Some authors defending that the UFO phenomenon and stories of fairies and goblins are the same phenomenon, with an aim of saying that the UFOs have nothing extraterrestrial, rest this claim on alleged similarities between UFO reports and fairies stories, so-called "invariants" or "constants".
One of these alleged invariants relates to "telepathy."
These researchers say that what people mistake for extraterrestrial beings communicate by telepathy, and say that fairies, goblins, demons and others such "beings " also communicate by telepathy.
The book by Jacques Vallée "Passport to Magonia", of 1969, oddly titled "Chronics of the extraterrestrial appearances" in French, and founding book of the thesis that UFOs and fairies are one phenomenon and that fairies just like aliens are indeed physically real but non-extraterrestrial. The book never suggested that the fairies use telepathy, it however presents a number of fairies stories. Take this book by Jacques Vallée, as like I did, check for yourself this alleged telepathy communication of fairies:
On 107 descriptions of fairies, demons, gnomes, goblins and other creatures of legend from the entire world presented from the most various sources by Jacques Vallée, there is not a single case in which these creatures communicate by telepathy.
This "invariant" is a pure fabrication.
Page: | Date: | Source: | Designation: | Telepathy? |
---|---|---|---|---|
18 | 300 | Catholic Church | Saint Antoine | No. |
20 | 0 | Surya Siddhanta | Siddhas, perfect men. | No. |
20 | 840 | Agobard | Magonians. | No. |
21 | Middle age | Paracelse | Mysterious beings | No. |
21 | Biblical | Ezechiel | Sherubines. | No. |
22 | Biblical | Montfaucin de Villars | Sadaims, Daimones. | No. |
21 | Antique | Plutarque | A race of demons | No. |
22 | Moyen âge | Zedechias | Sylphes | No. |
26 | 1491 | Facius Cardan | Seven men | No. |
27 | 1768 | Goethe | Lights of goblins | No. |
42 | 1846 | Wentz | Pat Finney and a woman | No. |
43 | - | Wentz | The Sleagh Maith. | No. |
44 | - | Wentz | The little people | No. |
46 | - | Paul Sébillot | The fions. | No. |
46 | - | Hartland | Little men. | No. |
48 | Wentz | Fairies | No. | |
50 | Biblical | The Bible | Two angels | No. |
59 | Wentz | Fairies | No. | |
60 | Leroux de Lincy | Fairies. | No. | |
65 | Hartland | 12 Algonquin fairies. | No. | |
66 | - | Wentz | Strange hockey players. | No. |
81 | - | Wentz | Fairies | No. |
82 | - | Wentz | Fairies | No. |
82 | - | Wentz | A leprechaun | No. |
84 | - | Villemarqué | Korrigans and dwarves | No. |
85 | Anonymous | The "moon eyes". | No. | |
85 | Bob Silverberg | The "moon eyes". | No. | |
85 | 1797 | Barton | The "Whites". | No. |
87 | - | Wentz | Fairies of Britanny. | No. |
89 | 1850 | Gelin | Goblins of the Poitou. | No. |
90 | 1849 | Wentz | The Braves People | No. |
90 | - | - | Elves. | No. |
91 | - | Wentz | The Gentlemen of an island | No. |
91 | - | Agrippa | The Friday demons. | No. |
93 | - | Brian Stross | The Ikals. | No. |
94 | - | Gordon Creighton | A Hek. | No. |
95 | - | Piaute indians | The Hac-Musuwa. | No. |
96 | 1620 | - | A green demon. | No. |
96 | 830 | Corneil Van Kemper | Some Whites Ladies. | No. |
97 | 1691 | A Scottish savant | Creatures in Scotland. | No. |
100 | - | Kirk | The Braves People. | No. |
100 | - | Paracelse | Elemental beings | No. |
101 | - | Wentz | Fairies. | No. |
101 | - | Wentz | A Morrigu. | No. |
101 | - | Wentz | Black beings. | No. |
102 | 1014 | Wentz | A fairie. | No. |
107 | - | Kirk | The Siths | No. |
107 | - | Alfred Noyes | The Siths | No. |
108 | - | Campbell | Pygmies of the cold countries. | No. |
108 | - | Campbell | The Lapanach. | No. |
109 | - | MacDougal | The Tamhasg, the Amhuish | No. |
109 | Inde antique | Tyson | Pigmies of tha Ancients. | No. |
110 | Perse antique | Tyson | Black Pigmies. | No. |
110 | Biblical | Ezechiel | Gammadins, or "courageaous people". | No. |
110 | Epoque celte | McRitchie | Fenlanders [Finland?], Awisk, dwarves. | No. |
110 | Epoque celte | McRitchie | The Awisks dwarves. | No. |
111 | 1400 | Evêque Thomas Bulloch | A race of dwarves in the Orkneys islands. | No. |
111 | McRitchie | Peiths, Picts or Piks in Scandinavia. | No. | |
112 | Prêtres irlandais | Dwarves of legend, the Tamhaisg. | No. | |
113 | Campbell | Tamhaisgs, the best warriors of the King of France. | No. | |
115 | 297 | Wainwright | The Picties [Pixies?], Scottish pigmies. | No. |
115 | Wainwright | The Papae, Scottish pigmies. | No. | |
116 | Walter Scott | Dwarves living underground. | No. | |
118 | 1966 | Keel | A Mothman. | No. |
118 | 1966 | Keel | A Mothman. | No. |
118 | 1837 | Keel | A being with a large nose, helmet, short ears in London. | No. |
119 | 1838 | J. Viner | Jack, ogre with the giant steps boots. | No. |
119 | 1838 | J. Viner | Jack, tall, thin, distinguished, with a cape. | No. |
144 | 1950 | Vallée | An invisible assaulter. | No. |
149 | Wentz | The "brave people" in Knoch Magh playing ball games. | No. | |
149 | John Campbell | The ennemies. | No. | |
149 | Reverend Kirk | Brave people, fairies. | No. | |
150 | Reverend Taylor | Fairies. | No. | |
151 | 1671 | Hartland | Fairies, Trolls. | No. |
151 | Reverend Kirk | A gnome. | No. | |
151 | Reverend Kirk | Fairies. | No. | |
153 | Hartland | Fairies in Nithdale, Trolls. | No. | |
153 | An ondin or an ondine. | No. | ||
154 | A little man in Pomerania. | No. | ||
154 | Chinese folklore. | No. | ||
155 | Hartland | Elves in the North of Scotland. | No. | |
156 | Hartland | An irascible wife at a burial of fairies. | No. | |
157 | 1825 | Hartland | Chidren go to fairyland. | No. |
159 | A woman abducted by fairies. | No. | ||
159 | Hartland | A child by the fairies. | No. | |
159 | Acient China | Wang Chi | Old men. | No. |
160 | Hartland | A typical Danish fairy tale. | No. | |
162 | Brian Stross | Beings of another work flying with sorts of rockets in their back. | No. | |
163 | Gordon Creighton | The Ikals. | No. | |
163 | 1947 | Brian Stross | The Ikals. | No. |
173 | Anatole France | Arcade, a celestial creature. | No. | |
173 | 1700 | Torfeus | Elves. | No. |
174 | William Grant Stewart | The fairies. | No. | |
174 | William Grant Stewart | A female lananshi. | No. | |
174 | Kirk | Familiar spirits. | No. | |
175 | Wentz | A fairie in love. | No. | |
176 | 1600 | Frater Sinistrasi | An incubus wants to seduce a woman. | No. |
184 | Gnaccius | witches are sleeping with devils. | No. | |
185 | Saint Augustin | Incubus, and goblins of the Gallics. | No. | |
185 | Wentz | Incubus and succubus. | No. | |
186 | Frater Sinistrasi | The Antéchrist | No. | |
191 | Shakespeare | The fairies. | No. | |
194 | 1879 | A kind of "autel" landed and three luminous characters go down from there, they are Saints. | No. | |
199 | 1531 | A young Mexican girl of stunning beauty. | No. | |
204 | 1897 | The 1897 airship. | No. | |
211 | Gervaise de Tilbury | A man in a "cloudship". | No. |