Sunday, October 31, 2010

Secret mesages, submersibles and remote viewing

In July 1977 SRI (Stanford Research Institute) carried out experiments in remote viewing from a submersible submerged in 500ft of sea, approximately 500 miles from the receiver site.

The goal of the experiment was to determine if it was possible to transmit a secret message to a submerged submarine via remote viewing. The submersible used in the experiment was the Taurus, a five-man underwater vehicle.

The protocol for the experiment was constructed in advance of the experiment;
A series of six potential messages ere to be sent. These were:
1.    Remain submerged for two days
2.    Evasive plan six
3.    Rendezvous at pickup point three
4.    Proceed to base one
5.    Standby alert on priority targets
6.    Launch priority targets

To each message was assigned a San Francisco Bay Area target location. To send a given message, a pair of investigators comprising a target demarcation team went at a prearranged time to the site linked to the particular message and remained there for 15 minutes. During this period a subject on-board the submersible, monitored by an investigator blind to the target pool, registered his impressions as to where the demarcation team was, 500 miles away, as per standard remote viewing protocol. 


Following the remote-viewing trial, the subject then consulted a list of potential targets (seen for the first time at this point), made a choice as to which target of the set he had described, and noted the associated message.

Two experiments of this type were carried out - one each with two subjects. For this first experiment the submersible was at a depth of 170 m in water 340 m deep; for the second the submersible rested on the bottom in 80 in of water.

For experiment 1 the outbound team had chosen a large oak tree.
Experiment1: 17m deep in 340m of water 16th July 1977.

Target: A giant oak on a hilltop in Portola valley, California.

Remote viewer data: “A very tall, looming object. A very, very, huge, tall tree and a lot of space behind them. There feels like there is a cliff or drop-off behind them”.
In this experiment the subject was able to identify the correct target on the list and was thus able to obtain the associated correct message, "Rendezvous at Pickup Point Three."

In both completed experiments the subjects rendered excellent descriptions of the target sites, and had no difficulty in choosing the correct target from the list of six potential targets.


The docs are:
http://www.remoteviewed.com/blogdocs/taurus1.pdf

http://www.remoteviewed.com/blogdocs/taurus2.pdf


for more info on remote viewing including examples and official documents: remoteviewed

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.