I have always veered away from the concept of telepathy in both my
fantasy and science fiction writing. Why? Because it doesn’t work
in the real world so I can find no basis for it to work in a created
universe.
Of course, I’ve
found ways to get around that. There is ‘assisted telepathy’ in
the Jack Mack SF stories (written as Oliver Davis Pike). That is,
thoughts can be ‘read’ by a computer via sensors and passed on to
another person by reversing the process. This requires being attached
to relatively bulky units and is not generally practical. It is,
however, the means by which jump pilots communicate with their drive computers
when traveling from star to star, so I had to include the ability to
use the process for human-to-human communication.
That does open up
uses for the technology which I have yet to explore. Maybe someday!
Then there is the
‘talking afar’ that has been part of my Izan fantasies from the
start. This is something wizards and gods can do, and is essentially
sending a part of ones physical being to another world to speak with
someone. To be sure, they also have to have this ability (although
one can, if talented and powerful enough, send nebulous dreams to
those who lack it).
This meshes with the
infinite worlds (or universes) that make up existence. Some humans
have the inherited ability to enter those universes — not
permanently — and interact there. Gods, for the most part, can
travel through them without much restriction, but that’s another
subject. Gods can also send part of themselves roundabout through
other worlds to peep into mortal minds via a sort of melding. That
is, the minds or brains occupy the same space simultaneously. Just
surface thoughts, mostly, can be ‘read’ in this manner, but it
does give them the ability to pick up any language almost at once.*
That
‘two-minds-in-one-place’ is the closest I come to true telepathy,
and it generally requires the cooperation of both individuals, and
that both have the ability to enter other worlds. Yes, a truly
powerful wizard might be able to force it, and I’ve gone that way a
few times. It is to be noted that both will know each other’s mind
when it’s all over, so it’s not always an effective way of
learning someone’s secrets. It has, perhaps needless to say,
definite dangers for both.
For the untrained, or
those who do not know they have powers, all this can lead to madness.
One ‘hears’ the voices of other worlds, with no knowledge of how
to shut them out. The tragic (more or less) King Hara’a of the
Malvern Trilogy is one such.
Although I could, in
theory, drop telepathy into unrelated stories, I have chosen not to.
As I said at the start here, I don’t think it works and I’d
rather not make up pseudoscience to explain it. I am not at all big
on mental powers of any sort. Telekinesis? Nope, but a wizard might
reach through another world to move something. Precognition? Well, I
have dropped in prophecies and explained them, again, as wizard
powers. If one can send oneself to other worlds, one might — if one
had the rare talent for prophecy — also seek worlds through time.
Again, this is not a mental power but an actual physical phenomenon,
a part of the body traveling ‘elsewhere.’
And not a bit of it
has anything to do with brainwaves or electricity or any other of the
usual explanations for telepathy.
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*For a long time, I
chose not to tell how they knew languages but did finally provide
this explanation. There may be just a bit of retcon to it, but it
does fit with the other rules I’ve laid out in my world-building.