreement with [[Great Britain]]. The ship's keel was laid down at the [[Blohm and Voss]] shipyard in [[Hamburg]] on [[July 1]], [[1936]]; the vessel was launched on [[February 14]], [[1939]] and commissioned in August [[1940]]. Her sister ship, <i>[[Tirpitz]]</i>, was commissioned in February [[1941]].
The controversial British academic Professor [[Kevin Warwick]] of the University of Reading claims that his research into implanted radio transmitters is the first step towards a kind of telepathy. Others view Warwick as a self-publicist, and regard his claims with extreme skepticism.


Because of the British numerical superiority in battleships, [[Hitler]] ordered the [[Kriegsmarine]] to target allied merchant shipping. <i>Bismarck</i> set off on this mission on her maiden voyage, leaving port on [[May 18]], [[1941]]. Three days later, she was spotted by allied reconaissance while refueling in a Norwegian fjord.
[[Parapsychology|Parapsychologists]] have performed a number of experiments attempting to provide repeatable evidence of the existence of non-technological telepathy.
Perhaps the closest they have come is with studies of so-called [[Ganzfeld phenomena]].


On [[May 24]], [[1941]], accompanied by the heavy [[cruiser]] <i>[[Prinz Eugen]]</i>, she was engaged in battle by the British [[battlecruiser]] [[HMS Hood|HMS <i>Hood</i>]] and the newly commissioned [[battleship]] [[HMS Prince of Wales|HMS <i>Prince of Wales</i>]]. It is believed that one of <i>Bismarck</i>'s shells penetrated the relatively thin side armor of ''Hood'' and struck a powder magazine. <i>Hood</i> exploded and sank, taking all but three of the 1,418 crewmembers with her. ''Prince of Wales'', half its guns out of action, escaped under a smokescreen. <i>Bismarck</i> headed for France, in need of repairs, but was hit by a torpedo from a plane from the [[aircraft carrier]] [[HMS Victorious|HMS <i>Victorious</i>. She managed to escape her pursuers for the next 36 hours before being discovered by a reconnaisance plane. On [[May 26]], at dusk, she was attacked by British Swordfish torpedo planes from the [[aircraft carrier]] [[HMS Ark Royal|HMS <i>Ark Royal</i>]]. One torpedo hit jammed her rudder and steering gear, and she was rendered unmanoeuvrable. On the early morning of [[May 27]], [[1941]] she was engaged in an eighty-eight minute battle with
----
[[HMS King George V|HMS <i>King George V</i>]],
[[HMS Rodney|HMS <i>Rodney</i>]],
[[HMS Norfolk|HMS <i>Norfolk</i>]], and
[[HMS Dorsetshire|HMS <i>Dorsetshire</i>]].
After several shell hits and five or six torpedo hits she finally sank at 10:40 PM. Only 115 of 2,206 sailors survived.


The wreck of <i>Bismarck</i> was discovered in June [[1989]] by [[Dr. Robert Ballard]], the marine archeologist also responsible for finding the [[S.S. Titanic]]. <i>Bismarck</i> rests at depth of approximately 4,700 meters (15,500 ft.) at about 650 kilometers west of [[Brest, France]]. Analysis of the wreck showed extensive damage by shelling and torpedo hits, but also indicated that the Germans scuttled the ship to hasten its sinking.
[[Comic book]]s take greater liberties with telepaths, giving them the ability to not only control minds (through hypnosis-like capabilities, illusion, etc..) but actually turning telepathy into an offensive weapon by overloading the mental communication channel with a "mind-blast" which causes great pain, unconsciousness, and sometimes even death.


Nearly a hundred ships of all kinds were deployed to operate with, against, or because of
=== Additional Resources ===
<i>[[Bismarck]]</i>.
* http://www.btinternet.com/~neuronaut/webtwo_features_psi_one.htm


* The German heavy [[cruiser]] <i>[[Prinz Eugen]]</i>
* The German [[destroyer|Zerst&ouml;rer]] [[Zerstorer Hans Lody|<i>Hans Lody</i> (Z-10)]], [[Zerstorer Friedrich Eckoldt|<i>Friedrich Eckoldt</i> (Z-16)]], and [[Zerstorer Z-23|Z-23]].
* The German [[U-boat|submarines]] [[Unterseeboot 43|U-43]], [[Unterseeboot 46|U-46]], [[Unterseeboot 48|U-48]], [[Unterseeboot 66|U-66]], [[Unterseeboot 74|U-74]], [[Unterseeboot 93|U-93]], [[Unterseeboot 94|U-94]], [[Unterseeboot 98|U-98]], [[Unterseeboot 108|U-108]], [[Unterseeboot 552|U-552]], [[Unterseeboot 556|U-556]], and [[Unterseeboot 557|U-557]].
* The German weather ship [[Sachsenwald]].


* The British [[battleship|battleships]] [[HMS King George V|HMS <i>King George V</i>]], [[HMS Prince of Wales|HMS <i>Prince of Wales</i>]], [[HMS Ramillies|HMS <i>Ramillies</i>]], [[HMS Revenge|HMS <i>Revenge</i>]], [[HMS Rodney|HMS <i>Rodney</i>]], [[HMS Repulse|HMS <i>Repulse</i>]], [[HMS Hood|HMS <i>Hood</i>]], and [[HMS Renown|HMS <i>Renown</i>]].
''Someone else will have to supply the details of the experiments and controversy... :-)''
* The British [[aircraft carriers]] [[HMS Victorious|HMS <i>Victorious</i>]] and [[HMS Ark Royal|HMS <i>Ark Royal</i>]]
* The British heavy [[cruiser|cruisers]] [[HMS Suffolk|HMS <i>Suffolk</i>]], [[HMS Norfolk|HMS <i>Norfolk</i>]], [[HMS Dorsetshire|HMS <i>Dorsetshire</i>]], and [[HMS London|HMS <i>London</i>]].
* The British light [[cruiser|cruisers]] [[HMS Kenya|HMS <i>Kenya</i>]], [[HMS Galatea|HMS <i>Galatea</i>]], [[HMS Aurora|HMS <i>Aurora</i>]], [[HMS Neptune|HMS <i>Neptune</i>]], [[HMS Hermione|HMS <i>Hermione</i>]], [[HMS Edinburgh|HMS <i>Edinburgh</i>]], [[HMS Manchester|HMS <i>Manchester</i>]], [[HMS Arethusa|HMS <i>Arethusa</i>]], [[HMS Birmingham|HMS <i>Birmingham</i>]], and [[HMS Sheffield|HMS <i>Sheffield</i>]].
* The British [[destroyer|destroyers]] [[HMS Achates|HMS <i>Achates</i>]], [[HMS Antelope|HMS <i>Antelope</i>]], [[HMS Anthony|HMS <i>Anthony</i>]], [[HMS Echo|HMS <i>Echo</i>]], [[HMS Somali|HMS <i>Somali</i>]], [[HMS Eskimo|HMS <i>Eskimo</i>]], [[HMS Nestor|HMS <i>Nestor</i>]], [[HMS Jupiter|HMS <i>Jupiter</i>]], [[HMS Electra|HMS <i>Electra</i>]], [[HMS Icarus|HMS <i>Icarus</i>]], [[HMS Active|HMS <i>Active</i>]], [[HMS Inglefield|HMS <i>Inglefield</i>]], [[HMS Intrepid|HMS <i>Intrepid</i>]], [[HMS Assiniboine|HMS <i>Assiniboine</i>]], [[HMS Saguenay|HMS <i>Saguenay</i>]], [[HMS Lance|HMS <i>Lance</i>]], [[HMS Legion|HMS <i>Legion</i>]], [[HMS Columbia|HMS <i>Columbia</i>]], [[HMS Punjabi|HMS <i>Punjabi</i>]], [[HMS Winsor|HMS <i>Winsor</i>]], [[HMS Mashona|HMS <i>Mashona</i>]], [[HMS Cossack|HMS <i>Cossack</i>]], [[HMS Sikh|HMS <i>Sikh</i>]], [[HMS Zulu|HMS <i>Zulu</i>]], [[HMS Maori|HMS <i>Maori</i>]], [[HMS Tartar|HMS <i>Tartar</i>]], [[HMS Faulknor|HMS <i>Faulknor</i>]], [[HMS Foresight|HMS <i>Foresight</i>]], [[HMS Forester,|HMS <i>Forester,</i>]], [[HMS Foxhound,|HMS <i>Foxhound,</i>]], [[HMS Fury|HMS <i>Fury</i>]], and [[HMS Hesperus|HMS <i>Hesperus</i>]].
* The British [[submarine|submarines]] [[British submarine H-44|H-44]], [[British submarine P-31|P-31]], [[HMS Minerve|HMS <i>Minerve</i>]], [[HMS Sealion|HMS <i>Sealion</i>]], [[HMS Seawolf|HMS <i>Seawolf</i>]], [[HMS Tigris|HMS <i>Tigris</i>]], [[HMS Sturgeon|HMS <i>Sturgeon</i>]], and [[HMS Pandora|HMS <i>Pandora</i>]].


* The Polish [[destroyer]] [[Polish destroyer Piorun|<i>Piorun</i>]]

* The Swedish seaplane [[cruiser]] [[Flygplanskryssare Gotland|<i>Gotland</i>]]

* The Spanish heavy [[cruiser]] [[Spanish cruiser Canarias|<i>Canarias</i>]]

* The [[US Coast Guard]] [[cutter]] [[USCGC Modoc|<i>USCGC Modoc</i> (WPG 46)]]

[[talk:Bismarck|talk]]

Revision as of 22:34, 26 January 2002

http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/images/g10000/g15722.jpg

German battleship in World War II, named after Otto von Bismarck.

Design of this ship started in 1934. During the design process it turned out that the standard displacement was 42,600 tons, which was well over the allowed 35,000 tons, as laid down in a naval agreement with Great Britain. The ship's keel was laid down at the Blohm and Voss shipyard in Hamburg on July 1, 1936; the vessel was launched on February 14, 1939 and commissioned in August 1940. Her sister ship, Tirpitz, was commissioned in February 1941.

Because of the British numerical superiority in battleships, Hitler ordered the Kriegsmarine to target allied merchant shipping. Bismarck set off on this mission on her maiden voyage, leaving port on May 18, 1941. Three days later, she was spotted by allied reconaissance while refueling in a Norwegian fjord.

On May 24, 1941, accompanied by the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, she was engaged in battle by the British battlecruiser HMS Hood and the newly commissioned battleship HMS Prince of Wales. It is believed that one of Bismarck's shells penetrated the relatively thin side armor of Hood and struck a powder magazine. Hood exploded and sank, taking all but three of the 1,418 crewmembers with her. Prince of Wales, half its guns out of action, escaped under a smokescreen. Bismarck headed for France, in need of repairs, but was hit by a torpedo from a plane from the aircraft carrier [[HMS Victorious|HMS Victorious. She managed to escape her pursuers for the next 36 hours before being discovered by a reconnaisance plane. On May 26, at dusk, she was attacked by British Swordfish torpedo planes from the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal. One torpedo hit jammed her rudder and steering gear, and she was rendered unmanoeuvrable. On the early morning of May 27, 1941 she was engaged in an eighty-eight minute battle with HMS King George V, HMS Rodney, HMS Norfolk, and HMS Dorsetshire. After several shell hits and five or six torpedo hits she finally sank at 10:40 PM. Only 115 of 2,206 sailors survived.

The wreck of Bismarck was discovered in June 1989 by Dr. Robert Ballard, the marine archeologist also responsible for finding the S.S. Titanic. Bismarck rests at depth of approximately 4,700 meters (15,500 ft.) at about 650 kilometers west of Brest, France. Analysis of the wreck showed extensive damage by shelling and torpedo hits, but also indicated that the Germans scuttled the ship to hasten its sinking.

Nearly a hundred ships of all kinds were deployed to operate with, against, or because of Bismarck.

talk