Parapsychologists believe that both people and objects have the ability to emit an aura, although there are varying degrees of this ability, and not everyone is aware of it.
In ancient artworks, individuals and objects have been depicted with glowing auras. Saints in Christianity, Buddhism, and other religions are often illustrated with halos of light around their heads. The Holy Trinity is shining with auras, Bodhisattvas radiate light, and seasoned monks also emit a glow.
Today, parapsychological researchers assert that everyone and everything can emit an aura. This is a multicolored glow surrounding a person or object, reflecting a special energy state. This phenomenon can be visible to the naked eye through practice, but the ability to see it varies with age.
Auras are categorized into Spiritual Aura, True Aura, and 7 different energy levels. Auras display various colors. When angry, they may appear black or dark red. Practitioners often emit an orange aura. The color and intensity of an aura are related to health.
According to parapsychologists, plants also emit auras in the form of energy fields, with varying strengths depending on their resilience. For example, wild grasses have stronger auras than house plants because they exhibit more vigorous life force.
Aura Photography
An aura is a multicolored glow surrounding a person or object, reflecting a special energy state. (Source: noticiasaominuto).
Parapsychologists propose that there are numerous energy fields in the universe and on Earth. Meanwhile, humans, without the aid of technology, are limited by the five ordinary senses. Therefore, many phenomena exist that we do not recognize, such as cosmic radiation, electromagnetic radiation from the Earth, and artificial radiation like lasers. Thus, it is normal for people to be unaware of the auras of all things.
In 1939, a Russian electrical engineer accidentally discovered what would later be named after him: The Kirlian Effect. He was an electrician working in a hospital. Once, while repairing a high-frequency generator, Kirlian was electrocuted but remained unharmed.
He managed to photograph an object placed in a high-voltage electric field, resulting in an image of that object on film with an aura surrounding it. The glow exhibited unique characteristics depending on the type of material.
When the hospital acquired a new generator, Kirlian was allowed to use the old one for experiments. He figured out how to photograph various materials, making their aura images increasingly clear and systematic.
His research efforts attracted the attention of the state. In 1950, he received funding to establish a more modern laboratory. Kirlian’s research results garnered interest from the scientific community both domestically and internationally.
Following Kirlian’s path, in 1970, Georges Hadjo (from England) invented the biological aura camera. He was a photographer; instead of connecting an electrode to the film as Kirlian did, he attached multiple electrodes to different areas of the body to capture the aura of most body parts.
Natural scientists have also explained the phenomenon of aura photographs of people, animals, and objects captured through different imaging methods. They suggest that placing a material in a high-voltage electric field results in the absorption and scattering of the electric field on the surface of the material. This leads to a change in the value of the electric field (similar to how light is absorbed and scattered when it hits an object).
The images of the electric field captured on film merely reflect that phenomenon, and thus do not necessarily mean that materials emit an aura. However, on the other hand, natural scientists have been unable to confirm whether materials emit special biological energy fields.
Meanwhile, supporters of the “aura” movement have continued to develop various generations of aura cameras, even marketing them to the public. They systematically compile aura photographs and correlate them with applications in medicine and psychology.
This also laid the groundwork for the emergence of aura photography diagnostics, incorporating energy distribution within the images to assess health conditions. For instance, patients with poisoning may exhibit an aura image showing a deteriorated energy ring, while cancer patients may have a black energy ring resembling coal. In patients with autism, stress, or psychological trauma, the aura image around the ring finger may appear chaotic, diffused, blurred, and red.
However, scientists argue that there is no evidence supporting the effectiveness of diagnosing and treating conditions based on the Kirlian effect, if not to say that it is an ambiguous method that disadvantages the patients. The decoding of human auras has spanned thousands of years and continues to evolve.