Often in life we feel we have experienced an event that has been encountered many times in life, events or ongoing events that we think has happened in our past lives. I had never experienced anything like it's an event that will take place have I felt in my former life, but if in fact it turns out looking for me not knowing and experiencing the event, so I never thought whether this phenomenon is that the saying KARMA, apparently through one of the articles I found this answer is called Deja
Déjà vu comes from one indecent word or phrase in French language meaning literally a "never seen". That is, someone is having an experience that is felt by him never experienced before.This Venomena (Deja vu) was first found and expressed by a French scientist named Emile Boirac who have studied in the year (1851-1917) and recorded entitled "L'Avenir des sciences Psychiques" he wrote at the time he was educated at University of Chicago
The definition of déjà vu in psychiatric science, according to Dr. Vernon Neppe MD, PhD, Director of the Pacific Neuropsychiatric Institute (PNI), is a subjective influence on their perceived similarity current experience with the past is difficult to explain. While James Lampinen, professor of psychology at the University of Arkansas defines as a feeling of déjà vu is so strong on the global similarities that occur in new situations. The similarity in the déjà vu experience this is a whole, until every smallest detail, a lot like someone who never experienced in the past. But this experience is
Déjà vu comes from one indecent word or phrase in French language meaning literally a "never seen". That is, someone is having an experience that is felt by him never experienced before.This Venomena (Deja vu) was first found and expressed by a French scientist named Emile Boirac who have studied in the year (1851-1917) and recorded entitled "L'Avenir des sciences Psychiques" he wrote at the time he was educated at University of Chicago
The definition of déjà vu in psychiatric science, according to Dr. Vernon Neppe MD, PhD, Director of the Pacific Neuropsychiatric Institute (PNI), is a subjective influence on their perceived similarity current experience with the past is difficult to explain. While James Lampinen, professor of psychology at the University of Arkansas defines as a feeling of déjà vu is so strong on the global similarities that occur in new situations. The similarity in the déjà vu experience this is a whole, until every smallest detail, a lot like someone who never experienced in the past. But this experience is