A Kozyrev mirror (Russian: Зеркало Козырева, romanizedZerkalo Kozyreva), in Russian esoteric literature from the 1990s, is a pseudoscientific device made from long sheets of aluminum (sometimes from glass, or a reflecting, mirror-like material) curled into a cylindrical spiral. It is alleged to focus different types of radiation, including that coming from biological objects, when those objects are placed inside it.[1][2] Kozyrev mirrors were used in experiments related to extrasensory perception (ESP), conducted in the Institute of Experimental Medicine of Siberia, division of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Example of a Kozyrev mirror

Name edit

This device is named after the astronomer Nikolai Aleksandrovich Kozyrev.

Reported uses edit

 
A 1998 Russian patent, RU2122446, "Device for the correction of man's psychosomatic diseases", relates to Kozyrev mirrors.[3]

Humans, placed into the spirals, allegedly experienced anomalous psycho-physical sensations.[4]

Kozyrev mirrors were shown in a documentary on the Russian state TV channel[5] and articles about them were published in tabloid newspapers in Russia and Ukraine[6] but not in scientific journals.

There is a claim that during one of early experiments in the Arctic village of Dikson, scientists placed an ancient symbol of Trinity into a mirror installation and perceived a field of force around the setup. The experiment was led by Vlail Kaznacheev, of the Russian Academy of Medical Science.[citation needed]

Materials edit

Highly conductive pure alloy of aluminium built into a spiral shape with a magnetic alloy on the inside layer of the structure.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ RU96113190A, Казначеев, В. П. & Трофимов, А. В., "DEVICE FOR CORRECTION OF PSYCHOSOMATIC HUMAN DISEASES", issued 1998-10-27 
  2. ^ Kaznacheev, Vlail (1992). Cosmic consciousness of humanity : problems of new cosmogony. Russia. pp. 33–36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ "RU212244: Device for correction of man's psychosomatic diseases". Scribd. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  4. ^ Энциклопедия чудес, загадок и тайн (Encyclopaedia of miracles, riddles and mysteries). Moskva. 2006.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Mirrors - Breaking the Future. YouTube.
  6. ^ "NovaYA - Онлайн журнал для женщин".

External links edit