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- Subject: Remote Viewing Vs Telepathic Overlay 2/2
- Date: Sat, 18 May 1996 22:00:37 -0400
-
-
- We have seen by now that the concept of rapport is
- obviously important to all telepathic matters. But it is a
- term rarely encountered in research today -- except in
- subliminal research where researchers are quite aware that
- human specimens are subliminally connected by various kinds
- of subconscious rapport states although not at all conscious
- of being so.
- Indeed, it is the existence of rapport which helps in
- many ways to distinguish between INTUITION and TELEPATHY,
- the two superpowers of the human bio-mind which are most
- frequently experienced world-wide.
- *
- The term INFECT is unpopular regarding telepathic
- stuff, because in its first definition it is largely taken
- to mean CONTAGIOUS in ways which contaminate or corrupt.
- Even so, regarding telepathic overlay and remote viewing,
- the former would contaminate the latter, and there is hardly
- any other way around this phenomenon.
- *
- But there is a second definition regarding INFECT: to
- work upon or seize upon so as to induce sympathy, belief, or
- support.
- *
- And INDUCED sympathy puts us within the realms of
- sympathetic states, rapport, and entrainment -- whether such
- are consciously perceived or subconsciously present in some
- kind of a psycho-active way.
- And all of this is not very far removed from the
- "psychic hypothesis" of the early researchers of mob
- psychology -- an hypothesis seeking to explain the
- infectious telepathic nature of the overpowering
- emotionality which literally sucks people into subconscious
- entrainment and participation.
- *
- One of the on-going situational problems regarding
- telepathy is that there are many different kinds of it --
- only a few of which seem to fit in with the sender-receiver
- model.
- In the past, I was able to identify some thirty-five or
- thirty-six kinds of telepathy -- some of which, for example,
- show that information can be ABSORBED without being either
- "sent" or "received."
- From this latter category can be derived the concept of
- "telepathic osmosis" -- OSMOSIS referring to a process of
- absorption or diffusion suggestive of the FLOW of osmotic
- action.
- We need only to suppose that such a kind of telepathic
- osmosis can exist at the subconscious levels -- and thus we
- achieve the model for the existence of telepathic overlay
- regarding remote viewing.
- And at this point we also arrive back at the discarded
- concept that thought-transference (of thought AND emotion
- and empathy) entails some kind of "fluidic" mechanism.
- *
- In this sense, what we call telepathy appears to exist
- along a spectrum of some kind. Subconscious telepathy would
- absolutely have to be included in this spectrum.
- The concept of subconscious mind-linking (as opposed to
- conscious or intellectual mind-linking) would actually serve
- better to bring the existence of this spectrum into better
- view. People can say that they are not telepathically
- linked consciously -- but they well may be subconsciously.
- *
- I suppose that mind-linking may more easily be thought
- of as intellectual agreement. But it is quite easy to show
- that other formats of mind-linking exist with or without
- intellectual agreement.
- As an example of one kind of mind-linking that is never
- thought of as telepathic entrainment, it can easily be
- observed that an individual who personally is very
- charismatic can, even without trying to do so, induce
- certain entrainment states in his or her followers.
- Examples are very numerous along these lines. Such a
- charismatic individual can utter the most amazing nonsense -
- - but even so can accumulate a dedicated, hypnoid-like
- following whose entrained members will give up everything in
- order to be part of it.
- Thus, it can be witnessed that charismatic examples of
- our species can have some kind of telepathic power over
- others, a type of power which is explainable only by
- introducing a psychic hypothesis consisting of rapport and
- sympathetic states.
- *
- So, IF telepathy EXISTS at all, then one has to be
- somewhat backward to think that it exists only when one is
- cognitively aware of it, or that it exists only when an
- experiment to test for it is set up.
- And if one examines for the many different types of
- telepathy, then one has to be slightly addled to accept that
- the conscious sender-to-receiver model is the ONLY model for
- it.
- *
- As a result of all that has been discussed so far, we
- can now reexamine the definition of TELEPATHY.
- *
- The word TELEPATHY actually means empathy across
- distance (tele-). "Empathy" refers to (1) the capacity for
- participating in another's feelings or ideas, and (2) the
- projection of a subjective state so that those affected by
- the projection themselves appear to be infused with it.
- It is unfortunate, though, that what the "subjective
- state" consists of has never really been identified --
- largely because no one comprehends what it consists of. And
- for that matter no one really knows what empathy consists
- of, either.
- However, a careful reading of the two definitions given
- just above will reveal that they mean something far
- different than so-called mind-to-mind contact or so-called
- mental telepathy.
- *
- Clearly the projection of (1) conscious mind content
- (2) empathic states, (3) subjective states, and (4)
- subconscious sympathy and rapport are FOUR entirely
- different sectors of the telepathic spectrum of the
- superpowers of the human bio-mind.
- For one thing, empathy is FELT, not thought about. And
- in the bio-mind systems feelings are subconsciously
- processed quite differently than conscious thinking.
- And feelings-empathic are transmitted quite more easily
- than conscious thinking as well. After all, thinking has to
- be understood to be processed. Feelings and empathy and
- subjective states do not need to be understood.
- Love and hate, both mostly consisting of subjective
- states, are often thought of as "contagious," but for
- reasons that are quite mysterious and completely
- unidentified -- unless the sub-telepathic hypothesis is
- admitted.
- *
- But even so, all formats of telepathy appear to have
- their basis in empathetic and rapport states. For one
- thing, it might be noticed that telepathy of any kind is
- hardly ever reported between people who are not sympathetic,
- or are out of rapport with, each other.
- *
- Now, in the light of all that has been discussed above,
- the question remains regarding remote viewing and telepathic
- overlay and how to eliminate the latter.
- To discuss this, we have to incorporate the probable
- existence of conscious AND subconscious telepathic
- information.
- We also have to incorporate, theoretically at least,
- the high probability that subconscious telepathy goes on all
- of the time.
- We also have to resort to the hypnotist-hypnotee model
- and the concept of who is to have power over whom.
- *
- Regarding the hypnotist-hypnotee model, it is easy
- enough to consider that subconscious telepathic information
- flows FROM the hypnotist TO the hypnotee -- meaning that the
- hypnotist's signals will overlay those of the hypnotee.
- In this sense, the hypnotist's signals will be
- duplicated by the hypnotee, and the latter's subconscious
- systems will respond accordingly.
- This may be the same as saying that the weaker is
- influenced by the stronger -- and this IS unambiguously the
- formula for who is to have power over whom even though many
- manifestations of this formula are very subtle.
- *
- But this is almost the same as considering who goes
- into rapport with whom, for if the weaker is influenced by
- the stronger, then the weaker has gone into rapport with the
- stronger.
- If subconscious telepathic signals are involved, which
- they are most likely to be, then the signals flow from the
- stronger to the weaker -- which is to say, flow from those
- accepted as having power to those accepted as having none or
- very little.
- *
- Now, in the typical parapsychology laboratory
- situation, consisting of experimenters and test subjects,
- the experimenters are accepted as having governing power.
- It is THEY who are conducting the experiments, while the
- subjects are just participating in them as guinea pigs.
- In the first instance, the subjects do want to please
- the experimenters -- and so one of the bases for rapport
- comes into existence.
- The experimenters then tell the subjects what to do,
- when to do it, and for how much and for how long.
- If the subjects have gone into rapport with the
- experimenters, a variety of strange situations then ensue.
- *
- A number of those situations have, to their credit,
- been investigated by parapsychologists themselves -- but
- without including the possibilities of sympathetic and
- rapport states which are politically incorrect within
- science itself.
- If, for example, it was discovered after the fact of
- the experiment that an experimenter did not expect the
- subject to succeed, then the subject usually didn't -- even
- though the same subject occasionally succeeded elsewhere
- under other more positive experimenter auspices.
- In such a case, it is quite feasible to suspect the
- existence of telepathic overlay at the subconscious level in
- which the experimenter's expectation of non-success somehow
- overlaid the subject's effort.
- Indeed, many subjects themselves have stated that they
- cannot perform if someone involved in the experiment is
- sensed as "negative" either consciously or non-consciously.
- *
- Within this context, it might be assumed that if the
- experimenter through and through wants the subject to
- succeed, then the subject ought to be able to produce
- stunning results. Something here does depend on the
- subject's capabilities in the first place.
- But if rapport has been established, then it is quite
- probable that the subject will do no better than the
- experimenter could if he or she undertook the same
- experiment -- because the experimenter's incapability has
- telepathically overlaid the subconscious strata of the
- subject.
- Most parapsychologists themselves are not "psychic."
- Indeed, as a social subset of science in general, they have
- a commitment NOT to be psychic in order to retain their
- scientific objectivity.
- *
- Admittedly, the whole of this is quite subtle and many
- of its aspects are debatable -- especially if the phenomena
- of sympathetic and rapport states are rejected to start
- with.
- But the issue here is not experiments themselves or
- their power-dynamic pitfalls, but whether telepathic
- connectiveness does exist at other than conscious levels.
- If it does, then much which usually is never taken into
- account, or even thought of, has to be brought up for
- serious consideration.
- *
- Another type of experiment which is sensitive to the
- power-dynamic pitfalls are those in which the experimenter
- guides, interrogates, or questions the subjects. Even
- though this relationship between experimenter and subject is
- not seen as a power one, there is no question about who is
- in power here -- rather, who is in control.
- And if rapport is to arise, there is no question of who
- is going to go into rapport with whom. If the existence of
- sympathetic and rapport states is accepted, then it is easy
- enough to see that the subject could easily go into rapport
- with his or her experimenter interrogator.
- *
- As it is, the general public has no idea of what
- actually goes on during a parapsychology experiment. Some
- small segment of the public may eventually see a report
- about it which will include the experimental design,
- protocols and results. The report is actually a selection
- of bits and pieces of the experiment made presentable.
- But if the entire overall experimental process, its
- environment, and participating personnel were put on film,
- such would reveal that many experiments somewhat resemble a
- psychological zoo.
- It would be seen that some, but certainly not all,
- experimenters have very little real interest in the
- subjects, but a great deal of interest regarding THEIR
- experiment. In my own experience of many years, even social
- graces are sometimes not observed regarding the subjects.
- I've talked with many subjects who at first
- enthusiastically wanted to be "tested" via an experiment,
- but who felt they were a piece of crud afterward.
- *
- The role of the subject is, of course, to try to
- produce the phenomena the experimenters are after -- and, in
- most cases, produce the phenomena the experimenters
- themselves cannot.
- If you read between the lines of the paragraph above,
- and depending on who the experimenters are, including their
- particular egos and psychological balances, you can perhaps
- sense that some peculiar, subtle and difficult micro-social
- affects will arise -- few of which are ever mentioned in
- reports of experimental design and results.
- *
- There is one word which will help bring together most
- of the elements which have been discussed in this essay:
- INTERACTIVE. This is taken from INTERACTION which means
- mutual or reciprocal action or influence.
- Perfected interactive conditions are highly redolent of
- achieving complete rapport -- and which is the basis for
- telepathic identification between the interactive personnel.
- *
- In the ideal parapsychology or remote viewing
- experimental session, the goal is to have the subject (or
- viewer) interact with the target materials or distant
- location.
- For ease of reference here, we can say that the viewer
- is expected to exclusively communicate with the distant
- location or target.
- However, if the local environmental factors of the
- experiment and personnel involved with the session also need
- to be interacted with by the subject or viewer, it is quite
- easy to comprehend that the communication with the target by
- the viewer can become split in gross and subtle ways.
- And it is this splitting which permits the introduction
- of telepathic overlay -- and especially if the role of a
- second person other than that of the viewer becomes
- influential and dynamic.
- *
- In the early days of remote viewing research at
- Stanford Research Institute, it was supposed that the viewer
- could benefit from being guided during a session by someone
- else. Which is to say, benefit by interacting with the
- guide.
- Further down the line of research, this WAS to prove to
- be the beneficial case regarding tutoring in the techniques
- of remote viewing. But after the trainee had acquired
- the techniques and had become exceedingly proficient in
- them, the active role of the tutor-guide then ceased
- altogether -- and for reasons which should by now be
- obvious.
- *
- Before this had been understood, however, several
- effects of the guided remote viewing session were
- identified. For one thing, this particular model tended to
- increase the interactive dependency of the viewer on the
- guide (later referred to as the "monitor").
- This dependency effect sometimes became so grossly
- evident that the viewer ultimately said nothing unless
- prompted to do so by the monitor.
- In this sense, then, the viewer was responding more to
- the monitor's role than to the viewer's role of exclusive
- contact with the distant location. The viewer's exclusive
- interaction with the distant location had become split
- between the location and the guiding function of the monitor
- -- and whose role was seen as interrogating the viewer about
- what was, or might be, at the distant location.
- *
- I will now illustrate some of the affects and
- difficulties of this guided method by condensing several of
- them into the following scenario.
- The monitor asked the viewer if the site was a nuclear
- reactor or a computer research installation. "I don't
- know," replied the viewer. "Well, is it a nuclear reactor?"
- "Yes." "Is it a computer research installation?" The
- viewer again replied "Yes."
- At this point, the monitor assumed that the site was a
- nuclear reactor with computer support, and asked the viewer
- to describe what she was seeing. She did so in a way which
- ultimately was determined to somewhat match what the guide
- thought such a place should look like.
- In experimental test situations like this, the monitor-
- guide did not know what was at the distant location -- and
- which turned out to be the Golden Gate Bridge.
- *
- This, then, was not remote viewing. At the vocal
- interactive level, the viewer was clearly responding to the
- suggestions of the guide, more or less in the same way an
- hypnotee might respond to the suggestions of the hypnotist.
- But at the non-vocal level the viewer proceeded to
- describe something which matched what the guide thought the
- nuclear reactor might look like.
- *
- Thus, we can describe two different kinds of
- interactive overlay, one of which was verbally determined
- and one of which fell into the wobbly category of telepathic
- overlay.
- *
- This guide-the-viewer procedure was undertaken in good
- faith by all concerned, and it certainly needed to be
- investigated, and in no sense did the guide-monitor
- consciously want to control the viewer nor did the viewer
- want to be controlled.
- But in the final analysis it could be seen anyway that
- the focus of control-power had subtly shifted to the guide-
- monitor, that the viewer had probably fallen into
- sympathetic rapport with him, and thereafter the viewer did
- not interact with the distant location but with the
- conscious and subconscious mind of the monitor.
- In this sense, then, the formula of who was to have
- power over whom was subtly present, even if no one involved
- consciously thought about implementing it.
- *
- The whole of this gave a good deal to think about --
- for unless something could be done to resolve what otherwise
- was a mess, then remote viewing would be up against a wall
- of perpetual telepathic contaminants coming from who knows
- where.
- Up until that time, it seems that no one really
- realized, or didn't admit to, the possibility that people
- are continuously interactive at some deep telepathic levels
- -- and which levels are very interactive at least in
- sympathetic and rapport states.
- *
- Now, a diagram would be convenient here. Rather than
- use pixels to do so, I've discovered that I can erect simple
- forms of them with keys available on my keyboard. I will
- now try to construct one which incorporates most of what has
- been discussed in this essay.
- Below I will construct two pyramids representing two
- people, and cast them against the formula of who is to have
- power over whom, in the stronger versus weaker sense.
- You can assume that the stronger (S) will exert some
- kind of power over the weaker (W) -- as in the case of the
- hypnotist-hypnotee, experimenter-subject, or monitor-viewer.
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- Conscious levels
-
- Stronger Weaker
- . .
- . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- . . . .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Interactive telepathic levels
- . . . > .
- . . . > .
- . . . > .
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- As regards this arrangement of two people who might
- interact at the subconscious telepathic levels, if the
- weaker goes into rapport with the stronger, or is made to
- assume that status by some kind of social-environmental
- circumstances, then information would telepathically flow
- from the stronger to the weaker -- as indicated by the three
- > marks.
- There are, I think, some positive aspects to this --
- for example, in tutoring or educating, for anyone might wish
- to benefit from telepathic transfer of information via a
- good teacher.
- But in many other instances, in remote viewing
- precisely, the transfer of information could be seen only as
- telepathic contamination.
- Some form of this contamination might easily emerge if
- the viewer is dependent on the monitor for anything at all.
- *
- The way all of this was ultimately handled at SRI, as
- least so far as controlled remote viewing was concerned, was
- to shift the power relationship exclusively to the viewer in
- ways which TERMINATED his or her interaction with anyone
- else, even with the monitor.
- This is to say that AFTER the viewer had been fully
- trained and could operate with high-stage proficiency, the
- viewer became the captain of the remote viewing ship --
- while the role of the monitor became very minimal indeed.
- *
- In other words, if telepathic overlay flowed from the
- stronger to the weaker (the impressionable, or the
- suggestible,) then the only feasible way to try to eliminate
- telepathic overlay was to create controlled remote viewers
- who could maintain themselves and their performance as the
- central power core of any viewing -- and this regardless of
- whomever else might be involved around the edges of the
- viewing process.
- After all, the CRV'er PRODUCES -- whereas all else
- (including everyone else) is incidental to the product.
- *
- The only initial problem with all this was to get the
- potential RV'ers themselves and EVERYONE ELSE to agree to
- this. Almost everyone likes to direct something or someone
- in order to have a "place" within what is going on.
- But there are earlier models for this. The concert
- pianist, for example, studies long and hard to achieve
- competency. But when that has been achieved, when he or she
- steps onto the performance platform it is his or her show.
- It is inconceivable that the pianist would need someone else
- standing by and directing what and when to do something.
- Likewise, after the guru teaches the chela, the guru
- steps aside and does so voluntarily -- at least in the ideal
- scene.
- *
- In any event, something along these lines WAS achieved
- regarding controlled remote viewing -- and telepathic
- overlay vanished as a contaminating noise source, as did any
- form of suggestivity or influencing from others. The VIEWER
- controls the viewing, and ceases interacting with anyone
- else during it. Monitors make no attempt to interact with
- the viewer. Telepathic overlay vanishes.
- *
- It now has to be pointed up that there are two models
- for monitors regarding remote viewing: the TRAINING monitor
- and the FORMAL OPERATIONAL SESSION monitor. Unfortunately,
- as the years have lately unfolded these have become
- confused, and the latter model has disappeared.
- The training monitor of course guides and instructs the
- potential remote viewing student -- but only until he or she
- achieves various states of proficiency, and ultimately all
- of the states necessary to produce high-stage results
- WITHOUT any interference from anyone at all.
- The role of the operational session monitor is thus
- very minimal, and is mainly constituted to serve the needs
- and demands of the achieved CRV'er.
- Thus, while the training monitor at first has a great
- deal of power within the training mode, the role of the
- operational session monitor is practically nil.
- *
- More detailed descriptions of the discovery,
- realization, and amelioration of telepathic overlay will be
- included in my forthcoming Internet book REMOTE VIEWING, THE
- REAL STORY. What remote viewing actually is will be
- detailed in the book, and I dare say that many will find
- that it is something quite different from what they had
- assumed it to be.
- *
- The modern elements of thought-transference and
- traveling clairvoyance arose from research successors to
- Anton Mesmer during the early 1800s -- and who studied
- sympathetic and rapport states during which the phenomena of
- both often manifested with exceeding clarity.
- However, this is an epoch of history which has been
- almost totally erased from access.
- Fortunately, the intrepid historian of such phenomena,
- Eric J. Dingwall, spent many years collecting all relevant
- documents still available from France, Belgium, the
- Netherlands, Germany, Scandinavia, Russia, Poland, Italy,
- Spain, Portugal, Latin America, the United States and Great
- Britain.
- He published this amazing collection in four volumes
- entitled ABNORMAL HYPNOTIC PHENOMENA (J. & A. Churchill,
- Ltd., 1967.)
- Although these volumes may be hard to locate by now, I
- heartily recommend them to those ardently interested in the
- superpowers of the human bio-mind -- a number of which are
- breathtakingly presented in them. And, furthermore,
- presented in ways strip away the cloying, simplistic
- stereotypes fashionable today.
- (End)
-
-
- ___________________________________________________________
-
- ** Copyright 1996 by Ingo Swann. Permission to redistribute
- granted, but only in complete and unaltered form. **
- ** Distributed only, not written, by Thomas Burgin <thomas@obc.is.net> **
-
- This and other recent articles by Ingo Swann are archived at
- the following sites:
- WWW: <http://www.webcom.com/way/the-way.html>
- WWW: <http://www.ameritel.net/lusers/rviewer/>
- WWW: <http://www.ticllc.net/~biomind/> (---coming soon---)
- FTP: <ftp.webcom.com/pub/way/>
- ___________________________________________________________
-