Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!spool.mu.edu!uunet!mcsun!ukc!edcastle!spider!raft.spider.co.uk!peter@spider.co.uk From: peter@spider.co.uk (Peter Reid) Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle Subject: Re: Challenger Dreams? Message-ID: <1991Apr24.193727.17895@spider.co.uk> Date: 24 Apr 91 19:37:27 GMT References: <1991Apr22.043753.11398@ariel.unm.edu> Sender: peter@spiderman (Peter Reid) Organization: Spider Systems Ltd Lines: 23 Nntp-Posting-Host: spiderman.spider.co.uk In article <1991Apr22.043753.11398@ariel.unm.edu>, ollie@hydra.unm.edu (Ollie Eisman N6LTJ) writes: > I'd like to hear, via e-mail, from those who had dreams > of a shuttle disaster before the Challenger accident. Given the hazardous nature of a shuttle flight, the infrequency of such flights, and the interest that people (perhaps used to) show in upcoming launches, there's probably a very good chance that people dreamed in some way about a problem. You would probably find the same thing before each successful flight as well, except of course no-one makes anything of a dream that turns out to be wrong (when we dream of a loved one dying, and wake up to find they're OK, it causes no more than a momentary worry - when we dream of the same thing, and wake up to find that the event has occurred, we tend to connect that with some precognitive facility). Just a thought. Pete -- Peter Reid - Project Consultant | Spider Systems Limited | Spider Park, Stanwell Street - peter@spider.co.uk | Edinburgh, EH6 5NG, Scotland - peter%spider.co.uk@uunet.uu.net | +44 31 554 9424 (Ext 4021)