According to quantum
theory, time is relative and the past can be changed
Scientific Explanations for
Remote Viewing
by Gerald O'Donnell
Eighteenth and nineteenth
century physical science had completed and embellished the "golden
age of a mechanistic and deterministic models of the universe" where
the universe and its constituents are ruled by rigid interactive
forces that can be measured, phenomena that can be predicted using
mathematical tools, and where the universe or any system operating
within it is made of the sum of its parts.
Light was thought to be an
electromagnetic wave vibrating in an undetected, and later
experimentally disproved media: "the ether", at certain rates of
vibration that would define its color. It was part of the
electromagnetic wave spectrum that allowed one to perceive an
electromagnetic wave as heat, light , radio waves, or other
electromagnetic radiations depending on the frequency of its
vibrations. This spectrum had been well-defined by the equations of
the English physicist James Clerk Maxwell in 1864.
Man's biology was reduced to
a mechanical system albeit of extreme complexity, and thought was
perceived to be but an epiphenomenon of the mechanical brain.
All this was very hygienic,
logical, and comforting. It allowed to view the so-called invisible
world of spiritual forces or entities as a personal unproven
hypothesis, and permitted the justification of atheistic concept to
be scientifically sound. Basically it allowed for purely atheistic
politico-philosophies alike communism to find a sympathetic
resonance within the "intelligentsia" and the masses.
It also gave a great
mechanistic impetus and approach to the fields of biology,
microbiology, psychology, neurobiology, and the allopathic technical
mechanistic approach to the health sciences. Technology was "king"
and the understanding of interactions between well-defined separated
systems would bring the possible conquest of disturbances and
imperfections in the "machinery" of biological entities.
Man having created a new
religion called "science", which revered himself and his intellect,
had the perception of having attained a Godlike control over nature.
By the end of 19th century
the ultraviolet catastrophe - as it came to be known - put this
whole hygienic view of the world in question, and the theory of
"quanta" of Max Planck was introduced in 1900. The German physicist
Max Planck introduced the notion of packets of energy that he called
"quanta" in order to explain why the wavelength (color) of the
radiation given off by heated objects did not rise in a continuous
manner but in discontinuous spurts from value to value as they grew
hotter. Danish physicist Niels Bohr, who was to become later one of
the fathers of the "Manhattan Project" that developed the first US
A-bomb during WWII, used in 1913 the theory of "quanta" of energy in
order to prove that the whole world of atoms was full of "quantum"
jumps. An electron could jump from one level of energy (so-called
orbit) to another without appearing in-between these states.
Discontinuity had been introduced in our equation of the universe!
In 1905 Albert Einstein
defined light as made of quanta of energy or particles that he
coined "photons" in his famous paper explaining the photoelectric
effect for which he received a Nobel prize in 1923. He nevertheless
acknowledged that light could also be defined as a wave, depending
on the mode of observation used in a chosen experiment, and the
particle/wave duality was introduced in our attempts to grasp the
mysteries of nature.
The new physics of the
beginnings of the twentieth century gave a mortal blow to the
deterministic principles of the old school of thought. Time and
space became relative notions according to the theory of relativity
of Albert Einstein. Quantum physics stated that all particles of
matter could be viewed either as material bodies or as waves. It
allowed for one electron (or any other particle) to be in two
locations at once (double slit experiment), and proved that one
could not predict the next location of a particle by knowing its
present one.
In the strange world of
quantum physics, particles dematerialized themselves into waves
(such as in transistors) and rematerialized themselves later into
particles. This depended on the type of experiment they were
subjected to, and most importantly: the choice made by a conscious
observer as to how he or she would view these particles.
To most theorists, the
phenomena of nature existed only as determined states as a conscious
observer witnessed them, either directly, or through the artifacts
of a measuring device. Quantum mechanics was born, and with it our
view of reality would be forever changed.
In order to comprehend
events in the phenomenal world, one needed to introduce a major
variable that had until then been ignored: The consciousness (self
reflective thought) of the observer. Without the perception of a
material world by a conscious entity, there were great doubts as to
the existence of that material reality independently of its
observation.
In other words we make a
potential reality manifest itself by our choices, even retroactively
through time and immediately across the perceived infinite space, as
the two experiments mentioned hereafter have proven, to the surprise
of most physicists. Or, in other words, volition and free will
operate outside the confines of time/space, and our impression of
making choices is but a delayed awareness of events that higher
levels of our minds have already made for us and therefore project
to our awareness (ego) as a holographic packet of sensory
information, post facto. We are therefore, at a higher level, the
maker (subject) of our reality projected to one's self (object)
within the web of probabilities of the quantum world that we
"materialize" for both the subject and the object that are but two
mirrors of one same reality: Consciousness, defined as self
-reflective awareness.
Very advanced "remote
viewers" know at which points volition is part of the higher levels
of one's self and at which points it is made available to the lower
(conscious level), as the quantum self or higher self merges with
the lower self (ego).
Our courses attempts to
allow the conscious part (reactive sensory apparatus operating as
intellect) and the much higher vibratory mind (deep subconscious
level) to merge with each other in awareness in order to allow a
human individual to be more in control of one's reality and probable
future. At the level of the higher mind time/space is instantly
bridged. "Remote Viewing" and especially "Remote Influencing" allows
one to connect to that level.
Mr. O'Donnell only mentions
quantum physics in order to allow for the comforting view of reality
of most individuals to be shattered and at the very least
questioned. Each one is to find his or her own truth, using
eventually his or her own path. The course is only meant as a guide
to a new world, an opening to a new way of viewing and experiencing
reality.
In 1982 at the Institute of
Applied Physics and Theoretical Optics at the University of Paris,
France, the team of physicists composed of Alain Aspect, Jean
Dalibard and Gerard Roger made what may prove to be the greatest
scientific discovery of this century. They proved experimentally
that the world is non-local or non-separable. This is equivalent to
saying that space, as we perceive it to be, does not exist, but is
an illusion of our senses. Projected by whom? This is the big
question that science tries to answer.
In the same field of quantum
theory, time is not only relative but one can experimentally change
the past, as the delayed choice experiment, carried out by
scientists in the 80's at the University of Maryland and the
University of Munich has proven.
Although this all seems to
belong to the realm of science-fiction, it is a reality, albeit hard
to accept, for all the minds that dwell in the world of the quanta:
a world full of seemingly contradictions, surprises, and a certain
sense of humor.
All modern disciplines are
nowadays affected by it, short maybe of modern biology, neurobiology
and surprisingly psychology that are still embracing a mechanistic
view of thought and have not, as yet, been able to define it.
Quantum physics gave us the
invention of the atomic bomb, the transistor, the computer chip,
laser and devices using laser light as a conduct for information,
Josephson junctions in supercomputers, superconductors etc.
You should never doubt your
natural-born ability to operate at such a high vibratory level of
thought. This ability has been proven since antiquity, and is still
utilized successfully by highly secretive intelligence units
belonging to the major world powers.
This is one case where a
dose of skepticism in the field of thought orientation and
exploration is unhealthy, and the fear of ridicule even more so. You
have to become open-minded, as a child is. All major shifts in
scientific thought have incurred the ire of the static-minded old
Praetorian Guard of proven inadequate sclerotic systems that are
beginning to hit too many walls loaded with points of singularity.
The methods taught in our
courses are probably part of the dawn of a new paradigm shift in
scientific thinking that will revolutionize and change the "old
classical scientific concepts" of the late 19th century that still
rule for most of us our interpretation of our perceived material
reality. This will have major implications in the natural and health
sciences, the biological perceptions and their assumed correlations,
all other phenomenal science, and the understanding of what the mind
is.
If we are in the process of
constantly creating our reality by thinking about it in an
individualized and global manner, and that science reflects but a
snapshot of our attempt at understanding our Creation, a major shift
in our thought- perception will induce totally different ways at
experiencing the phenomenal world and controlling it to our desires.
All aspects of our lives in
this new Millennium will, most likely, be profoundly transformed by
it.
The introduction of
consciousness as a major factor in the equation of reality by modern
quantum physics is at the core of one of the major paradox of
so-called psychic research. According to quantum physics, the
thought of the observer has an influence upon the result of an
experiment. Therefore, if we are co-creator of our reality by mere
thought, the natural imbued skepticism of many scientists and their
methodologies introduce a negative bias in the results that they
would obtain in thought experiment such as "remote viewing" etc.
In other words, in order to
achieve 100% success at proving the efficacy of "remote viewing or
influencing " one would need to deal with scientists and tests
subjects that are of the firm belief of the easy achievement of such
mental feats, which would automatically be called a bias
experimental protocol by the skeptical scientific community. That is
why the best results at remote viewing were always achieved within
intelligence and military secret units that pragmatically only cared
about bridging time and space effectively using mental technologies,
and were not the least concerned about peer recognition and the fear
of being ridiculed.
About the author: Mr.
Gerald O'Donnell,founder of Academy of Remote Viewing and Remote
Influencing , has been a visionary in mind/consciousness research.
He is now dedicating his life to skilfully inspiring and guiding
students through healing and empowering meditations on Oneness, to
access incredibly high levels of creative energy, that allow for the
rapid manifestation of desires based upon one's thoughts.
http://www.probablefuture.com/
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