Remote Viewing
Remote viewing (RV) is defined by parapsychology as the practice of seeking impressions of a distant target hidden from physical sight, using paranormal and extrasensory means. The term "remote viewing" was coined by physicists and parapsychologists Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff of the Stanford University Research Institute.
Remote viewing differs from ordinary scrying in that it follows protocols and requires further feedback on the target. However, both practices involve extrasensory perception and some kind of psychic ability.
The remote viewing process was first developed by Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff at the Stanford University Research Institute at the request of the CIA in 1972. The program — initially codenamed Scanate.
The show has gone through a number of changes over the years, both in structure and in name. Later codenames included Gondola Wish, Grill Flame, and in 1991 Stargate. Over twenty years, the United States has spent $20 million on the Stargate and related projects.
In 1970, Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder, two American authors, collaborated to write a book with the title "Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain." This was during the height of the Cold War, and there was a growing fear that the Soviet Union would come to dominate the world. They used it to gather proof that the Soviets had used clairvoyants, psychics, psychokinetics, telepaths, and child prodigies in espionage, counterintelligence, and other security-related fields.
The book caught the attention of the US military to the point that in 1972 the Department of Defense produced a document called "Control of the offensive behavior of the USSR".
The document confirmed the strong Soviet push for research and application of telepathic and telekinetic communication capabilities, adding how these capabilities were extensively studied and used by the Soviet military and the KGB.
The document also noted that "Soviet knowledge in this field is significantly superior to Western knowledge." It was feared that the use of "asymmetric" intelligence, such as psychic espionage, could give the Russians a great advantage in the field of espionage. While Russia was more open to the unknown, the U.S. was more reticent and lacked expertise, denouncing the latest Soviet advances and crediting them with capabilities far beyond reality.
In 1972, the aforementioned Ingo Swann joined Dr. Hal Puthoff, a physicist from Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International, a California-based research institute at Stanford University in Palo Alto.
These experiments attracted attention and funding from the Central Intelligence Agency. Puthoff was a respected engineer who had the security clearance, a background in hard science, and training to handle this kind of project.
Russell Targ joined Swann and Puthoff at SRI, forming the core of a team that researched and refined an understanding of what had now become known as "remote viewing". In just a few years, the U.S. government support for the growing remote viewing program moved from the CIA to the Defense Intelligence Agency, as well as certain other military organizations.
Types of Protocol:
ERV- External Remote Viewing: in which a person (the external) physically present at the target location acts as a "beacon" to identify the target location. This was one of the first protocols used in the SRI (Stanford Research Institute) program.
CRV- Coordinated Remote Viewing: Initially, target locations were described in terms of geographic coordinates, but later, any (non-descriptive) identification code used to identify a target to the viewer was accepted.
TRV - Technical Remote Viewing: a term registered by a company called PSI TECH, based on VRC.
ARV- Associative Remote View: a variant that adds a level of indirection, specifically event-associated proxy targets to answer binary (yes/no) questions. Often applied to predict future events.
PRV-Predictive Remote Viewing: This method was created by researchers Simon Turnbull and Charles Scarf to predict changes in the stock market.
Basic Remote Viewing Techniques:
Enter an altered state of consciousness through meditation.
Get the coordinates of a location (but you don't know the target beforehand).
You can psychically tune in with your eyes open or closed (or open to draw and closed to tune).
Describe the place, but without interpreting it with the analytical mind.
Do not attempt to identify or analyze the target.
Write everything down on a sheet.
Pay attention to sensory and dimensional information in your mental images.
Confirmation.
If possible, visit the location you tried to visualize, check the image in Google Earth, or ask a friend to photograph it for you. If it's a lost item, repeat the process if you didn't find it the first time.
This is the simplified procedure, there are different methods (protocols), read in my book.
Difference between Remote Viewing, Astral Travel and Out of Body Experiences:
The difference between astral projection and remote viewing is the controlled use of extrasensory perception.
Remote viewing uses a specific (controlled) method to perceive a target over great distances and even over time. An out-of-body experience is when the energy body or etheric double leaves the body, while remote viewing is staying in the body and perceiving a person, place or thing from a distance and over time.
From a psychic and spiritual perspective, it is when with our subconscious we receive information from the akasha, as did the medium Edgar Cayce and other psychics.
We are surrounded by a non-local holographic information field.
Remote viewing differs from ordinary scrying in that it follows protocols and requires further feedback on the target. However, both practices involve extrasensory perception and some kind of psychic ability.
The remote viewing process was first developed by Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff at the Stanford University Research Institute at the request of the CIA in 1972. The program — initially codenamed Scanate.
The show has gone through a number of changes over the years, both in structure and in name. Later codenames included Gondola Wish, Grill Flame, and in 1991 Stargate. Over twenty years, the United States has spent $20 million on the Stargate and related projects.
In 1970, Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder, two American authors, collaborated to write a book with the title "Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain." This was during the height of the Cold War, and there was a growing fear that the Soviet Union would come to dominate the world. They used it to gather proof that the Soviets had used clairvoyants, psychics, psychokinetics, telepaths, and child prodigies in espionage, counterintelligence, and other security-related fields.
The book caught the attention of the US military to the point that in 1972 the Department of Defense produced a document called "Control of the offensive behavior of the USSR".
The document confirmed the strong Soviet push for research and application of telepathic and telekinetic communication capabilities, adding how these capabilities were extensively studied and used by the Soviet military and the KGB.
The document also noted that "Soviet knowledge in this field is significantly superior to Western knowledge." It was feared that the use of "asymmetric" intelligence, such as psychic espionage, could give the Russians a great advantage in the field of espionage. While Russia was more open to the unknown, the U.S. was more reticent and lacked expertise, denouncing the latest Soviet advances and crediting them with capabilities far beyond reality.
In 1972, the aforementioned Ingo Swann joined Dr. Hal Puthoff, a physicist from Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International, a California-based research institute at Stanford University in Palo Alto.
These experiments attracted attention and funding from the Central Intelligence Agency. Puthoff was a respected engineer who had the security clearance, a background in hard science, and training to handle this kind of project.
Russell Targ joined Swann and Puthoff at SRI, forming the core of a team that researched and refined an understanding of what had now become known as "remote viewing". In just a few years, the U.S. government support for the growing remote viewing program moved from the CIA to the Defense Intelligence Agency, as well as certain other military organizations.
Types of Protocol:
ERV- External Remote Viewing: in which a person (the external) physically present at the target location acts as a "beacon" to identify the target location. This was one of the first protocols used in the SRI (Stanford Research Institute) program.
CRV- Coordinated Remote Viewing: Initially, target locations were described in terms of geographic coordinates, but later, any (non-descriptive) identification code used to identify a target to the viewer was accepted.
TRV - Technical Remote Viewing: a term registered by a company called PSI TECH, based on VRC.
ARV- Associative Remote View: a variant that adds a level of indirection, specifically event-associated proxy targets to answer binary (yes/no) questions. Often applied to predict future events.
PRV-Predictive Remote Viewing: This method was created by researchers Simon Turnbull and Charles Scarf to predict changes in the stock market.
Basic Remote Viewing Techniques:
Enter an altered state of consciousness through meditation.
Get the coordinates of a location (but you don't know the target beforehand).
You can psychically tune in with your eyes open or closed (or open to draw and closed to tune).
Describe the place, but without interpreting it with the analytical mind.
Do not attempt to identify or analyze the target.
Write everything down on a sheet.
Pay attention to sensory and dimensional information in your mental images.
Confirmation.
If possible, visit the location you tried to visualize, check the image in Google Earth, or ask a friend to photograph it for you. If it's a lost item, repeat the process if you didn't find it the first time.
This is the simplified procedure, there are different methods (protocols), read in my book.
Difference between Remote Viewing, Astral Travel and Out of Body Experiences:
The difference between astral projection and remote viewing is the controlled use of extrasensory perception.
Remote viewing uses a specific (controlled) method to perceive a target over great distances and even over time. An out-of-body experience is when the energy body or etheric double leaves the body, while remote viewing is staying in the body and perceiving a person, place or thing from a distance and over time.
From a psychic and spiritual perspective, it is when with our subconscious we receive information from the akasha, as did the medium Edgar Cayce and other psychics.
We are surrounded by a non-local holographic information field.