Associative Remote Viewing Research

Learn about Asso­cia­tive Remote View­ing for the Finan­cial Markets

Financial Markets Graph

Here’s an inter­est­ing arti­cle that cov­ers some of the orig­i­nal sci­en­tific stud­ies done at the Stan­ford Research Insti­tute as well as by other Asso­cia­tive Remote View­ing Researchers like Stephan Schwartz. This arti­cle dis­cusses the meth­ods used and the results for asso­ciate remote view­ing for the stock mar­kets includ­ing with Remote View­ers who have lit­tle to no knowl­edge of finance.

ASSOCIATIVE REMOTE VIEWING

by: Jack Houck

REMOTE VIEWING is a term coined by Harold Puthoff and Rus­sell Targ to describe a form of psy­chic func­tion­ing his­tor­i­cally known as clair­voy­ance.1 Dr. Puthoff and Mr. Targ, both for­merly with Stan­ford Research Insti­tute (SRI) Inter­na­tional, have researched this phe­nom­e­non since the early 1970s, and their results are pub­lished in sev­eral books.2 Their research was con­cen­trated on train­ing selected indi­vid­u­als to “see” or “view” a scene or event that was occur­ring at a dis­tant loca­tion. In addi­tion, the abil­ity to “view” the scene at dif­fer­ent times — past, present and future — was established.

One par­tic­u­larly sig­nif­i­cant out­come of this research was the dis­cov­ery that view­ers could reli­ably access remote infor­ma­tion when they were asked to describe a scene, but that they were not as reli­able when the tar­get was a num­ber or a let­ter. This dis­cov­ery led to the devel­op­ment of asso­cia­tive remote view­ing (ARV) in which a scene is asso­ci­ated with a par­tic­u­lar mes­sage. A group of scenes is cho­sen, each scene hav­ing a dif­fer­ent mes­sage asso­ci­ated with it. When the viewer’s per­cep­tion cor­re­sponds to one of the scenes, the mes­sage cor­re­spond­ing to that scene is accepted.

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