Has this been experimented with by anyone?
I was thinking about how remote viewers realized at some point that they needed to be specific about time and not merely location.
This got me thinking: it is like when I go to google to figure out when and where the 4th of July fireworks show is supposed to be and I accidentally end up reading some outdated article from years past... Google is providing me something that held significance over a greater span of time than the upcoming show I was actually intending to get info on, so what Google finds significant doesn’t match up with my present intentions.
Then this got me to thinking: why is all that is required for remote viewing a place and time? Even GPS coordinates are sufficient. No need to specify a radius of perception or elevation or zoom level. There’s nearly an infinite number of things going on at any given time and place, so who is assigning significance?
As an example, I recall reading about a remote viewing experiment with McMoneagle where the GPS coordinates of the St Louis Arch were in a sealed envelope. And Joe successfully described the arch. But there were a million other things going on in the vicinity. To all the animals in the area, the Arch was insignificant.
It is interesting that remote viewers have perceptions as if they were physically present in a human body with human perceptual biases and human interests.
So has anyone ever specified in remote viewing a location, time, AND alternate type or organism of perception? E.G. dusk at a certain bat infested bridge from the bats’ perspectives? Or maybe do the St Louis Arch again, but specify the school of fish swimming in the river below who don’t even notice the Arch.
I was thinking about how remote viewers realized at some point that they needed to be specific about time and not merely location.
This got me thinking: it is like when I go to google to figure out when and where the 4th of July fireworks show is supposed to be and I accidentally end up reading some outdated article from years past... Google is providing me something that held significance over a greater span of time than the upcoming show I was actually intending to get info on, so what Google finds significant doesn’t match up with my present intentions.
Then this got me to thinking: why is all that is required for remote viewing a place and time? Even GPS coordinates are sufficient. No need to specify a radius of perception or elevation or zoom level. There’s nearly an infinite number of things going on at any given time and place, so who is assigning significance?
As an example, I recall reading about a remote viewing experiment with McMoneagle where the GPS coordinates of the St Louis Arch were in a sealed envelope. And Joe successfully described the arch. But there were a million other things going on in the vicinity. To all the animals in the area, the Arch was insignificant.
It is interesting that remote viewers have perceptions as if they were physically present in a human body with human perceptual biases and human interests.
So has anyone ever specified in remote viewing a location, time, AND alternate type or organism of perception? E.G. dusk at a certain bat infested bridge from the bats’ perspectives? Or maybe do the St Louis Arch again, but specify the school of fish swimming in the river below who don’t even notice the Arch.