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Remote viewing
is the ability to describe persons, places, and events via some
aspect of consciousness that cannot presently be explained. This
ten DVD set is the professionally produced broadcast quality record
of the most extraordinary Remote Viewing conference ever held.
The material for the disks was originally filmed in November 2003,
at the annual Schwartzreport Conference on Issues in Consciousness,
co-sponsored by the ARE, Atlantic University, and the International
Remote Viewing Association. For the first, and very probably only
time in history, the Founders of Remote Viewing, as well as others
who have played a significant role in the field, assembled and
discussed how Remote Viewing developed, how it is done; what it
has been used for; and, what it means. The presentations are an
historical record that includes pictures of legendary viewings
that have become benchmarks in the history of Remote Viewing.
They come from the actual intelligence projects, archaeological
discoveries, and experiments. Many have been rarely seen, and
would be extremely hard to locate from other sources. This DVD
set, in conjunction with Nemoseen’s CDs, comprises a complete
course on the art and science of Remote Viewing, taught by the
masters of the craft.
Nemoseen’s DVDs and CDs offer scientifically based, clear, simple
instructions to guide anyone through a Remote Viewing experience in a way
that is as rich as anything a person would experience in a laboratory. The
validity of this material has been tested hundreds of thousands of times
over almost thirty years of research at laboratories and universities all
over the world.
At the personal level, Remote Viewing expands our definition of what it
means to be human. At the social level, it opens our view of the world to
another dimension of the self and adds to our store of knowledge as to how
we as humans fit within our universe. |
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THE PRESENTERS: (from left to right) Dale Graff, Ingo Swann, Stephan
Schwartz, Hal Puthoff, James Spottiswoode, Edgar Evans Cayce, Henry Reed,
Paul Smith, Russell Targ. (Missing Skip Atwater.) |
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The Presentations |
DISK ONE
The SRI Years -- Hal Puthoff, Ph.D.
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How
did the CIA become involved with Remote Viewing? What actually happened?
This presentation comes from the physicist who ran the laboratory. Puthoff
explains how he founded the original CIA Remote Viewing program to determine
whether Remote Viewing might constitute an intelligence threat if used
against the U.S., by potential adversaries. With his colleagues Russell Targ,
Ed May, and others, he carried out seminal work from which emerged some of
the first papers on the subject to be published in mainstream scientific
journals such as Nature, the Proceedings of the IEEE (Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers), and AAAS Symposium Proceedings 57
(American Association for the Advancement of Science). SRI was asked by
Schwartz to participate in the Deep Quest submarine project he was carrying
out. Here are the stories of what happened and the lessons that were
learned. Puthoff is the Director of the Institute for Advanced Studies at
Austin, Texas. |
| DISK
TWO
Remote Viewing Joins the
Army --
Major Paul Smith, USA (Ret.)
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What
really happened in military intelligence? For seven years Smith worked for
the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command and the Defense Intelligence
Agency as a Remote Viewer, and knows the answer. Smith was the chief
coordinate Remote Viewing (CRV) theory instructor for the government
program, and was primary author of the government CRV manual. And he
performed hundreds of operational Remote Viewing sessions as a government
viewer. Smith is now president and chief instructor for Remote Viewing
Instructional Services, Inc., which provides training and operational
support for Remote Viewing.
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DISK
THREE
Exploration with Remote Viewing -- Stephan A. Schwartz |
How
was Cleopatra’s Palace found with Remote Viewing? What happened during the
submarine project known as Deep Quest? At the same time that the CIA program
was developing at SRI Schwartz, as the Research Director of the Mobius
Society began a parallel effort using Remote Viewing for archaeological
exploration and other applications. The Mobius Protocol that evolved
employed specialists from several scientific disciplines, a “four team”
approach, and the use of multiple viewers. For more than 30 years Schwartz
and his teams have used it to locate archaeological sites both on land and
undersea. Shipwrecks, buried buildings, palaces, and one of the Seven
Wonders of the Ancient World, sites lost for centuries, have been found this
way, often where other search techniques had been tried, and had failed.
Schwartz’ presentation, also includes the intellectual roots of Remote
Viewing, showing rarely seen material covering over 100 years of research.
Schwartz, who organized this conference, and produced these disks, is still
doing research, particularly a 25 year long project, in which over 3,000
people have participated, to view the year 2050. |
| DISK
FOUR
Remote Viewing and The
Biosphere -- James Spottiswoode |
Is
there a particular time to do a viewing? What difference does earth’s
magnetic field make on Remote Viewing? There is no one better able to answer
these questions, and others involving the biosphere, than James Spottiswoode.
He describes how he discovered the local sidereal time effect that earned
him the 1999 Parapsychological Association’s Outstanding Contribution Award,
and explains how to work with it. Spottiswoode has been actively involved in
psi research since the early 1980s and has worked with SRI and Mobius, as
well as several other labs. He is currently the president of GeoTech, and
Executive Vice President, and Chief Statistician of National Research Group,
both in Los Angeles. |
DISK
FIVE
Remote Viewing and Hemisynch - Skip Atwater |
A
second view of the Army experience. Atwater, while serving as a U.S. Army
Counterintelligence Special Agent volunteered to participate in the Army’s
Remote Viewing program, and initiated the program now known to the world by
the code name Star Gate. During his tour at Fort Meade, with Smith,
and Graf, he underwent training at The Monroe Institute, near
Charlottesville, Virginia. He developed a training process to enhance the
skills of the Army’s Remote Viewers using The Monroe Institute’s audio
technology known as Hemi-Sync. Atwater explains the program, which involves
specialized sound forms, breathing exercises, guided relaxation,
affirmations, and visualizations. Now retired from the Army, he is the
Monroe Institute’s Research Director. |
| DISK
SIX
From Remote Viewing Onwards
-- Russell Targ |
Targ,
trained as a physicist and was already a pioneer in the development of the
laser and laser applications when he joined Puthoff in the CIA-funded SRI
investigation into Remote Viewing. He describes where his interest in Remote
Viewing has taken him over 30 years, and his sense of its being a part of
the inner-journey described by spiritual teachers. After leaving SRI, Targ
returned to his original field of laser physics, from which he has now
retired. He devotes himself to the study of extraordinary human functioning
and its context in religion and society. |
DISK
SEVEN
Remote Viewing and Dreams -- Dale Graff, M.S. Physics |
Graf
has been involved in various aspects of Remote Viewing research and
applications for over 25 years. In 1976, he became the first Department of
Defense (DOD) contract manager for the Remote Viewing research being done at
SRI by Puthoff and Targ. In 1981, he joined the Defense Intelligence Agency
(DIA) where he continued his integrating and liaison role for Remote Viewing
research and applications and assessments of Communist countries activities
in Remote Viewing. In the late 1980s, he was assigned as Director of the
Army’s Remote Viewing application unit based at Ft. Meade, Maryland where he
worked with both Smith and Atwater. Now retired from government service he
continues his research, focusing especially on dreaming and Remote Viewing. |
| DISK
EIGHT
Remote Viewing as a Tool
for Self-Actualization --
Henry Reed, Ph.D. |
Reed
is a visionary psychologist who is widely recognized for evoking dreams and
visions to create extraordinary experiences for others. Reed describes this
visionary imagination approach, its incorporation of Remote Viewing, and
explains how he built it on principles he found in the Edgar Cayce readings.
Reed is presently Senior Fellow at the Edgar Cayce Institute for Intuitive
Studies. |
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The Remote Viewing of Edgar Cayce -- Edgar Evans Cayce
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Edgar
Evans is the youngest son of Edgar Cayce, and perhaps the only person still
alive who can talk from direct personal knowledge about the nature of
Cayce’s famous and unique abilities, much of which would be characterized as
Remote Viewing today. This is the only time Edgar Evans has addressed the
subject of Edgar Cayce’s Remote Viewing. He repeatedly witnessed his father
giving what were called “readings”, and had a son’s intimate exposure to his
feelings and attitudes about his gifts. Edgar Evans is now retired from a
professional career as an electrical engineer.
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| DISK
NINE
Remote Viewing Experiences
from My Past,
Paths to the Future --
Ingo Swann |
For
many Remote Viewing begins with Swann, an internationally known fine arts
painter who has demonstrated extraordinary skills in several areas of
anomalous human performance. While working at SRI he coined the term Remote
Viewing, now so widely in use. Swann has worked with Targ and Puthoff, as
well as Schwartz, and was deeply involved in several of the secret Remote
Viewing government programs. He rarely speaks publicly and this opportunity
to hear him describe his early experiences, and to learn the insights he has
distilled from 30 years of Remote Viewing are not to be missed. |
DISK
TEN
Implications of Remote Viewing’s Power –
Stephan A. Schwartz |
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Remote Viewing is usually discussed in
terms of the power of an individual, and that is very significant. But
perhaps the most significant importance of this modern mental martial art is
the sense of empowerment it gives, as well as the viewers have that one is
connected to a network of life, something larger than oneself. Remote
Viewing has gone from a laboratory curiosity, to a tool for scientists and
spies, to a social movement. Schwartz, who has studied the power of small
groups to effect social change, sees this linkage and the personal
transformation that comes from developing these skills as, in the long run,
the important thing to come out of this research.
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