It’s been just revealed that the CIA is making public the idea of remote viewing. Check out the mind-blowing official reports below.
CIA reveals remote viewing
Here’s the tweet that started the discussion about the matter below:
The CIA literally confirmed that Remote Viewing is real & NO ONE seems to care???
— illuminatibot (@iluminatibot) November 22, 2023
The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) conducted research programs on remote viewing (RV) starting in 1972. These programs were gradually declassified from 1995 to 2003.
The research aimed to replicate the original findings and determine the cognitive mechanisms involved in RV. The focus was on examining emotional intelligence (EI) theory and intuitive information processing as potential mechanisms.
The study utilized a quasi-experimental design, incorporating new statistical control techniques based on structural equation modeling, analysis of invariance, and forced-choice experiments, to provide objective results.
They measured emotional intelligence using the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test. A total of 347 participants, who did not believe in psychic experiences, took part in a Remote Viewing (RV) experiment using targets based on location coordinates.
Another RV experiment was conducted with 287 participants who believed in psychic experiences, using targets based on images of places.
Also, experts divided the total sample into subsamples to replicate the findings and used various thresholds on standard deviations to test for variations in effect sizes. The hit rates on the psi-RV task were compared to the estimated chance.
It is crucial to conduct research on RV due to two critical reasons. Firstly, it is one of the frontiers of current knowledge.
Science doesn’t progress by only studying what we already know; it must also tackle the unknown and turn it into something useful and understandable (Leifer, 2014). Secondly, there is a lack of understanding of many of the mechanisms that regulate human perception and cognition (Khrennikov, 2015).
We shouldn’t exclude RV phenomena from the study of sensory and cognitive processes because there is evidence suggesting that these anomalous cognitions represent more than just methodological or statistical artifacts, perceptual disturbances, or clinical symptoms.
We strongly suggest that you take a look at the official documents, we promise you’ll be mind-blown.