Ok , I watched the whole thing. What I did like was that much of what was uncovered in the field investigations following the regressions was pretty obscure stuff, some of it known only to a few academics, and some literally unknown to anyone alive at the time. Not that it was flawless, it was almost as if some of the information, such as the language spoken, had been filtered through a kind of dreamworld, so what came through was somewhat garbled. On the other hand. that was counterbalanced by the very detailed drawings made by one of the participants.
There was one part where the woman under hypnosis spoke in a strange language, sounding somewhat like German, but apparently incomprehensible to language experts. Not being a German speaker myself I took what was stated at face value.What do you mean about the language being "garbled" Typoz?
."The language meant nothing to our German interpreter, or to us, or to the university linguistics experts who heard it ..."
There was one part where the woman under hypnosis spoke in a strange language, sounding somewhat like German, but apparently incomprehensible to language experts. Not being a German speaker myself I took what was stated at face value.
In part six, at about 5 minutes:
That last case is the one that I found most troublesome. I do speak a little German, and I could understand what the interpreter was saying but the responses did not seem to match. However, there are many local dialects across Germany that are very different from one another. Also she would have been a child under traumatic circumstances and therefore the memories may have been difficult to comprehend.