Missing Malaysia flight a mystery

Don

New Member
Alex,
You wrote:

Who made you the arbiter of what is RV and what isn't? What are correct protocols and what aren't.

Sigh... Okay. I'll give this one more shot.

I would have walked away from this conversation a long time ago. I'm really, really tired of beating this dead horse. But I really care about remote viewing. I care about the accomplishments of those who originated it, developed it, and perfected the protocols. They have bequeathed to us - at long last - a means of demonstrating psychic perception that cannot be reasonably, intelligently questioned by the skeptics nor ridiculed by society.

Even the arch-skeptic and debunker Ray Hyman - who has devoted his life to debunking anything and everything paranormal - admitted, after reviewing the scientific protocols of the remote viewing research done at Stanford, that he could offer no non-paranormal explanation for the success of remote viewing. In other words, he could find no flaw in the protocols. He could find no way the information in the remote viewing studies could have been transmitted except by psychic means. I don't know, Alex, if you fully understand the enormity of that admission by one of the world's leading skeptics. You obviously do not seem to understand that IT IS THE PROTOCOLS that all but proved the reality of remote viewing to this arch-skeptic and debunker. Without those protocols, what we are doing is not remote viewing.

You ask who made me the arbiter of what is RV and what isn't? What are correct protocols and what aren't?

You asked me a similar question a few days ago when you asked me who was I speaking for. I'm not the arbiter of what is RV and what isn't, nor did I decide what the correct protocols are. The people who decided that are the scientists who created it. The people who agree with that statement include the following (from one of my previous posts ion this thread):

I'm speaking for myself and I suppose for those who, like me, ascribe to the peer-reviewed, laboratory-designed, scientifically accepted protocols as originally developed at Stanford Research Institute. These are people who have stated (often repeatedly and vehemently) in public that, for PSI perception to fit the definition of "remote viewing", those protocols must be followed. SOME of those people are Joseph McMoneagle, Edwin May, Dean Radin, Charles Tart, Fred "Skip" Atwater, Ingo Swann, Richard S. Broughton, Palyne Gaenir, Gary Langford, Charles Puthoff, Brian Josephson, and many people who frequent TKJR like Eric, LD, Tunde, Gene and many more.

Alex, you wrote:

Don: You pretty much summed up the reason "RV is no longer real to the world" as Russell Targ said to me a few weeks ago.

No.

There IS a reason RV is "no longer real to the world" (if indeed it ever was; the average person on the street still has no idea of what the words "remote viewing" even means). But RV once had a legitimacy among those who took the time to investigate the research. Among many, RV had overcame the "giggle factor" to some extent. But remote viewing has been shoved right back into the same disbelieved, unproven, sensationalistic, ridiculed box as palm reading, channeling, fortune telling and spoon bending.

And I'm going to tell you how that happened...

I've been civil and I've tried to be gentle about this up until now. But I'm really weary - not just weary of my failure to get you to understand the vital importance of the protocols, but also extremely weary of watching the slow slide of remote viewing, in the eyes of society, back into the ridiculed, non-legitimate box where so many other psychic activities reside.

And this slow destruction of all that was built in the creation and development of remote viewing is being done by you, Alex, and those like you who have decided that the appropriate attitude is (as you posted recently):

I have no interest in... and most recently endless debates on definitions. Please be my guest, call what you do what ever you would like.

Your trainer, Ed Dames, heads up the list of those people. So I can readily see why you feel as you do about the lack of a need for scientific protocols. Completely aside from Dames' regular pronouncements about the impending end of the world (killshots, plant pathogens, etc.) that never seem to happen, he began damaging RV back in the early 1990s. He claimed an accuracy of "a previously never achieved success rate of 100%". He claimed his team would discover the origin of the AIDS virus. He claimed there would be public contact with aliens in Chaco Canyon in August of 1993. On radio, he claimed his students could work frontloaded with 100% accuracy. He claimed the scientific protocols were only important to scientists. He trained Courtney Brown and the complete lack of blinding controls and massive frontloading that he told Brown was "okay" and was "still remote viewing" directly resulted in the fiascos Brown has been associated with.

Almost single-handed, Dames managed to begin the ruination of remote viewing and the turning away of legitimate science. When Dames convinced people that a total lack of rules and controls, the lack of all protocol, massive frontloading and target-informed monitors were still" remote viewing", no scientist could take remote viewing seriously any longer. I say "almost single-handed" because many of the ex-military CRV trainers were just as guilty back then of employing protocols. All but Dames seemed to have now changed their tune. THAT is what has made remote viewing "no longer real to the world". Ed Dames and people like you, who believe that his style of refusing to implement the scientific controls is just fine, are what has put RV now on a par with such unproven phenomena as UFOs, aliens, ghosts, and Bigfoot.

Edwin C. May is the scientist with the most experience in the development of remote viewing. He ran - by far - more RV studies and put in more years than any other scientist. Puthoff and Targ are often publicly mentioned in association with RV but May's experience vastly exceeds that of both Puthoff and Targ. Ed May has written: "In the very beginning of Stargate Chronicles, Joe expresses frustration over the lack of good scientific protocols, which is unfortunately all too common with some of the material that purports to pass as valid remote viewing that can be found on the World Wide Web. Joe is especially qualified to speak on these matters...". (From the introduction, pg. xxiv, of McMoneagle's The Stargate Chronicles).


Alex, note that May is pointing to work EXACTLY like yours - material that purports to be valid remote viewing yet lacks scientific protocol.

May goes on to say that Joe is the "most tested and certified psychic in history".

From the same book, pg. xi, Joe writes his definition of remote viewing (the same one - the only one - accepted by science):

"Remote viewing is a human ability to produce information about a targeted object, person, place, or event, while being completely isolated from the target by space, time, and other forms of shielding. This isolation is guaranteed by following a very specific scientific protocol. This protocol was developed at Stanford Research Institute in the early 1970s and has become more rigorous and specific since then."

You see, Alex, I am not claiming to be "the arbiter of what RV is and isn't". What RV is has been known for a long time - for those who are willing to face it and deal with it. It is rigorous and specific. That's what sets it apart.

Joe goes on to write:

"Remote viewing can be considered to have taken place only when the remote viewer and anyone else in the room with the remote viewer are completely blind to the specifically targeted object, person, place, or event of interest. They must remain blind to the target of interest prior to and during the production of information. In scientific terms, this is called a double-blind condition. That is, the viewer and all the people associated with the viewer are unaware of the target material. There are no exceptions to this protocol."

Read that last sentence again, Alex. "There are NO exceptions to this protocol."

That is not me saying that. It is Joe McMoneagle and every scientist ever engaged in the development of remote viewing saying that. The fact that you and Ed Dames don't agree with it doesn't change anything. And it certainly doesn't change the definition of remote viewing.


You wrote:
You're still in the 1970s pouring over sketches of Soviet Missile Silos. God help me if I attend one more presentation where those sketches are pulled out and displays like crown jewels.. In 40 years of RV the stuff from the 70s is the best we have to display.. Oh I forgot Brown has a brilliant "breakthrough" with Aliens at the Pyramids..

I have no clue what you are referring to here. Who mentioned Soviet missile silos? Who mentioned Brown's aliens and pyramids issue?

But if you think the stuff from the 1970s is the best we have to display, then you need to take a long hard look at the work done by McMoneagle in just the last couple years.

You wrote:
Take off you 2 inch thick glasses and look around. RV ISN'T established, defined and proven as a documented Law of Nature.... it's an evolving process .. that is still developing... Continually being refined and explored.

And:
It about producing tangible results..

And:
Like Russell said to me, .... I wish you success, go make a half a million dollars and tell the world about it. Perhaps that would make RV real again to the world.

I mentioned Joe's recent work. Long since the government program shut down, Joe has remote viewed the location of around 20 or more missing people in Japan, some of them missing for over 50 years - documented. On camera. From his dining room in Virginia. I have a little experience in locating missing people myself that I described in a previous post. How's that for tangible results? How's that for "making RV real" to the world? It was certainly tangible and real to law enforcement and those searching for the missing persons. And in my case - and in Joe's - it was done double-blind, with zero frontloading, completely in-protocol.

You wrote:
STILL NOT ONE SINGLE VIEWER HAS TAKEN 10 minutes and viewed the Missing Plane.. amazing..

Oh yeah, that's right. This entire conversation began with you claiming to be the only remote viewer here and with you referring to everyone else here in parenthesis ("viewers"), as if they are not really RVers. That was right about the time that you mentioned how you are working targets totally, completely frontloaded. Others jumped on that, pointing out that you are NOT, in fact, remote viewing. And I said we at least realized that one person here - meaning you, Alex - are not a remote viewer. It looks like we are right back where we started from. All this polite discussion, all this gradual education, all this repeated explanation - and you still defend working frontloaded, without any regard to protocol.

And by the way, I DID take a look at the missing plane - remember? But I termed my effort (since it was done totally frontloaded and out of protocol) as an "Intuitive Session". I did not refer to it as "remote viewing" because it was not remote viewing. Neither was yours. But there was one more difference. I didn't criticize any one else here for not offering a session on the missing plane. Because I do not feel the need to. And because what others choose to remote view or what others choose to make public is none of my business. Don.
 

Marv_Darley

New Member
Staff member
STILL NOT ONE SINGLE VIEWER HAS TAKEN 10 minutes and viewed the Missing Plane.. amazing..

LOLZ I CLOSED MY EYS AND REMOT VIEWED THE PLANE ITS IN ON THE MOON THE GREYS HAV GOT IT I DONE AN OBE AND WENT THERE I SEEN IT WHEN I RVd IT

There we go, Alex. Happy now?

Marv :)
 

Chakra

New Member
Marv said:
STILL NOT ONE SINGLE VIEWER HAS TAKEN 10 minutes and viewed the Missing Plane.. amazing..

LOLZ I CLOSED MY EYS AND REMOT VIEWED THE PLANE ITS IN ON THE MOON THE GREYS HAV GOT IT I DONE AN OBE AND WENT THERE I SEEN IT WHEN I RVd IT

There we go, Alex. Happy now? Marv :)

Just wondering - whats your trick eh? How did you know it was the grays - are you able to see the 'grays' on the moon - being gray arn't they sort of camouflaged against the back ground? The floating black eyes maybe?

Enquiring minds want to know! lol
 

Solaris

New Member
He knew they were greys because he "took off his 2 inch thick glasses and looked around" :eek:
This is the trick! It always works!

By the way the moon is silver, not just grey :)

Cheers
 

Marv_Darley

New Member
Staff member
Just wondering - whats your trick eh?

No trick - I've been able to RV since I was born. I just close my eyes and the target appears before me.

Mad, hey? Guess I'm just blessed.

Marv :)

PS Massive asteroid set to hit the planet next week btw. I seen it.
 

Solaris

New Member
No, Asteroid 2003 QQ47 Is NOT Going to Hit the Earth Next Week.
Sleep well :)

http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2014/03/15/asteroid_2003_qq47_rumors_of_an_impact_in_march_2014_are_false.html

Sorry, no more diversion from the main topic.
 

daz

Remote viewer, author, artist and photographer.
Staff member
People,
I moved this topic of conversationout of CRV because well, its not CRV related and it has degraded into split topics.
 

AlexDiC

New Member
Just received an email from Marty..

Maybe what Marty says will be more meaningful to "you all"?

This is exactly what I have been saying..

1) RV will be real again to the world when viewers can find an application that makes money
2) RV is "only at the beginning", to suggest that the protocols or "anything" that we now consider "established" are clearly subject to further revisions and development.

Marty Says:

I believe this is a very important addition to APP-2014 because successful "money applications" of precognition may be the most effective way of convincing society (and scientists) that precognition is real and that we are truly only at the beginning of learning about the capabilities of consciousness.
 

Don

New Member
Alex,


you wrote:
Marty Says:

I believe this is a very important addition to APP-2014 because successful "money applications" of precognition may be the most effective way of convincing society (and scientists) that precognition is real and that we are truly only at the beginning of learning about the capabilities of consciousness.

I like Marty Rosenblatt. I met him at a workshop - which was about applying ARV to the stock market - put on by himself and Skip Atwater, about ten years ago at the Monroe Institute. It was a fairly successful workshop. We remote viewed several times over a 2 and a half day period. But ALL remote viewing was done in-protocol. And that's an important point because that's where you and I differ.

Many people feel as you and Marty do, that successful application of remote viewing - especially a successful FINANCIAL application - will cause remote viewing to be recognized and accepted by society. I'm sure it would help a lot.

But I'm certain it is a mistaken assumption - whether by Marty or anyone else - that the successful financial application of RV will make RV "real" to scientists. I could list scores of concepts and supposed truths that have been accepted by society but not by scientists. Dowsing, as a quick example, was long accepted by society. But, as soon as science and the scientific method became established, dowsing was relegated to the dust bin of superstition and "folk beliefs". It didn't matter that it was accepted by the government (royalty), the church (quite a few monks and priests were dowsers), and the common people. It didn't even matter that dowsers had been successfully locating potable sources of water for thousands of years.

Science requires a paradigm; a hypothesis; a fraud-proof, information-leakage-proof protocol (which is what we have been disagreeing about); initial proof-in-principle research; a theory; peer-review; publishing; and then replication by other scientists - all before science will even begin to accept a phenomena. Even after many years and scores of successful studies into proof-in-principle (beyond the level of any other area of study), science still refuse to accept PSI (or remote viewing) because one of the above items is missing - PSI (and remote viewing) has no paradigm. Researchers still have not been able to put forth any solid mechanism by which it works.

It doesn't matter how much money any one makes by remote viewing (or how many people make it) it; if there is any conceivable way that success came about other than by remote viewing, it will not move science to accept remote viewing as real.

You wrote:
2) RV is "only at the beginning", to suggest that the protocols or "anything" that we now consider "established" are clearly subject to further revisions and development


But when I compare what you wrote, Alex, to your quote from Marty:


Marty Says:

I believe this is a very important addition to APP-2014 because successful "money applications" of precognition may be the most effective way of convincing society (and scientists) that precognition is real and that we are truly only at the beginning of learning about the capabilities of consciousness.

I notice a couple things:

(1) When Marty uses the phrase, "we are only at the beginning", he is referring to "learning about the capabilities of consciousness". But when you use same phrase, you are applying it to "the protocols or "anything" that we now consider "established". That's NOT what Marty said.

(2) Marty is not even talking about remote viewing directly. He is referring to precognition. Granted, precognition is one kind of remote viewing, but one kind only (unless all RV works by precognition, we simply don't know at this point). But remote viewing is not one kind of precognition. Precognitive Remote Viewing is precognition accomplished under an accepted remote viewing protocol.

Your claim that RV protocols are subject to further revisions and development is a valid one. But that is not accomplished in a "feel free to call what you do whatever you want" kind of way. To be valid , those revisions and developments require peer-review and publishing - and that means being subject to the scrutiny, criticisms, and acceptance of other scientists. This is how RV came to be distinct from all other psychic practices in the first place. Don
 

stewart edwards

New Member
Don

Can I suggest one other aspect?

Scientists like to be able to repeat things. When it comes to test tube type lab work, you simply follow a formulae that pretty much any scientist could do [ok they might need special training eg in genetics but at a concept level]. When it comes to anything that involves "feeling energy" while in principle anyone could do it [and actually do it in everyday life all the time], in reality few can, and probably very few can do it really well. Hence it is beyond the abilities of many scientists to repeat and replicate. That is a stumbling block. One that is aided by egos.

I was reading the skeptics dictionary earlier today and one of their biggest (and fair) criticisms of RV is that target data could be interpreted in so many different ways. Hence a solutions needs to address this.

Perhaps starting with a basic gestalt eg a green hill and nothing else. Work out the statistical probability (its been to long for me to remember how to do this - and all those stats exams I passed at university and in the professions) of a random selection of people responding "hill" or "green hill" by guesswork, and then setting up basic RV training sessions and testing for that. Once you have proven that can beat the probability, move it up a gear. But you would need a rich benefactor to fund it all. As with most things you just need the money.
 

Don

New Member
Stewart,
You wrote;
Scientists like to be able to repeat things.

Right. That's called "replication". It's been done with RV by many scientists at many different labs.

you wrote:
When it comes to anything that involves "feeling energy" while in principle anyone could do it [and actually do it in everyday life all the time], in reality few can, and probably very few can do it really well. Hence it is beyond the abilities of many scientists to repeat and replicate. That is a stumbling block.

That's not the case with RV. At Stanford, where some of the earliest RV trials were carried out, they found that almost everyone can produce at least a basic response. The key is the double blind. It seems that when the mind has no other way to get the information except by psychic means, that's when PSI works best. In fact, many skeptics were convinced RV is real when the scientists - Puthoff and Targ - suggested to the skeptics that they try it themselves. They did and found they could also produce results.

you wrote:
I was reading the skeptics dictionary earlier today and one of their biggest (and fair) criticisms of RV is that target data could be interpreted in so many different ways

I disagree. I don't think it is a fair criticism. Here's why: In the lab, remote viewing trials always include a "blind judging" component. The following is one blind judging method that was used: The judge - who is oblivious to all other aspects of the experiment - is given the remote viewer's results and 5 possible target photos. He is asked to compare the RV results with the 5 possible photos and match them, rating each photo with a number, one through five. One being the best match and five being the worst match. Only one of the 5 photos is the actual target. The other photos are called "decoys".

When a blind judge consistently gives the actual target a number one, meaning the best match, he is matching the remote viewer's results with the actual target. When this is occurs repeatedly, the odds against chance reach into the thousands-to-one. In fact, when all the work conducted at SRI between 1973 and 1988 was analyzed, the odds against change were on in one trillion! (from "Psychic Wars", pg 45, by Elmar Gruber, copyright 1997).

You are correct in that there is a subjective component to remote viewing. That's the nature of the beast. But even the odds quoted above don't allow even a minor glimpse into the astounding odds against chance within which RV operates.

As an example, just take a look at the excellent work by Daz in the thread about Courtney Brown's big announcement. Daz could have described absolutely anything in the world from any time period throughout history. But Daz sketched and described a pyramid at the time it was being built. And the target was the pyramid at the time it was being built. He absolutely nailed the target. And it is impossible to figure the odds in that. I think sometimes we, as remote viewers (especially active RVers who train daily), get a bit jaded from seeing direct hits so often. We tend to forget what a minor miracle it is - at least in the context of the mainstream beliefs.

If you are interested in remote viewing and the research that brought RV to us, I would suggest doing a lot of reading, probably starting with "Mind-Reach" by Targ and Puthoff and then reading about all the following research that occurred after that. Don
 

Marv_Darley

New Member
Staff member
I was reading the skeptics dictionary earlier today and one of their biggest (and fair) criticisms of RV is that target data could be interpreted in so many different ways. Hence a solutions needs to address this.

Also one of their most common de-bunking tricks. Over here in the Uk we had an illusionist snare some hapless viewer by getting him to do a session live on TV and then revealing that his target had been Times Square. Unsurprisingly the viewer had TONS of information (Times Square being a busy place with thousands of possible objects to describe) and the illusionist was thus able to claim that by providing SO much information the viewer was essentially covering his bases...that it was possible simply to 'best fit' his data.

This went out live on National TV as a kind of magic bullet to kill off the notion that RV works. Clever, as to the average Joe in the street it looked pretty damning. Those of us with a modicum of experience could have pointed out the massive flaw in the experiment from the get-go.

If you have no idea what the target is (hence recent insistences on the need for correct protocol) and you go on to describe a white animal and your target is a polar bear then THAT'S NOT INTERPRETATION. That's statistically significant on a massive scale. Good viewers pull off this level of description all the time. Go check our Galleries for daily proof of this.

Marv :)
 

catsavior

New Member
I tried looking through one of the victims eyes and saw the plane do a nose dive into the water I don't know how accurate it is though
 

Chakra

New Member
Solaris said:
He knew they were greys because he "took off his 2 inch thick glasses and looked around" :eek:
This is the trick! It always works!

By the way the moon is silver, not just grey :)

Cheers

Really? hmmm looked like grey sorta powery stuff last time I was there. :) Course it was very briefly...didn't expect the trip and I came back as quickly as I went! lol
 

stewart edwards

New Member
Sorry if I upset, I just tend to look at all issues from all perspectives. I try to slip into as many pairs of shoes as I can to see things from different perspectives.

Remember I know that RVing is possible (from my initial couple of target acquisitions in under a minute with little false data, before I fell into AOL hell). I have zero issues with what Daz did, I just question a lot. Life has taught me that tends to be a wise thing to do. Though I do appreciate that my social skills are not what they might be [side effect of being a carer for a decade you don't get out much].

I was horrified when Daz said that he might quit - the community needs him. I can only hope that he finds a way to make his life work so that he can continue to lead and inspire.
 

Solaris

New Member
There is nothing upsetting in what you have said. This was just your observation. Sometimes our moods shine through and that day my mood was like that and I think it was a bit upsetting what I said.
I also have been questioning many things ( apparently OK for other people) since I remember. I have learnt a lot from this thread about importance of the protocol and that remote viewers fight for it like terriers. I would probably have done the same what Alex did ( I was really close ;D) but he was the first ( thanks Alex :) for taking the blow) and he seems to be experienced guy so now I don't have to. I have the answer.
I respect other's people input, knowledge, experience, dedication and that they still bother to answer stupid questions, and just bother to notice.....This is invaluable help.
But yes inside there is still this tiny fiery thing questioning unquestionable.
 
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