Maybe this is how intuition works!
I was watching a film (Suspect Zero) the other night about a remote viewer. The film starred Sir Ben Kingsley and Aaron Eckhart. What was more interesting, however, was the Special Feature which spoke of the Remote Viewing program caried out by the US Army. Amongst those interviewed was Russell Targ (of Stanford University), one of the co-ordinators of the program. He and another PhD from the Institute of Noetic Sciences, Dean Radin, were talking of the theory behind why such stuff might work.
They were saying that Bell’s Theorem was a reasonable explanation for how Remote Viewing works. Briefly, Bell’s Theorem says that the only way to account for the way particles interact across distance is to assume that the world as we see it is not how it is. (Read the difficult stuff here.) The theory postulates that non-locality is the way to go. What THAT means is that everything is connected with everything else in the universe. This is not just sloppy dream of a New Ager, this is acceptable and reputable science. Somehow, the theory goes, my mind is not located somewhere in and around me and resides just in that locality, it is, simultaneously permeating the entire universe. Thus, these two people were saying, all that is necessary for Remote Viewing to work, is to tune into what you want to know. Targ said it was just as easy to remote view across the corridor as it was to remote view across continents.
Oh, and before anyone says, but you have to be someone special to do this, Targ also added that Remote Viewing was easy to teach and they had taught many people. It only took a week.
Now tell me that’s no different to using your intuition about anything at all. It’s just that we are congenitally lazy in using it, when it has the answers to anything we want to know.
For some people, that might be scary. Are you one of those people?
Popularity: 14% [?]
Related posts
Filed under: general stuff, science, theories