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The three books
in this series, The Secret Vaults of Time, The Alexandria
Project, and Mind Rover: Explorations with Remote Viewing
comprise the bulk of my experimental research, as well as the intellectual
lineage from whence it springs. Each volume is complete within itself.
However, they are also a trilogy. Each explores the practical application
of Remote Viewing in archeology.
The Secret
Vaults of Time (Author's Guild: Lincoln, Nebraska,
2001) $24.95 ISBN: 0-595-18348-4
Tells the stories of researchers from around the world who over a century,
prior to my involvement, successfully located and reconstructed archaeological
sites using Remote Viewing. These are the documented stories of researchers
and Remote Viewers, the sites they found, and the reconstructions they
described. It is from this lineage that my own work in archaeological
Remote Viewing sprang. Volume One
The Alexandria
Project (The Author's Guild: Lincoln, Nebraska, 2001)
$19.95 ISBN: 0-595-18348-4
In the Fall of 1995, a combined French-Egyptian archaeological team
working in the Eastern Harbor of Alexandria, Egypt announced they had
discovered the palace of Cleopatra, the remains of the Lighthouse of
Pharos, and many other sites. It created the next day's headlines, and
ongoing media coverage. The work is fascinating, important, and worthy
of the attention it has received. What it is not, for the most part
though is original discovery. Sixteen years earlier, in 1979, The Mobius
Society had surveyed the harbor, and discovered the same sites, and
many of the same artifacts.
What followed, and what is happening now, provides a case study in how
science and the media deal with things they can not explain, do not
like for ideological reasons, yet which they can not make go away, because
they are authentic, and because strong popular interest will not be
denied. The Alexandria Project is the true story of how researchers
from five universities and organizations put the claims of Remote Viewing
to the ultimate test: Was it is possible under rigorously controlled
conditions for some part of human consciousness to direct us to lost
chapters and places in history? Were the sites where the Remote Viewers
marked them on their maps? Were the artifacts they described at those
sites actually there?
A second test was also carried out: comparing the relative accuracy
of information derived from traditional remote sensing, in this case
side-scan sonar, and proton precession magnetometer, with information
provided by Remote Viewing. This book, and the papers, and film record
that accompany it, have lain dormant as a kind of time capsule, awaiting
some independent confirming or disproving event. That event, in the
form of the Franco-Egyptian expedition's reports has now happened, and
it is possible in this newly revised edition to look back on both the
skeptics and the research they criticized and make a determination as
to who was correct. In both the generalities and specifics the second
expedition has confirmed the claims of the first. Volume Two
Mind
Rover: Explorations with Remote Viewing (Nemoseen
Press: Charlottesville, 2001) $19.95 ISBN
The final volume of the series is comprised of the actual research papers
we presented at various scientific conferences over almost 20 years.
This work, carried out on both land and sea, in the United States, Egypt,
Jamaica, and the Bahamas, with the help of dozens of specialists from
universities and institutions around the world, represents a unique
body of exploratory science. Many of these reports include comparisons
between Remote Viewing and a variety of electronic remote sensing technologies,
and demonstrate that Remote Viewing has proven capable of producing
results when other approaches have failed.
Volume Three
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