Search A Light In The Darkness

Thursday, 8 January 2009

Recommended Web Site: The Farsight Institution

"We have long wanted to know what directs the mind of a remote viewer to perceive one location or event rather than another. Is it because some place in the past, present, or future (that is, a target) is written down on a piece of paper? Is it because a computer program chooses a place and a date and assigns this as the focus of attention for a remote viewer? Or is there an entirely different reason why a remote viewer should perceive one place or event as compared with any other? We now know the answer to this question, and the answer is both new to the remote-viewing field, and entirely nonobvious.

In early research into remote-viewing, replicability was always the bane of most attempts to demonstrate the reality of the remote-viewing phenomenon. But now that we better understand some of the behavioral characteristics of the phenomenon itself, replicability is entirely achievable, so long as the experimental design is carefully constructed and executed. Moreover, now that replicability can be achieved given an intelligently structured experimental design, new and significant questions relating to the fabric of our universe can be asked with transparent relevancy to science. Indeed, we can now use the results of remote-viewing experiments to suggest answers to fundamental cosmological questions about the nature of time, the wave-particle duality of physical matter, and relativity. "

Visit The Farsight Institution here ....