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Petrification — The power to turn a living being to stone by looking them in the eye. Phytokinesis — The ability to control plants with one's mind. [citation needed] Prophecy (also prediction, premonition, or prognostication) — the ability to foretell events without using induction or deduction from known facts. [7]
In Tantric Buddhism, siddhi specifically refers to the acquisition of supernatural powers by psychic or magical means or the supposed faculty so acquired. These powers include items such as clairvoyance, levitation, bilocation and astral projection, materialization, and having access to memories from past lives. [citation needed]
Supernatural entities and powers are common in various works of fantasy. Examples include the television shows Supernatural and The X-Files, the magic of the Harry Potter series, The Lord of the Rings series, The Wheel of Time series and A Song of Ice and Fire series.
Pyrokinesis is a psychic ability allowing a person to create and control fire with the mind. [1] [2] [3] As with other parapsychological phenomena, there is no conclusive evidence in support of the actual existence of pyrokinesis. Many alleged cases are hoaxes; the result of trickery. [4] [5]
[66] [64] When the Buddha does not intervene, Moggallana, one of the Buddha's disciples, offers to save the Shakya clan using his own psychic powers but the Buddha discourages this, stating that the massacre is the result of the Shakyas' past karma and that no amount of supernatural powers can stop the power of karma.
Iddhi (Pali; Sanskrit: ṛddhi) in Buddhism refers to "psychic powers", [1] one of the six [2] supranormal powers attained by advanced meditation through the four dhyānas. [3] The main sense of the word seems to be "potency".
The Romans already had other terms for the negative use of supernatural powers, such as veneficus and saga. [85] The Roman use of the term was similar to that of the Greeks, but placed greater emphasis on the judicial application of it. [14] Within the Roman Empire, laws would be introduced criminalising things regarded as magic. [86]
These supernatural beings, whose worship is the essential object of voodoo, are called lwa, 'mysteries' and, in northern Haiti, 'saints' or 'angels'. Alongside them are the Twins, who wield great power, and the 'dead', who demand sacrifices and offerings and exert a direct influence on the fate of the living.