There were rumors that the first "night vision goggles" used in I think Vietnam had pilots seeing creatures flying alongside their aircraft
There was a guy on Danny jones podcast last summer that spoke about it, he also makes something similar that he claims lets you see auras. I can't remember his name unfortunately
Any idea which of those might be the one you’re thinking about? I’d be interested in listening to that particular podcast. I’ve heard this information before.
I've heard this claim from a number of sources. (Not necessarily independent. The story could be traveling a single grapevine.) I first came across it from Cliff High.
The story is wild. It doesn't make much sense to me, though. If the infrared band of the night vision detector is the same, why should the color of the photo-multiplier used to bring the frequencies into human perception matter? Why would red versus green matter if the detection is happening upstream? I don't get that.
The thing is, this is a case where the legend is ripe for scientific verification. Build a new pair of goggles according to the original specification. Put it to test. Nothing could be more compelling than a live demonstration.
"Brent discusses Dicyanin goggles and their historical use in trying to visualize the human aura (1:25:30). He explains that they work by filtering light into specific spectra, allowing the user's eyes to acclimate and see cobweb-like halos around people or objects (1:28:03).
While popular in spiritual circles, Brent notes that these goggles are not magical, but rather shift perception to a specific violet range (1:30:36). His company, Museum of Tarot, recreates these goggles using modern lens technology to prevent the fast...."
There were rumors that the first "night vision goggles" used in I think Vietnam had pilots seeing creatures flying alongside their aircraft
There was a guy on Danny jones podcast last summer that spoke about it, he also makes something similar that he claims lets you see auras. I can't remember his name unfortunately
This is a link to a summary of Danny Jones’ podcasts. https://glasp.co/youtube/channel/UCbtV5L8TVB0zQ9khThGApLw
Any idea which of those might be the one you’re thinking about? I’d be interested in listening to that particular podcast. I’ve heard this information before.
I've heard this claim from a number of sources. (Not necessarily independent. The story could be traveling a single grapevine.) I first came across it from Cliff High.
The story is wild. It doesn't make much sense to me, though. If the infrared band of the night vision detector is the same, why should the color of the photo-multiplier used to bring the frequencies into human perception matter? Why would red versus green matter if the detection is happening upstream? I don't get that.
The thing is, this is a case where the legend is ripe for scientific verification. Build a new pair of goggles according to the original specification. Put it to test. Nothing could be more compelling than a live demonstration.
It's like an hour 25 minutes in according to the ai summary. It's a pretty good interview though, I watched the whole thing
https://youtu.be/I7CPUNSlXKs?si=d8rAs6f_hvTBVAj4
"Brent discusses Dicyanin goggles and their historical use in trying to visualize the human aura (1:25:30). He explains that they work by filtering light into specific spectra, allowing the user's eyes to acclimate and see cobweb-like halos around people or objects (1:28:03).
While popular in spiritual circles, Brent notes that these goggles are not magical, but rather shift perception to a specific violet range (1:30:36). His company, Museum of Tarot, recreates these goggles using modern lens technology to prevent the fast...."
Thank you :)
Enjoy!