Leonardo da Vinci

10 | MANDELA MONDAY | 10

10 | MANDELA MONDAY | 10

Welcome to Mandela Monday, a bi-weekly I, Jak blog series where we explore some of the residual evidence people claim has been left behind regarding the cited changes caused by the Mandela Effect — a phenomenon in which large groups of people have shared memories of specific facts and/or events contrary to the evidence that reality provides.

In this installment we shift to the fine arts and focus on one of the most popular (and valuable) pieces of work by Leonardo da Vinci that scholars are still analyzing today — the Mona Lisa.

CON[CERN]ING THE MANDELA EFFECT: PART SIXTEEN

CON[CERN]ING THE MANDELA EFFECT: PART SIXTEEN

We've just explored not only the concept of time travel and teleportation, but a very specific claim by an attorney — Andrew D. Basiago — that this technology has existed for decades and that he was an active participant in the government's experiments involving it. Whether it exists or not, many believe (or hope) that we will eventually unlock the ability to bend time and space, making many sci-fi lovers' dreams a reality.

At this point in this series, you may already be questioning your very reality. If not, however, perhaps you'll be triggered by our sixth Mandela Effect quiz!