{"items": [{"author": "Nicolas", "source_link": "https://plus.google.com/105722903272192091597", "anchor": "gp-1345809847652", "service": "gp", "text": "Pretty soon you'll want a ysalmiri to suppress Force influencing.", "timestamp": 1345809847}, {"author": "Danni", "source_link": "https://www.facebook.com/jefftk/posts/166276106830346?comment_id=166282123496411", "anchor": "fb-166282123496411", "service": "fb", "text": "What makes you think unethical people AREN'T using infrasound to manipulate others?", "timestamp": "1345812877"}, {"author": "Jeff&nbsp;Kaufman", "source_link": "https://plus.google.com/103013777355236494008", "anchor": "gp-1345814220963", "service": "gp", "text": "Quibble: I think \"ysalamiri\" is plural.\n<br>\n<br>\nHow content are they to be carried around? \u00a0Cats don't like it so much, but I could imagine a species that evolved living\u00a0parasitically\u00a0on trees would be more amenable to it than a carnivore.", "timestamp": 1345814220}, {"author": "Nicolas", "source_link": "https://plus.google.com/105722903272192091597", "anchor": "gp-1345814302280", "service": "gp", "text": "I knew I should have looked up the spelling. I think you're right, it's one ysalamir. I recall Kardde carrying one around on his shoulder, but they also had those cages for them.", "timestamp": 1345814302}, {"author": "Alex", "source_link": "https://plus.google.com/100936518160252317727", "anchor": "gp-1345837457761", "service": "gp", "text": "I have heard that low frequency sound (perhaps infrasound, perhaps consciously-perceivable) has the effect of making people think that something spiritual or paranormal is occurring. This might be partly why organs (which are excellent at generating very low frequencies) appear in churches. I do not have a citation handy, though.", "timestamp": 1345837457}, {"author": "Jeff&nbsp;Kaufman", "source_link": "https://plus.google.com/103013777355236494008", "anchor": "gp-1345838463929", "service": "gp", "text": "@Alex\n\u00a0The lowest frequency of an organ note is determined by the fundamental for that length of the pipe. Many organs go to a 16\" C1 (32Hz). Some big ones go down to a 32\" C0, which is 16hz (plus \nlots\n of overtones, which we actually hear). \u00a0A very few really big ones have a set of pipes twice as long which get them down to a 64\" C-1 at 8hz. \u00a0(But any church using an electronic or otherwise amplified organ is probably not going below ~40Hz.)", "timestamp": 1345838463}]}