Telekinesis: Science Behind Stranger Things With the finale of Season 4 of Netflix’s “Stranger Things” out now, Michigan State University Professor S. Marc Breedlove discusses science fiction in the real world and asks: Is telekinesis real? Breedlove, the Barnett Rosenberg Professor of Neuroscience in the College of Natural Science, is an expert on the development of the nervous system. Psychokinesis or telekinesis is a psychic ability allowing a person to influence a physical system without physical interaction. Gerhard Ruhenstroth-Bauer director of the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried in Germany and his team studied the abilities of Miroslaw Magola alias Mind Force from Stan Lee’s Superhumans documentary aired on History and Discovery Channel. In Miroslaw Magola’s demonstration he shows that he attracts objects made of different materials like metal, plastic, glass, wood with his hands or his head. He lifts these objects vertically off the floor with the palm of his hand and move them vertically, horizontally or in a circle. He also attaches them to his head. According to the laws of physical gravitational force, this is not possible and only exists in science fiction imaginations. David Lewis, a French-born English neuropsychologist, a founder and director at the independent research consultancy Mindlab International based at the Sussex Innovation Centre in Brighton in UK investigated Miroslaw Magola too and used EEG devise originally developed for neurofeedback by Geoffrey Blundell and Maxwell Cade. Magola has shown his demonstrations to various scientific institutions, TV shows and television programs under strictly controlled conditions. So far, the scientists have not been able to find a plausible explanation for the phenomenon, nor a concept that anybody can imitate it