Abstract
IN his presidential addrress to Section D (Zoology) of the British Association at Newcastle recently, Prof. A. C. Hardy that forward the tentative suggestion that one factor in moulding patterns of behaviour among the members of a given species might be something akin to which he considered had now been established and which was clearly a revolutionary discovery from whatever point of view it might be regarded. Although, perhaps, a little apologetic in advancing this idea, Prof. Hardy did not conceal his belief that few could reject the evidence for telepathy were they to examine it with unbiased minds and without undue prejudice.
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Science and Telepathy. Nature 164, 505–506 (1949). https://doi.org/10.1038/164505a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/164505a0