Anyone who deals with time anomalies and time travel almost automatically encounters ancient chronicles and legends about people who have consciously or unconsciously made a time leap. People who abruptly disappeared without leaving the slightest trace and only later returned. According to ancient Indian epics, there once even existed a special "spiritual meditation technique" that amplified the numerous magnetite crystals in the brain and the body's energy to such an extent that a magnetic biofield was created around the body, making it possible to teleport someone across space and time. This is ancient knowledge that is not taken seriously. The phenomenon of time anomalies, such as time displacements, remains mysterious. Time anomalies are believed to arise from electromagnetic disturbances, when space and time are distorted or bent as a result, also known as "frequency anomalies." This is being further researched. Legends and occurrences of time anomalies were so puzzling to people in the past that they quickly associated them with a curse, a whim of the gods, magic, or magical beings. The Greek philosophers of ancient Greece even suspected that not all gods disappeared, but rather "wandered through time and continued to guide the destinies of humanity." And today? In the German Middle Ages, and especially during the fanatical era of the "Index librorum prohibitorum," demons, witches, and sorcerers, if not the devil himself, were suspected of being behind the events when people appeared and reported, confused, that for several days, weeks, months, or even years they could no longer remember where they were or what had happened. One can assume that their fate usually ended gruesomely. How much truth is there behind the legends?
Autorentext
Wilfried Stevens wurde am 27. Februar 1960 in Düsseldorf geboren. Seit seiner Schulzeit interessierte er sich für grenzwissenschaftliche Themen. 1973 schrieb er dazu seine ersten Beiträge in einer Schülerzeitung. Bis heute verfasste er dazu rund 200 Artikel und hielt einige Vorträge. Er ist mit internationalen Forschungsgruppen vernetzt, die sich mit diesen Themen beschäftigen. Von 1992 bis 2003 brachte er mit seinem Freund Axel Ertelt die Privat-Zeitschrift "Siam-Journal" heraus. Diese war zu diesem Zeitpunkt die einzige deutschsprachige Zeitschrift, die sich auch mit der thailändischen Kultur in Deutschland beschäftigte. Dazu verfasste er rund 300 Artikel. Stevens ist mit einer Thailänderin verheiratet. Dazu ist er auch mit deutsch-thailändischen Medien und Organisationen vernetzt.