Remote Viewing — Scientists Agree There’s More Than Meets The Eye

It seems that as usual, sci­ence is slow to accept and estab­lish things that are on the fur­ther side of “ordi­nary”, despite all the evi­dence point­ing in that direc­tion. At least, how­ever, remote view­ing is mak­ing inroads as sci­ence con­tin­ues to try to ‘prove it’. Read on…

Could there be proof to the the­ory that we’re ALL psychic?

By DANNY PENMAN, Daily Mail

GroupXSmallDr Chris Roe places a pair of enor­mous fluffy ear­phones over the head of a blonde 20-year-old woman. He care­fully slices a ping-pong ball in half and tapes each piece over her eyes.

Then he switches on a red light that bathes the woman in an eerie glow, and leaves the room.

After a few moments, a low hum begins to fill the lab­o­ra­tory and the woman begins smil­ing sweetly to her­self as images of dis­tant loca­tions start to pass through her mind.

She says she can sense a group of trees and a bab­bling brook full of boul­ders. Stand­ing on a boul­der is her friend Jack. He’s wav­ing at her and smil­ing. She begins to describe the loca­tion to Dr Roe.

Half a mile away, her friend Jack is, indeed, stand­ing on a boul­der in a stream.

Some­how, the woman has been able to “see” Jack in her mind’s eye, even though all of con­ven­tional sci­ence — and com­mon sense — says it is impos­si­ble. Is this sim­ply a bizarre coincidence?

Or could it be proof that we all pos­sess psy­chic pow­ers of the type pop­u­larised in such films as Minor­ity Report?

That is what Dr Roe is inves­ti­gat­ing. A para­psy­chol­o­gist based at the Uni­ver­sity of Northamp­ton, he is exam­in­ing whether it could indeed be pos­si­ble to project your “mind’s eye” to a dis­tant loca­tion and observe what is going on — even if that place is hun­dreds of miles away. And though the research is not yet com­plete, the results have been tantalising.

His early find­ings sug­gest that up to 85 per cent of peo­ple may pos­sess some form of clair­voy­ance — the abil­ity to “remote view”. And he believes that with only a mod­icum of train­ing we can all sharpen our psy­chic skills.

“Our results are sig­nif­i­cant,” says Dr Roe.

“They sug­gest that remote view­ing, or clair­voy­ance, is some­thing that should be taken seriously.”

It would be easy to dis­miss such claims as laugh­able, were it not for the fact that an increas­ing num­ber of sci­en­tists are tak­ing them seriously.

While Dr Roe’s work may appear con­tro­ver­sial, he is start­ing to gar­ner the sup­port of emi­nent aca­d­e­mics such as Pro­fes­sor Brian Joseph­son, a Nobel Prize-winning physi­cist from Cam­bridge Uni­ver­sity, who says: “The exper­i­ments have been designed to rule out luck and chance. I con­sider the evi­dence for remote view­ing to be pretty clear-cut.”

The mil­i­tary is also tak­ing a keen inter­est. The Min­istry of Defence takes the phe­nom­ena seri­ously enough to have com­mis­sioned its own research.

Doc­u­ments only recently released under the Free­dom of Infor­ma­tion Act detail a series of exper­i­ments on psy­chic phenomena.

Unfor­tu­nately, the actual details of the exper­i­ments that were car­ried out — and what the con­clu­sions were — are still clas­si­fied, and intrigu­ingly the MoD refuses to say whether they were a success.

They claim that releas­ing such details would imperil the defence of the nation, and what lit­tle infor­ma­tion has been released is described as “poor qual­ity” by Dr Roe. “Their analy­sis of the data is quite frankly, woe­ful,” he says.

But the very exis­tence of such files sug­gests that the mil­i­tary are tak­ing the pos­si­bil­ity of psy­chic phe­nom­ena seri­ously. In fact, most exist­ing sci­en­tific knowl­edge on clair­voy­ance is based on other recently declas­si­fied mil­i­tary research under­taken in Amer­ica dur­ing the Cold War.

Dur­ing the Six­ties and Sev­en­ties, para­noia gripped the US mil­i­tary estab­lish­ment. Strange rumours began cir­cu­lat­ing that the Rus­sians had found a way of har­ness­ing psy­chic pow­ers and begun wield­ing them as weapons.

Psy­chic skills such as telekine­sis — the abil­ity to move objects or con­trol machines using noth­ing more than the power of the mind — were appar­ently being taught to sol­diers in elite com­bat units.

They were also said to be using clair­voy­ants to gather intel­li­gence from top-secret Amer­i­can bases. If true, the American’s believed, it would mean that the Rus­sians could dis­cover their most impor­tant secrets and even con­trol the minds of their Generals.

So in the early Sev­en­ties, the US mil­i­tary began its own top-secret research to try to close the “psy­chic intel­li­gence gap” with the Rus­sians. The CIA later joined them in a series of covert research projects that were given suit­ably innocu­ous titles such as Sun Streak, Grill Flame and Star Gate.

These were designed to track down the most gifted psy­chics in the U.S., unravel the mys­ter­ies of their pow­ers and then find ways of teach­ing these skills to ordi­nary sol­diers and agents.

The aim was to pro­duce a new breed of “super-soldier” capa­ble of con­trol­ling mat­ter with their minds and gath­er­ing intel­li­gence from afar.

But some in the mil­i­tary wanted to go even further.

The US Navy wanted to send con­fi­den­tial orders to their nuclear sub­marines using telepa­thy, which would be impos­si­ble for even the most sophis­ti­cated enemy lis­ten­ing devices to intercept.

And Major Gen­eral Albert N. Stub­blebine III, com­mand­ing offi­cer of the US Army Intel­li­gence and Secu­rity Com­mand, sug­gested that one day sol­diers might even be able to “walk through walls”, using psy­chic pow­ers to over­come the phys­i­cal boundary.

And if that wasn’t enough, researchers at Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity (where Ein­stein was once based) and Stan­ford were sim­i­larly tasked with inves­ti­gat­ing the paranormal.

Sci­en­tists at Stan­ford quickly focused on the use of clair­voy­ance, known as remote view­ing in tech­ni­cal par­lance, as the most mil­i­tar­ily use­ful psy­chic skill.

Very soon, Stan­ford played host to more than a dozen psy­chic spies, whose para­nor­mal skills were once demon­strated to Pres­i­dent Jimmy Carter.

The remote view­ers used a decep­tively sim­ple method based on what is known as the Ganzfeld tech­nique to help “see” deep into enemy territory.

They induced an altered state of con­scious­ness by seat­ing them­selves in a sound-proof room and wear­ing ear­phones play­ing white noise. Ping­pong balls sliced in half were placed over their eyes to obscure vision. The whole room was then bathed in soft red light.

The map coor­di­nates of the “tar­get” loca­tion would be writ­ten on a piece of paper, placed in an enve­lope and handed to the viewer.

He would be allowed to touch the enve­lope but for­bid­den to open it. Alter­na­tively, pic­tures of the tar­get loca­tion would be sealed in the envelope.

The remote view­ers would then slip into a light med­i­ta­tive trance and their “mind’s eye” would be drawn to the tar­get loca­tion. Pic­tures, feel­ings and impres­sions would then drift into their minds from the tar­get, which might be located thou­sands of miles away.

To an out­sider, this approach might appear to pro­duce only hope­lessly vague results that were no bet­ter than guesswork.

But the sci­en­tists inves­ti­gat­ing remote view­ing found them to be sur­pris­ingly accu­rate, giv­ing mil­i­tary intel­li­gence a small but sig­nif­i­cant advan­tage over their cold war enemies.

Joe McMonea­gle was one such “psy­chic spy”. Given the code­name “Remote Viewer No 1″, his pri­mary role was to use remote view­ing to look inside Russ­ian mil­i­tary bases and gather intelligence.

McMonea­gle was recruited from US Army intel­li­gence in Viet­nam because of his amaz­ing abil­ity to sur­vive while on recon­nais­sance mis­sions behind enemy lines against seem­ingly impos­si­ble odds.

His com­mand­ing offi­cers thought he was either amaz­ingly lucky, psy­chic — or a dou­ble agent. On his return home, he was tested for his remote-viewing skills at Stan­ford and found to have psy­chic gifts. He went on to spend the next 20 years track­ing Russ­ian nuclear war­heads and gath­er­ing intelligence.

His work even­tu­ally earned him the Legion of Merit, America’s high­est mil­i­tary non-combat medal. “My suc­cess rate was around 28 per cent,” says McMonea­gle. “That may not sound very good, but we were brought in to deal with the hope­less cases.

“Our infor­ma­tion was then cross-checked with any other avail­able intel­li­gence to build up an over­all pic­ture. We proved to be quite use­ful ‘spies’.” Word of America’s exper­i­ments with the para­nor­mal spread to the UK and while the mil­i­tary were scep­ti­cal, the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police spot­ted an intrigu­ing possibility.

Could psy­chic pow­ers be har­nessed to help solve crimes?

They soon had their answer when a woman named Nella Jones came to their atten­tion, claim­ing that she could help locate a price­less Ver­meer paint­ing, called The Gui­tar Player, that had been stolen from Ken­wood House in North Lon­don in 1974.

Nella told the police that she had been iron­ing some clothes and idly watch­ing the tele­vi­sion when her mind sud­denly focused on the where­abouts of the painting.

She hur­riedly sketched it out and took it to the police, who were under­stand­ably scep­ti­cal. But hav­ing noth­ing else to go on they fol­lowed the lead. The paint­ing was even­tu­ally recov­ered from St Bartholomew’s church­yard as a result of the infor­ma­tion she gave them.

Again, it would be easy to dis­miss Nella’s guid­ance to the police as just blind luck. Easy, that is, if she hadn’t spent the fol­low­ing 20 years help­ing them ensnare mur­der­ers and other seri­ous offenders.

“Nella gave invalu­able assis­tance on a num­ber of mur­ders,” says Detec­tive Chief Inspec­tor Arnie Cooke. “Her evi­dence was not the type you can put before a jury. But senior inves­ti­gat­ing offi­cers have got to take peo­ple like her on board and accept what they are saying.”

In fact, so use­ful was Nella to Scot­land Yard that in 1993 they pub­licly thanked her and senior offi­cers hosted a din­ner in her hon­our. Scot­land Yard later wrote to her, say­ing: “Some police offi­cers may have seemed scep­ti­cal of your abil­i­ties … but it is a mark of those abil­i­ties that police turn to you time and time again.”

Such anec­dotes are all very well but there is sta­tis­ti­cal evi­dence, too, that proves that psy­chic skills are a use­ful tool for law enforce­ment agen­cies and the military.

In 1995, the US Con­gress asked two inde­pen­dent sci­en­tists to assess whether the $20 mil­lion that the gov­ern­ment had spent on psy­chic research had pro­duced any­thing of value. And the con­clu­sions proved to be some­what unexpected.

Pro­fes­sor Jes­sica Utts, a sta­tis­ti­cian from the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia, dis­cov­ered that remote view­ers were cor­rect 34 per cent of the time, a fig­ure way beyond what chance guess­ing would allow.

She says: “Using the stan­dards applied to any other area of sci­ence, you have to con­clude that cer­tain psy­chic phe­nom­ena, such as remote view­ing, have been well estab­lished. “The results are not due to chance or flaws in the experiments.”

Of course, this doesn’t wash with scep­ti­cal scientists.

Pro­fes­sor Richard Wise­man, a psy­chol­o­gist at the Uni­ver­sity of Hert­ford­shire, refuses to believe in remote view­ing. He says: “I agree that by the stan­dards of any other area of sci­ence that remote view­ing is proven, but begs the ques­tion: do we need higher stan­dards of evi­dence when we study the para­nor­mal? I think we do.

“If I said that there is a red car out­side my house, you would prob­a­bly believe me.

“But if I said that a UFO had just landed, you’d prob­a­bly want a lot more evidence.

“Because remote view­ing is such an out­landish claim that will rev­o­lu­tionise the world, we need over­whelm­ing evi­dence before we draw any con­clu­sions. Right now we don’t have that evidence.”

Back at the Uni­ver­sity of Northamp­ton, Dr Chris Roe hopes he can pro­vide such proof one way or the other. Next month, he will embark on a series of exper­i­ments that will be more rig­or­ous than any so far attempted.

They will rule out fluke pos­i­tive results and any uncon­scious biases held by any­one involved with the exper­i­ments. And if that wasn’t enough, he then plans to embark on research into an even more out­landish field: whether it is pos­si­ble to remote view through time.

In other words, he will inves­ti­gate whether it is pos­si­ble for remote view­ers not only to observe dis­tant loca­tions, but also to see what will hap­pen at that place at a pre­de­ter­mined time in the future.

Time does not seem to be a bar­rier to remote view­ing,” says Dr Roe, mat­ter of factly.

Cer­tainly, only time will tell whether he has been cru­elly deluded, or has glimpsed a very intrigu­ing future.

(Sourceread the arti­cle here)

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