Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder
This study uses remote viewing in a predictive manner within the context of a novel experimental design to describe eleven target events spread out over a year, each of which occurs approximately one month after the remote-viewing sessions are completed. The study was conducted at The Farsight Inst...
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doaj-01c205b6cf4c407fa1f4b92fd0de172e2020-11-25T03:24:45ZengSSEJournal of Scientific Exploration0892-33102012-03-01261Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal OutbounderCourtney Brown0Emory University Dept of Political Science also, The Farsight Institute (separate affiliation) This study uses remote viewing in a predictive manner within the context of a novel experimental design to describe eleven target events spread out over a year, each of which occurs approximately one month after the remote-viewing sessions are completed. The study was conducted at The Farsight Institute using 12 highly experienced remote viewers who were trained in the use of four remote-viewing methodologies that are the same as or derived from those previously used by the United States military for espionage purposes. While prediction using remote viewing has a long and spotted history, the current investigation is aimed at enhancing our understanding of the remote-viewing phenomenon by utilizing a temporal outbounder approach to tasking in order to improve the description of future events. In this design, the tasker is located in time after the remote-viewing sessions are completed and after the occurrence of the chosen target event. Exploiting one of the largest bodies of remote-viewing data ever collected using military-related viewing methodologies, this study finds strong support for hypothesis that experimental designs utilizing a temporal outbounder as a tasker greatly enhances the accuracy of remote-viewing descriptions of future events. The causal mechanism for why this might occur is left to be determined by future research. http://journalofscientificexploration.org/index.php/jse/article/view/257 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Courtney Brown |
spellingShingle |
Courtney Brown Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder Journal of Scientific Exploration |
author_facet |
Courtney Brown |
author_sort |
Courtney Brown |
title |
Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder |
title_short |
Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder |
title_full |
Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder |
title_fullStr |
Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder |
title_full_unstemmed |
Remote Viewing the Future with a Tasking Temporal Outbounder |
title_sort |
remote viewing the future with a tasking temporal outbounder |
publisher |
SSE |
series |
Journal of Scientific Exploration |
issn |
0892-3310 |
publishDate |
2012-03-01 |
description |
This study uses remote viewing in a predictive manner within the context of a novel experimental design to describe eleven target events spread out over a year, each of which occurs approximately one month after the remote-viewing sessions are completed. The study was conducted at The Farsight Institute using 12 highly experienced remote viewers who were trained in the use of four remote-viewing methodologies that are the same as or derived from those previously used by the United States military for espionage purposes. While prediction using remote viewing has a long and spotted history, the current investigation is aimed at
enhancing our understanding of the remote-viewing phenomenon by utilizing a temporal outbounder approach to tasking in order to improve the description of future events. In this design, the tasker is located in time after the remote-viewing sessions are completed and after the occurrence of the chosen target event. Exploiting one of the largest bodies of remote-viewing data ever collected using military-related viewing methodologies, this study finds strong support for hypothesis that experimental designs utilizing a temporal outbounder as a tasker greatly enhances the accuracy of remote-viewing descriptions of future events. The causal mechanism for why this might occur is left to be determined by future research.
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http://journalofscientificexploration.org/index.php/jse/article/view/257 |
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