Which was the first story featuring espers? [on hold]Who was the first telepath?Earliest exampe of mind-control failing due to obvious physiological/psychological differences?Which novel or short story was the first to utilize a Bussard Ramjet?What was the first story in which crucifixes burned vampires?Which SFF work first showed virgin birth?Which was the first story featuring merging of alternative/parallel universes?Which was the first sci-fi story featuring time travelling by passing memories back to your former self?Which was the first story featuring a psychic being unable to control his own powers and destroying his surroundings with them?Which was the first sci-fi story featuring alien genetical manipulation of native life on Earth to create humans?Which was the first story to feature helmets which reads your mind to control a machine?Which was the first story to feature space elevators?Which was the first story to feature orbital rings?

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Which was the first story featuring espers? [on hold]


Who was the first telepath?Earliest exampe of mind-control failing due to obvious physiological/psychological differences?Which novel or short story was the first to utilize a Bussard Ramjet?What was the first story in which crucifixes burned vampires?Which SFF work first showed virgin birth?Which was the first story featuring merging of alternative/parallel universes?Which was the first sci-fi story featuring time travelling by passing memories back to your former self?Which was the first story featuring a psychic being unable to control his own powers and destroying his surroundings with them?Which was the first sci-fi story featuring alien genetical manipulation of native life on Earth to create humans?Which was the first story to feature helmets which reads your mind to control a machine?Which was the first story to feature space elevators?Which was the first story to feature orbital rings?













10















Many stories feature "espers", or in other words, a person who is capable of mind control, telekinesis, telepathy and all kind of powers related to the mind.



Some examples in comics, movies, books, cartoons, anime and manga are Mob in Mob Psycho 100 (2012), Akira (1982), the Jedi in Star Wars (1977), Jean Grey in X-Men (1963) and Village of the Damned/The Midwich Cuckoos (1960)/(1957).



But for sure there is an earlier one. Which was the first story featuring espers?




Note: I looked for this question since it seemed obvious it should be there, but I couldn't find it. The closest one I've found is this, and it isn't exactly the same Earliest example of mind control failing. If there's one, please post the link to it.










share|improve this question















put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Valorum, Jenayah, TheLethalCarrot, Buzz, FuzzyBoots 10 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • 6





    What range of powers are you requiring for this? Do they need to show all of those powers? Some of them? At least one? Does it matter what the source of the powers is?

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday






  • 1





    scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/126687/…

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 8





    You didn't answer FuzzyBoots's question, whether espers need to soow all or some of the powers you listed. Originally and according to the dictionary, ESP is extrasensory perception; it includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition, but not "mind control" or psychokinesis (moving things with the mind).

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 2





    Is the story of a guy beeing able to walk on water and knowing his future days before it happends in the range of espers for you? Or the one about a guy that create a world just by thinking about it in 6 days?

    – xdtTransform
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    This is essentially unanswerable without significant further qualification. Almost all religions have some level of this type of thing in their stories, and it's functionally impossible to say when the ideas originated.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    12 hours ago















10















Many stories feature "espers", or in other words, a person who is capable of mind control, telekinesis, telepathy and all kind of powers related to the mind.



Some examples in comics, movies, books, cartoons, anime and manga are Mob in Mob Psycho 100 (2012), Akira (1982), the Jedi in Star Wars (1977), Jean Grey in X-Men (1963) and Village of the Damned/The Midwich Cuckoos (1960)/(1957).



But for sure there is an earlier one. Which was the first story featuring espers?




Note: I looked for this question since it seemed obvious it should be there, but I couldn't find it. The closest one I've found is this, and it isn't exactly the same Earliest example of mind control failing. If there's one, please post the link to it.










share|improve this question















put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Valorum, Jenayah, TheLethalCarrot, Buzz, FuzzyBoots 10 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • 6





    What range of powers are you requiring for this? Do they need to show all of those powers? Some of them? At least one? Does it matter what the source of the powers is?

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday






  • 1





    scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/126687/…

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 8





    You didn't answer FuzzyBoots's question, whether espers need to soow all or some of the powers you listed. Originally and according to the dictionary, ESP is extrasensory perception; it includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition, but not "mind control" or psychokinesis (moving things with the mind).

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 2





    Is the story of a guy beeing able to walk on water and knowing his future days before it happends in the range of espers for you? Or the one about a guy that create a world just by thinking about it in 6 days?

    – xdtTransform
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    This is essentially unanswerable without significant further qualification. Almost all religions have some level of this type of thing in their stories, and it's functionally impossible to say when the ideas originated.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    12 hours ago













10












10








10


4






Many stories feature "espers", or in other words, a person who is capable of mind control, telekinesis, telepathy and all kind of powers related to the mind.



Some examples in comics, movies, books, cartoons, anime and manga are Mob in Mob Psycho 100 (2012), Akira (1982), the Jedi in Star Wars (1977), Jean Grey in X-Men (1963) and Village of the Damned/The Midwich Cuckoos (1960)/(1957).



But for sure there is an earlier one. Which was the first story featuring espers?




Note: I looked for this question since it seemed obvious it should be there, but I couldn't find it. The closest one I've found is this, and it isn't exactly the same Earliest example of mind control failing. If there's one, please post the link to it.










share|improve this question
















Many stories feature "espers", or in other words, a person who is capable of mind control, telekinesis, telepathy and all kind of powers related to the mind.



Some examples in comics, movies, books, cartoons, anime and manga are Mob in Mob Psycho 100 (2012), Akira (1982), the Jedi in Star Wars (1977), Jean Grey in X-Men (1963) and Village of the Damned/The Midwich Cuckoos (1960)/(1957).



But for sure there is an earlier one. Which was the first story featuring espers?




Note: I looked for this question since it seemed obvious it should be there, but I couldn't find it. The closest one I've found is this, and it isn't exactly the same Earliest example of mind control failing. If there's one, please post the link to it.







history-of






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









TheLethalCarrot

47.9k17254303




47.9k17254303










asked yesterday









PabloPablo

1,2121333




1,2121333




put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Valorum, Jenayah, TheLethalCarrot, Buzz, FuzzyBoots 10 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Valorum, Jenayah, TheLethalCarrot, Buzz, FuzzyBoots 10 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 6





    What range of powers are you requiring for this? Do they need to show all of those powers? Some of them? At least one? Does it matter what the source of the powers is?

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday






  • 1





    scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/126687/…

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 8





    You didn't answer FuzzyBoots's question, whether espers need to soow all or some of the powers you listed. Originally and according to the dictionary, ESP is extrasensory perception; it includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition, but not "mind control" or psychokinesis (moving things with the mind).

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 2





    Is the story of a guy beeing able to walk on water and knowing his future days before it happends in the range of espers for you? Or the one about a guy that create a world just by thinking about it in 6 days?

    – xdtTransform
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    This is essentially unanswerable without significant further qualification. Almost all religions have some level of this type of thing in their stories, and it's functionally impossible to say when the ideas originated.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    12 hours ago












  • 6





    What range of powers are you requiring for this? Do they need to show all of those powers? Some of them? At least one? Does it matter what the source of the powers is?

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday






  • 1





    scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/126687/…

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 8





    You didn't answer FuzzyBoots's question, whether espers need to soow all or some of the powers you listed. Originally and according to the dictionary, ESP is extrasensory perception; it includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition, but not "mind control" or psychokinesis (moving things with the mind).

    – user14111
    yesterday






  • 2





    Is the story of a guy beeing able to walk on water and knowing his future days before it happends in the range of espers for you? Or the one about a guy that create a world just by thinking about it in 6 days?

    – xdtTransform
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    This is essentially unanswerable without significant further qualification. Almost all religions have some level of this type of thing in their stories, and it's functionally impossible to say when the ideas originated.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    12 hours ago







6




6





What range of powers are you requiring for this? Do they need to show all of those powers? Some of them? At least one? Does it matter what the source of the powers is?

– FuzzyBoots
yesterday





What range of powers are you requiring for this? Do they need to show all of those powers? Some of them? At least one? Does it matter what the source of the powers is?

– FuzzyBoots
yesterday




1




1





scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/126687/…

– user14111
yesterday





scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/126687/…

– user14111
yesterday




8




8





You didn't answer FuzzyBoots's question, whether espers need to soow all or some of the powers you listed. Originally and according to the dictionary, ESP is extrasensory perception; it includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition, but not "mind control" or psychokinesis (moving things with the mind).

– user14111
yesterday





You didn't answer FuzzyBoots's question, whether espers need to soow all or some of the powers you listed. Originally and according to the dictionary, ESP is extrasensory perception; it includes telepathy, clairvoyance, and precognition, but not "mind control" or psychokinesis (moving things with the mind).

– user14111
yesterday




2




2





Is the story of a guy beeing able to walk on water and knowing his future days before it happends in the range of espers for you? Or the one about a guy that create a world just by thinking about it in 6 days?

– xdtTransform
15 hours ago





Is the story of a guy beeing able to walk on water and knowing his future days before it happends in the range of espers for you? Or the one about a guy that create a world just by thinking about it in 6 days?

– xdtTransform
15 hours ago




1




1





This is essentially unanswerable without significant further qualification. Almost all religions have some level of this type of thing in their stories, and it's functionally impossible to say when the ideas originated.

– Austin Hemmelgarn
12 hours ago





This is essentially unanswerable without significant further qualification. Almost all religions have some level of this type of thing in their stories, and it's functionally impossible to say when the ideas originated.

– Austin Hemmelgarn
12 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















22














Copied from my answer to Q: Who was the first telepath?:



1755: A Voyage to the World in the Centre of the Earth: Giving an Account of the Manners, Customs, Laws, Government, and Religion of the Inhabitants, Their Persons and Habits Described ... : In Which is Introduced, The History of an Inhabitant of the Air, an anonymous booklet published in 1755; an abridged reprint from 1802, titled Bruce's Voyage to Naples, and Journey up Mount Vesuvius, is available at Google Books. It is the tale of a visitor to a utopian civilization inhabiting a 1000-mile-diameter globe inside the Earth. From Bleiler's review:




The humans are longhaired, bearded, and to some extent can read minds and character. They live to extreme old age, two hundred years not being unusual.




From the Google Books scan, p. 11:




"Know, O son of earth! that thou art not the first, by many, that chance has thrown upon our globe, neither is it impossible for us to visit your world: that god whom we truly adore has blessed us with those gifts that you are strangers to. We can, when we please, transport ourselves to your regions; and what surpasses even that, we have the gift of knowing the thoughts of those we converse with. By this means we are much better acquainted with your earthly brethren than you are yourselves, who can judge only by appearances. Often do you clasp that man to your bosom as a friend, who at the same time is your greatest enemy, and only professes friendship, while you have wherewithal to make him welcome; but when that fails, he will not only desert you, but leave you to starve in a dungeon, and pretend he never heard your name. These things, and worse, are common in your world: I have often made an excursion thither myself; and having the gifts I before mentioned, have seen things greatly unworthy of those beings that are, like ourselves, made after the image of our creator. Perhaps at a proper time I may tell you some particulars, but for the present we will confine ourselves to what relates to the world we are now upon, and which is in the centre of your globe."




From pp. 33-34, maybe an instance of telepathy in action:




I rose the next morning as soon as it was light and strolled about the town till breakfast-time; and when I came home, my landlady perceiving the perturbation of my mind, took every method in her power to alleviate my anxiety.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

    – duskwuff
    10 hours ago












  • @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

    – user14111
    5 hours ago


















12














One of the earliest stories is the novel The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford, published in 1911. The novel chronicles the life of Victor Scott, who is of superior intelligence and can control people with his mind.



With some further research, came across The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer-Lytton published in 1871. It's the story of a subterranean race called the Vril-ya, who resemble angels and have the power to channel the energy called Vril using staffs to heal or destroy and had telepathy.



If you're looking for earliest mention of telekinesis, possibly Odd John by Olaf Stapledon, published in 1935, the protagonist, John Wainwright, was able to manipulate matter at an atomic level.



So, Coming Race is probably the earliest mention of mental manipulation of energy and Odd John was the earliest I could find of the mental manipulation of matter.






share|improve this answer

























  • Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday











  • It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

    – KenM
    yesterday











  • My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday











  • FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

    – KenM
    yesterday












  • I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

    – KenM
    yesterday


















5














Satori are Japanese Yōkai with the power to read minds and speak the thoughts back to the person quicker than they can articulate them themselves. Written stories date from the early Edo period (sometime in the 17th century) but the oral tradition is much older.






share|improve this answer






























    3














    From another perspective the first use of the term was James Blish's "Esper" (1952), also published as "Jack of Eagles".






    share|improve this answer























    • Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

      – user14111
      3 hours ago











    • many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

      – user14111
      3 hours ago











    • Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

      – user14111
      3 hours ago

















    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    22














    Copied from my answer to Q: Who was the first telepath?:



    1755: A Voyage to the World in the Centre of the Earth: Giving an Account of the Manners, Customs, Laws, Government, and Religion of the Inhabitants, Their Persons and Habits Described ... : In Which is Introduced, The History of an Inhabitant of the Air, an anonymous booklet published in 1755; an abridged reprint from 1802, titled Bruce's Voyage to Naples, and Journey up Mount Vesuvius, is available at Google Books. It is the tale of a visitor to a utopian civilization inhabiting a 1000-mile-diameter globe inside the Earth. From Bleiler's review:




    The humans are longhaired, bearded, and to some extent can read minds and character. They live to extreme old age, two hundred years not being unusual.




    From the Google Books scan, p. 11:




    "Know, O son of earth! that thou art not the first, by many, that chance has thrown upon our globe, neither is it impossible for us to visit your world: that god whom we truly adore has blessed us with those gifts that you are strangers to. We can, when we please, transport ourselves to your regions; and what surpasses even that, we have the gift of knowing the thoughts of those we converse with. By this means we are much better acquainted with your earthly brethren than you are yourselves, who can judge only by appearances. Often do you clasp that man to your bosom as a friend, who at the same time is your greatest enemy, and only professes friendship, while you have wherewithal to make him welcome; but when that fails, he will not only desert you, but leave you to starve in a dungeon, and pretend he never heard your name. These things, and worse, are common in your world: I have often made an excursion thither myself; and having the gifts I before mentioned, have seen things greatly unworthy of those beings that are, like ourselves, made after the image of our creator. Perhaps at a proper time I may tell you some particulars, but for the present we will confine ourselves to what relates to the world we are now upon, and which is in the centre of your globe."




    From pp. 33-34, maybe an instance of telepathy in action:




    I rose the next morning as soon as it was light and strolled about the town till breakfast-time; and when I came home, my landlady perceiving the perturbation of my mind, took every method in her power to alleviate my anxiety.







    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

      – duskwuff
      10 hours ago












    • @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

      – user14111
      5 hours ago















    22














    Copied from my answer to Q: Who was the first telepath?:



    1755: A Voyage to the World in the Centre of the Earth: Giving an Account of the Manners, Customs, Laws, Government, and Religion of the Inhabitants, Their Persons and Habits Described ... : In Which is Introduced, The History of an Inhabitant of the Air, an anonymous booklet published in 1755; an abridged reprint from 1802, titled Bruce's Voyage to Naples, and Journey up Mount Vesuvius, is available at Google Books. It is the tale of a visitor to a utopian civilization inhabiting a 1000-mile-diameter globe inside the Earth. From Bleiler's review:




    The humans are longhaired, bearded, and to some extent can read minds and character. They live to extreme old age, two hundred years not being unusual.




    From the Google Books scan, p. 11:




    "Know, O son of earth! that thou art not the first, by many, that chance has thrown upon our globe, neither is it impossible for us to visit your world: that god whom we truly adore has blessed us with those gifts that you are strangers to. We can, when we please, transport ourselves to your regions; and what surpasses even that, we have the gift of knowing the thoughts of those we converse with. By this means we are much better acquainted with your earthly brethren than you are yourselves, who can judge only by appearances. Often do you clasp that man to your bosom as a friend, who at the same time is your greatest enemy, and only professes friendship, while you have wherewithal to make him welcome; but when that fails, he will not only desert you, but leave you to starve in a dungeon, and pretend he never heard your name. These things, and worse, are common in your world: I have often made an excursion thither myself; and having the gifts I before mentioned, have seen things greatly unworthy of those beings that are, like ourselves, made after the image of our creator. Perhaps at a proper time I may tell you some particulars, but for the present we will confine ourselves to what relates to the world we are now upon, and which is in the centre of your globe."




    From pp. 33-34, maybe an instance of telepathy in action:




    I rose the next morning as soon as it was light and strolled about the town till breakfast-time; and when I came home, my landlady perceiving the perturbation of my mind, took every method in her power to alleviate my anxiety.







    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

      – duskwuff
      10 hours ago












    • @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

      – user14111
      5 hours ago













    22












    22








    22







    Copied from my answer to Q: Who was the first telepath?:



    1755: A Voyage to the World in the Centre of the Earth: Giving an Account of the Manners, Customs, Laws, Government, and Religion of the Inhabitants, Their Persons and Habits Described ... : In Which is Introduced, The History of an Inhabitant of the Air, an anonymous booklet published in 1755; an abridged reprint from 1802, titled Bruce's Voyage to Naples, and Journey up Mount Vesuvius, is available at Google Books. It is the tale of a visitor to a utopian civilization inhabiting a 1000-mile-diameter globe inside the Earth. From Bleiler's review:




    The humans are longhaired, bearded, and to some extent can read minds and character. They live to extreme old age, two hundred years not being unusual.




    From the Google Books scan, p. 11:




    "Know, O son of earth! that thou art not the first, by many, that chance has thrown upon our globe, neither is it impossible for us to visit your world: that god whom we truly adore has blessed us with those gifts that you are strangers to. We can, when we please, transport ourselves to your regions; and what surpasses even that, we have the gift of knowing the thoughts of those we converse with. By this means we are much better acquainted with your earthly brethren than you are yourselves, who can judge only by appearances. Often do you clasp that man to your bosom as a friend, who at the same time is your greatest enemy, and only professes friendship, while you have wherewithal to make him welcome; but when that fails, he will not only desert you, but leave you to starve in a dungeon, and pretend he never heard your name. These things, and worse, are common in your world: I have often made an excursion thither myself; and having the gifts I before mentioned, have seen things greatly unworthy of those beings that are, like ourselves, made after the image of our creator. Perhaps at a proper time I may tell you some particulars, but for the present we will confine ourselves to what relates to the world we are now upon, and which is in the centre of your globe."




    From pp. 33-34, maybe an instance of telepathy in action:




    I rose the next morning as soon as it was light and strolled about the town till breakfast-time; and when I came home, my landlady perceiving the perturbation of my mind, took every method in her power to alleviate my anxiety.







    share|improve this answer















    Copied from my answer to Q: Who was the first telepath?:



    1755: A Voyage to the World in the Centre of the Earth: Giving an Account of the Manners, Customs, Laws, Government, and Religion of the Inhabitants, Their Persons and Habits Described ... : In Which is Introduced, The History of an Inhabitant of the Air, an anonymous booklet published in 1755; an abridged reprint from 1802, titled Bruce's Voyage to Naples, and Journey up Mount Vesuvius, is available at Google Books. It is the tale of a visitor to a utopian civilization inhabiting a 1000-mile-diameter globe inside the Earth. From Bleiler's review:




    The humans are longhaired, bearded, and to some extent can read minds and character. They live to extreme old age, two hundred years not being unusual.




    From the Google Books scan, p. 11:




    "Know, O son of earth! that thou art not the first, by many, that chance has thrown upon our globe, neither is it impossible for us to visit your world: that god whom we truly adore has blessed us with those gifts that you are strangers to. We can, when we please, transport ourselves to your regions; and what surpasses even that, we have the gift of knowing the thoughts of those we converse with. By this means we are much better acquainted with your earthly brethren than you are yourselves, who can judge only by appearances. Often do you clasp that man to your bosom as a friend, who at the same time is your greatest enemy, and only professes friendship, while you have wherewithal to make him welcome; but when that fails, he will not only desert you, but leave you to starve in a dungeon, and pretend he never heard your name. These things, and worse, are common in your world: I have often made an excursion thither myself; and having the gifts I before mentioned, have seen things greatly unworthy of those beings that are, like ourselves, made after the image of our creator. Perhaps at a proper time I may tell you some particulars, but for the present we will confine ourselves to what relates to the world we are now upon, and which is in the centre of your globe."




    From pp. 33-34, maybe an instance of telepathy in action:




    I rose the next morning as soon as it was light and strolled about the town till breakfast-time; and when I came home, my landlady perceiving the perturbation of my mind, took every method in her power to alleviate my anxiety.








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    user14111user14111

    104k6403518




    104k6403518







    • 1





      "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

      – duskwuff
      10 hours ago












    • @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

      – user14111
      5 hours ago












    • 1





      "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

      – duskwuff
      10 hours ago












    • @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

      – user14111
      5 hours ago







    1




    1





    "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

    – duskwuff
    10 hours ago






    "My landlady, perceiving the perturbation of my mind…" doesn't necessarily imply any kind of mindreading. In modern English, it might be rendered as "My landlady noticed that I looked worried".

    – duskwuff
    10 hours ago














    @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

    – user14111
    5 hours ago





    @duskwuff I understand that. That's why I said "maybe".

    – user14111
    5 hours ago













    12














    One of the earliest stories is the novel The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford, published in 1911. The novel chronicles the life of Victor Scott, who is of superior intelligence and can control people with his mind.



    With some further research, came across The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer-Lytton published in 1871. It's the story of a subterranean race called the Vril-ya, who resemble angels and have the power to channel the energy called Vril using staffs to heal or destroy and had telepathy.



    If you're looking for earliest mention of telekinesis, possibly Odd John by Olaf Stapledon, published in 1935, the protagonist, John Wainwright, was able to manipulate matter at an atomic level.



    So, Coming Race is probably the earliest mention of mental manipulation of energy and Odd John was the earliest I could find of the mental manipulation of matter.






    share|improve this answer

























    • Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

      – KenM
      yesterday











    • My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

      – KenM
      yesterday












    • I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

      – KenM
      yesterday















    12














    One of the earliest stories is the novel The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford, published in 1911. The novel chronicles the life of Victor Scott, who is of superior intelligence and can control people with his mind.



    With some further research, came across The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer-Lytton published in 1871. It's the story of a subterranean race called the Vril-ya, who resemble angels and have the power to channel the energy called Vril using staffs to heal or destroy and had telepathy.



    If you're looking for earliest mention of telekinesis, possibly Odd John by Olaf Stapledon, published in 1935, the protagonist, John Wainwright, was able to manipulate matter at an atomic level.



    So, Coming Race is probably the earliest mention of mental manipulation of energy and Odd John was the earliest I could find of the mental manipulation of matter.






    share|improve this answer

























    • Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

      – KenM
      yesterday











    • My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

      – KenM
      yesterday












    • I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

      – KenM
      yesterday













    12












    12








    12







    One of the earliest stories is the novel The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford, published in 1911. The novel chronicles the life of Victor Scott, who is of superior intelligence and can control people with his mind.



    With some further research, came across The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer-Lytton published in 1871. It's the story of a subterranean race called the Vril-ya, who resemble angels and have the power to channel the energy called Vril using staffs to heal or destroy and had telepathy.



    If you're looking for earliest mention of telekinesis, possibly Odd John by Olaf Stapledon, published in 1935, the protagonist, John Wainwright, was able to manipulate matter at an atomic level.



    So, Coming Race is probably the earliest mention of mental manipulation of energy and Odd John was the earliest I could find of the mental manipulation of matter.






    share|improve this answer















    One of the earliest stories is the novel The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford, published in 1911. The novel chronicles the life of Victor Scott, who is of superior intelligence and can control people with his mind.



    With some further research, came across The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer-Lytton published in 1871. It's the story of a subterranean race called the Vril-ya, who resemble angels and have the power to channel the energy called Vril using staffs to heal or destroy and had telepathy.



    If you're looking for earliest mention of telekinesis, possibly Odd John by Olaf Stapledon, published in 1935, the protagonist, John Wainwright, was able to manipulate matter at an atomic level.



    So, Coming Race is probably the earliest mention of mental manipulation of energy and Odd John was the earliest I could find of the mental manipulation of matter.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    KenMKenM

    5,04311428




    5,04311428












    • Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

      – KenM
      yesterday











    • My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

      – KenM
      yesterday












    • I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

      – KenM
      yesterday

















    • Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

      – KenM
      yesterday











    • My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

      – FuzzyBoots
      yesterday











    • FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

      – KenM
      yesterday












    • I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

      – KenM
      yesterday
















    Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday





    Hmm... Dracula, my first bet, postdates The Coming Race, although it also might not fit what they're looking for, being explicitly supernatural.

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday













    It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

    – KenM
    yesterday





    It looks like Bulwer-Lytton was also trying to distinguish Vril from a supernatural agency. From a wikipedia entry on Vril: in a letter to a friend, he compares it to electricity rather than some mysticism.

    – KenM
    yesterday













    My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday





    My apologies. I think the Vril-ya answer is fine. :) I was trying to indicate that, even if Dracula weren't newer, it's more explicitly supernatural.

    – FuzzyBoots
    yesterday













    FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

    – KenM
    yesterday






    FuzzyBoots, no apology needed, I got your intent. I thought it was interesting that Bulwer-Lyttton was also looking to make that distinction. I enjoy the dialogue that can happen in the comments section.

    – KenM
    yesterday














    I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

    – KenM
    yesterday





    I was wondering if Bulwer-Lytton was one of the first to make that distinction, of nature vs. supernatural. Then thought of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published in 1818.

    – KenM
    yesterday











    5














    Satori are Japanese Yōkai with the power to read minds and speak the thoughts back to the person quicker than they can articulate them themselves. Written stories date from the early Edo period (sometime in the 17th century) but the oral tradition is much older.






    share|improve this answer



























      5














      Satori are Japanese Yōkai with the power to read minds and speak the thoughts back to the person quicker than they can articulate them themselves. Written stories date from the early Edo period (sometime in the 17th century) but the oral tradition is much older.






      share|improve this answer

























        5












        5








        5







        Satori are Japanese Yōkai with the power to read minds and speak the thoughts back to the person quicker than they can articulate them themselves. Written stories date from the early Edo period (sometime in the 17th century) but the oral tradition is much older.






        share|improve this answer













        Satori are Japanese Yōkai with the power to read minds and speak the thoughts back to the person quicker than they can articulate them themselves. Written stories date from the early Edo period (sometime in the 17th century) but the oral tradition is much older.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        Dale MDale M

        1,465612




        1,465612





















            3














            From another perspective the first use of the term was James Blish's "Esper" (1952), also published as "Jack of Eagles".






            share|improve this answer























            • Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

              – user14111
              3 hours ago















            3














            From another perspective the first use of the term was James Blish's "Esper" (1952), also published as "Jack of Eagles".






            share|improve this answer























            • Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

              – user14111
              3 hours ago













            3












            3








            3







            From another perspective the first use of the term was James Blish's "Esper" (1952), also published as "Jack of Eagles".






            share|improve this answer













            From another perspective the first use of the term was James Blish's "Esper" (1952), also published as "Jack of Eagles".







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 13 hours ago









            WhatRoughBeastWhatRoughBeast

            4,25421127




            4,25421127












            • Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

              – user14111
              3 hours ago

















            • Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

              – user14111
              3 hours ago











            • Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

              – user14111
              3 hours ago
















            Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

            – user14111
            3 hours ago





            Taking your word for it that the word "esper" occurs in Blish's 1952 novel Jack of Eagles (which was only retirles ESPer in 1958), that is not the first use of the term. Alfred Bester famously used it in his Hugo-winning novel The Demolished Man, originally published as a serial in Galaxy beginning with the January 1952 issue, which would have been on the stands in December 1951. That issue is available at the Internet Archive; you will find the first of

            – user14111
            3 hours ago













            many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

            – user14111
            3 hours ago





            many instances of "esper" on page 8, column 1. Less famously but even earlier, Bester used "esper" in his 1950 story "Devil's Invention" (better known as "Oddy and Id"), first published in Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950, also available at the Internet Archive, see p. 139. There may be even earlier usas of "esper", but Bester's are the earliest citations in Brave New Words.

            – user14111
            3 hours ago













            Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

            – user14111
            3 hours ago





            Sorry, "retirles" in the first part of my long comment was typo for "retitled".

            – user14111
            3 hours ago



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            e9jCYhfp FI wgzDQAy0sHIldgpCfRNs8g nSwYdVnLeaC8Pxc,PdLJ5 Seg0

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