Biography: Courtney Brown, Ph.D., is a college professor and Director of The Farsight Institute. He has recently published a book on the science of remote viewing titled, Remote Viewing: The Science and Theory of Nonphysical Perception.
Climate Study Remote Viewing Field Trip
Abstract: Join us for an online field trip to the Climate Study Project housed at the Farsight Institute. The Climate Study Project, managed by Dr. Courtney Brown, is the first joint remote viewing venture attempted by the remote viewing community. Participating Trainers, Viewers and Methodologies: Courtney Brown - Science of Remote Viewing (SRV), Glenn Wheaton - Hawaii Remote Viewer Guild (HRVG), and Lyn Buchanan - Controlled Remote Viewing (CRV).
We'll take a look at and explain actual remote viewing sessions and explain baseline clarity results established with the 2008 sessions, then discuss the subsequent 2013 sessions of the same geographical locations.
Project Overview for the 1 June 2008 and 1 June 2013 Experiments as explained by Dr. Brown on Farsight: The remote viewers participating in this study have remote viewed various geographically determined targets during two time periods: 1 June 2008 and 1 June 2013. This five-year gap will allow us to look for planetary change that may occur over that period. We are also aware that popular culture views the year 2012 as potentially significant, and some people may be interested in following our results because of this. (No reason scientific studies can't be fun!)
The various 2008 targets establish a baseline set of criteria by which the accuracy of the remote-viewing results in general may be evaluated. Thus, if the 1 June 2008 targets are perceived accurately by the remote viewers participating in the study, then it is reasonable to assume that the results for the future dates for those same targets will be comparably accurate. Since each geographically determined target is evaluated three times (once in 2008, and twice in 2013 — once for each future timeline), there are three times as many total targets as there are geographically determined targets in this study.
The remote-viewing sessions were conducted prior to the targets being assigned to those sessions by a truly random process (explained in "Experiment Details" below as well as in the video presentation that appears at the top of this page) that took place on Wednesday, 4 June 2008. It was not possible for a remote viewer (or anyone else) to know the identity of a target at the time the target was being remote viewed since the remote-viewing sessions were conducted before 4 June 2008. Thus, the targets are assigned in the future with respect to when the sessions were done, and the remote-viewing data describe the future target assignments.
Topic: Climate Study Remote Viewing Field Trip
Date: Thursday, October 20th Time: 8 PM EST Duration: 2 hours
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