Remote viewing (RV) is the purported ability to perform clairvoyance under controlled conditions.
Remote viewing allows a viewer to use his or her intuitive abilities to gather information on a target consisting of an object, place, or person, etc., which is hidden from the physical perception of the viewer and typically separated from the viewer in space by some distance.
The "view" is merely a personal impression experienced by the viewer, and is sometimes recorded by another person. This is similar to somebody recording another person's dream memories when first awakened.
Classic remote viewing is done in real time, although some remote viewers claim the ability to perform retrocognition and precognition as well.
Proponents of RV claim that the existing scientific experimental evidence supports the claim that remote viewers are able to obtain information by means which are currently unknown to science. Proponents argue that remote viewing is distinguished from other forms of clairvoyance in that it follows a specific experimental protocol (or some variant of it). The critical aspect common to these protocols is that the viewer is blind to the target in the sense of being given no (or negligible) information regarding the target being viewed.
According to Russell Targ, the originator of this hypothesis, the original research is considered valid under accepted scientific protocol, and is currently at the level of a working theory. [citation needed] One weakness of the method is that it requires a subjective response from the subjects involved in the test. This is still considered as acceptable, because only the results are considered as evidence. The results have only reached the level of statistically significant, meaning it is beating the results of random outcome, but not yet a repeatable experiment without exception. Many accepted aspects of science, including such things as much of psychology, are at this same level of working theory.
Pursuant to Congressional mandate, DIA records concerning the requested subject have been transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The CIA gathered together CIA and Department of Defense records concerned with parapsychological phenomena, mainly remote viewing, and began a program to review, with the intention of declassifying, as many of these documents as possible. These records, now referred to as the Star Gate Collection, include information on the related projects Grill Flame, Center Lane, Sun Streak, Stunt Pilot, Phoenix and Scanate.
Remote viewing allows a viewer to use his or her intuitive abilities to gather information on a target consisting of an object, place, or person, etc., which is hidden from the physical perception of the viewer and typically separated from the viewer in space by some distance.
The "view" is merely a personal impression experienced by the viewer, and is sometimes recorded by another person. This is similar to somebody recording another person's dream memories when first awakened.
Classic remote viewing is done in real time, although some remote viewers claim the ability to perform retrocognition and precognition as well.
Proponents of RV claim that the existing scientific experimental evidence supports the claim that remote viewers are able to obtain information by means which are currently unknown to science. Proponents argue that remote viewing is distinguished from other forms of clairvoyance in that it follows a specific experimental protocol (or some variant of it). The critical aspect common to these protocols is that the viewer is blind to the target in the sense of being given no (or negligible) information regarding the target being viewed.
According to Russell Targ, the originator of this hypothesis, the original research is considered valid under accepted scientific protocol, and is currently at the level of a working theory. [citation needed] One weakness of the method is that it requires a subjective response from the subjects involved in the test. This is still considered as acceptable, because only the results are considered as evidence. The results have only reached the level of statistically significant, meaning it is beating the results of random outcome, but not yet a repeatable experiment without exception. Many accepted aspects of science, including such things as much of psychology, are at this same level of working theory.
Pursuant to Congressional mandate, DIA records concerning the requested subject have been transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The CIA gathered together CIA and Department of Defense records concerned with parapsychological phenomena, mainly remote viewing, and began a program to review, with the intention of declassifying, as many of these documents as possible. These records, now referred to as the Star Gate Collection, include information on the related projects Grill Flame, Center Lane, Sun Streak, Stunt Pilot, Phoenix and Scanate.
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