NIH and the Harkin Directive: Subtle Energies and Social Policy

NIH and the Harkin Directive: Subtle Energies and Social Policy (Full Text PDF)

ABSTRACT

At a time when the American health care system is in a crisis leaving as many as one out of the three individuals without proper health care coverage, the Senate Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Health and Human Services, chaired by Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), has directed the National Institutes of Health to spend two million dollars in 1992 studying “unconventional medical practices.” To this end an Ad Hoc Committee on Unconventional Medical Practices has held one meeting in June with a second planned for fall 1992. This paper explores two possible lines of research, Therapeutic Intent (TI) and psychophysiologic self-regulation (PSR), including placebo effect, which is seen as an unconscious PSR response resulting from TI. Relevant literature of the last 30 years from many disciplines, covering everything from cell colonies to animal studies to human research is surveyed, demonstrating that these alternative approaches have proven to be reliable and relatively robust, even when studied under conditions of rigorous and double-blind protocols. A possible explanatory model addressing the heretofore unanswered question of mechanism is offered, involving changes in hydrogen bonding in the blood of recipients of TI. The author proposes that, based on these studies, TI and PSR have been shown to be safe and effective, while offering an unusually attractive cost/benefit equation.

Infrared Spectra Alteration in Water Proximate to the palms of Therapeutic Practitioners

Infrared Spectra Alteration in Water Proximate to the palms of Therapeutic Practitioners (PDF)

ABSTRACT

Through standard techniques of infrared spectrophotometry, sterile water samples in randomly selected sealed vials evidence alteration of infrared (IR) spectra after being proximate to the palms of the hands of both Practising and Non-practising Therapy Practitioners, each of whom employed a personal variation of the Laying-on-of-Hands/Therapeutic Touch processes. This pilot study presents 14 cases, involving 14 Practitioners and 14 Recipients. The first hypothesis, that a variation in the spectra of all (84) Treated spectra compared with all (57) control spectra would be observed in the 2.5 – 3.0 micrometer range, was confirmed (p = 0.02). Ten per cent (15) of the spectra were done using a germanium Internal Reflection Element (IRE). Ninety per cent of the spectra (126) were done with a zinc selenide IRE, and the difference in refractive index between the two IREs skews the data. The zinc selenide IRE spectra alone yield p = .005. The authors believe the most representative evidence for the effect appeared in the sample group of Treated vs. Calibration Controls using the zinc selenide IRE (p = 0.0004). The second hypothesis, that there existed a direct relationship between intensity of effect and time of exposure was not confirmed. This study replicates earlier findings under conditions of blindness, randomicity, and several levels of controls. Environmental factors are considered as explanations for the observed IR spectrum alteration, including temperature, barometric pressure, and variations dependent on sampling order. They do not appear to explain the effect.

Publication history: Subtle Energies. (1990) Vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 43-72. A preliminary version of this paper was presented at the 29th Annual Parapsychological Association Annual Meetings, 5-9 August 1986. See Proceedings pp. 257-282. An abstract of the final paper is published in Research in Parapsychology 1986, (Meutchen: Scarecrow, 1987). This version of the report was presented as an Invited Paper at the Society for Scientific Exploration Sixth Annual Meeting 29 May 1987, and a slightly edited version was presented at the Federation of American Chemical Societies Meetings 1987.

Benjamin Franklin: The First Parapsychologist and His Creation of the Blind Protocol

Benjamin Franklin: The First Parapsychologist and His Creation of the Blind Protocol (PDF)

This paper describes the first reported blind protocol, which was devised by Croesus, King of the Lydians (BCE 560-547) and reported by Herodotus (~ BCE 484 – ~ 424). It was used in the first Remote Viewing experiment to enter the historical record. The next documented use of a blind protocol occurred in 1784, when it was explicitly employed in the interest of science, and its history as a research technique begins. King Louis the XVIth’s created a commission to evaluate Friedrich Anton Mesmer’s claims concerning healing through “animal magnetism”, administered while people were in a trance. Franklin was asked to be the commission’s head. The paper argues that Mesmer was probably looking for a scientific model to explain what he was observing, and settled on the, then, fashionable alchemical idea of ‘animal magnetism.” Mesmer could not practice medicine, so his claims were represented by his colleague, d’Eslon, a licensed physician. Franklin could not attend the commission’s early efforts, which failed, so he arranged a series of experiments conducted in his house in Passy. To do them, Franklin created the blind protocol to answer the king’s question as to whether or not “animal magnetism” was real. Franklin literally blind-folded recipients of d’Eslon treatments, which is why the protocol came to be called “blind”. These experiments also included a demographic variable in the experiment design. Franklin also conceived an experiment incorporating not only blindness but “treated” and “control” populations, in which d’Eslon attempted to “magnetize” a tree. A blindfolded boy could not distinguish three control trees from a treated tree. The commission concluded “animal magnetism” did not exist, but was at pains to acknowledge that something had occurred. Franklin commented on the psycho-physiological
implications. But only the headline was remembered and the development of hypnotism, and psychosomatic medicine, would be crippled for half a century, an unintended consequence of Mesmer’s linking them to animal magnetism. Although Mesmerism died out in France, the English surgeon John Eliotson (1791-1868) apparently saw through Mesmer’s explanatory model to the psycho-physical self–regulation in the form of hypnosis that was Mesmer’s real discovery. He seems to avoided all attempts at explaining how it worked, but conducted a considerable number of surgeries using hypnosis as the anesthetic, anticipating its usage in this capacity a century later. So great was the disapproval of Mesmer, however, that no one seems to have gotten Eliotson’s point. Franklin’s protocol, however, rapidly became the gold standard of science, and he the first parapsychologist.

The Rise of the Sensoid

The Rise of the Sensoid (PDF)

By the 19th Century, there were hundreds of papers in the country, but until the Civil War, there was no such thing as a press corps. The coverage of the 18th and early 19th Centuries was almost entirely lacking in the kind of multi-sourced interpretive writing which defines modern media. Reporters, known then as correspondents, were eponymously named because their copy was either a reprint of a government release, the publication of a statute, or something like a letter to a friend. Editors made sure the copy of their often ill-educated amanuenses was formed into passable English while, as publishers, they sold the ads announcing ship arrivals, and cows for sale, that made up much of their paper’s news.

The Civil War changed all that. In the confusion of the war only rarely did one single informant know the full story of what was occurring, and this forced both the “correspondents” and their editors, for the first time, to work as teams to piece together a “story.” That, combined with technical advances in printing presses and the advent of commercial telegraphy, created the first national press corps.

An Arrow Through Time

Full-Text | Full-Text PDF (100KB)

By Stephan A. Schwartz

Excerpt:

There is no siren whose call is quite so exquisite as the music of the future. For as long as writing has existed there are records showing we have sought to know its form. Last year alone literally billions were spent by widows, lovers, spies, and presidents. All seeking, like an arrow through time, some way to answer: “In the future, what will… ?” Serving up answers are prophets, psychics, experts, and fiction writers.

In Biblical antiquity, prophets were recognized because they could interpret dreams. Although not all dreams relate to the future in the Bible, most do, like Daniel’s interpretation of King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream. [1] Alternatively individuals have their own dreams, as Joseph did when an angel came to him and told him “to take Mary as your wife. For the child within her has been conceived by the Holy Spirit.” [2]

But it was a tricky business, one could be accused of being a false prophet, and many Christians believed then, and still believe today, that when such dreams are accurate they do not come from the individual, but from God. As Peter made clear, “no prophecy recorded in Scripture was ever thought up by the prophet himself. It was the Holy Spirit within these godly men who gave them true messages from God.” [3]

Download the Full Article (PDF)

Full Text of the Article – Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing March/April 2008, Vol. 4, No. 2

Publication History: EXPLORE March/April 2008, Vol. 4, No. 2

Disease of Distinction

Disease of Distinction Full Article (PDF)

by Stephan A. Schwartz

Excerpt:

Diseases have historically significant golden ages. Polio with the 1950s, Malaria with the pening of the Western Hemisphere are two examples. For gout, because effective treatment took so long to develop, there are several peak periods, the last of which is in many ways the most interesting — the 17th and 18th centuries. And the reason is the role the disease played in America’s founding.

John Locke, England’s leading empiricist philosopher and an amateur physician, was in many ways the spiritual father of the American Revolution. His philosophical writings center on human rights, and influenced virtually every major figure involved in our nation’s founding. Locke pursued medicine as avidly as philosophy, and his medical notebooks abound with observations about gout. Like many of his spiritual children in the American Revolution, he suffered gout attacks throughout his adult life.

Franklin, the only person to sign all three founding documents of the United States: the Declaration of Independence in 1776, the Treaty of Paris in 1783, and the Constitution in 1787 was a severe gout sufferer, and had to be carried in a sedan chair to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia by convicts.

An Anomalous Cognition Protocol Employing Fuzzy-Set Theory to Accelerate Breakthroughs in Disease Process Research

An Anomalous Cognition Protocol Employing Fuzzy-Set Theory to Accelerate Breakthroughs in Disease Process Research (Download the PDF)

by Stephan A. Schwartz, S. James P. Spottiswoode, Edwin C. May, Ph.D., and Jessica Utts, Ph.D

ABSTRACT

The primary goal of this protocol is to use an Anomalous Cognition (AC) technology to accelerate research breakthroughs concerning the cause, treatment, and prevention of disease states. The goal of testing whether, and to what extent, AC occurred in the course of the protocol is a secondary objective. Quantitative analysis has shown that the magnitude of this form of subtle human performance meets, or exceeds, the magnitude of many phenomena known to experimental psychology. To understand the structure of this study the reader should conceptualize it as an exercise in creating a collective meta-mind. The Respondents and their AC derived information, are analogous to the intuitive component of the individual mind, while the researchers serve the function of the analytical component. The protocol is an attempt to create on a macro level the same breakthrough process reported by individuals historically acknowledged for their creative genius. It employs a consensual protocol design developed over the course of some 15 years, the premise of which is that successful application of AC is, in many respects, an engineering problem centering on a bad signal-to-noise ratio. Unlike a purely statistical laboratory experiment, where the analysis of the data is the study’s end product, in an applied experiment of this kind the collection and analysis of the data is only a midpoint. Much as an MRI unit guides physicians in their choice of action, so the AC data seeks to help researchers to develop new approaches and hypotheses. The protocol and analysis method described in this paper was designed to sacrifice potential opportunities for statistical power as it pertained to the study’s second objective, the testing of whether, and to what extent, AC occurred in the course of the project, in order to maximize the chance of catching information pertinent to the project’s principal goal of using an AC technology to accelerate research breakthroughs concerning the cause, treatment, and prevention of a disease process is. Given these parameters we felt the best analysis design was to be found in fuzzy-set theory.

The Location and Reconstruction of a Byzantine Structure in Marea, Egypt Including a Comparison of Electronic Remote Sensing and Remote Viewing

The Location and Reconstruction of a Byzantine Structure in Marea, Egypt Including a Comparison of Electronic Remote Sensing and Remote Viewing (Full Article PDF)

ABSTRACT

This paper reports the location and reconstruction of a Byzantine structure in the now buried city of Marea along the shores of Lake Maryut, some 44 km southwest of Alexandria, Egypt. A Pharonic trade center that was occupied until the 16th Century, the city has been long abandoned and lies buried around what formerly was the lakeshore. This paper reports on an applied Remote Viewing experiment in which two Remote Viewers were asked to first locate Marea, and then a buried building within the city and, finally, to describe what would be found within the building site selected, with a particularly emphasis on tile and other decorative material. It also includes a comparison of Remote Viewing data with electronic remote sensing, and geographical data for the same area done independently three years earlier. The comparison is striking because while the Remote Viewers were successfully able to locate a building, including staking out its door, and corners, as well as providing a wealth of reconstructive and descriptive material about what would be found at the site, the electronic remote sensing and geographical analysis produced no suggestion whatever that there was a site at this location. For this reason, prior to discovery, much of the Remote Viewing data seemed extremely improbable, and notably contradicted the informed judgment of an archaeologist deemed by the University of Alexandria to be the leading authority on Marea.

History: The Marea Probe: An Experiment in Applied Parapsychology involving the Location, Reconstruction, and Excavation of a Byzantine Structure – Marea, Egypt. Invited Paper. Annual Meetings of The American Research Center in Egypt. De Young Museum. 14 April 1980. Also presented at the annual meetings of the Parapsychology Association 1980. Proceedings of the Parapsychology Association – 1980.

© copyright 1980 and 2000 by The Mobius Group. All Rights Reserved.

The Discovery of an American Brig: Fieldwork Involving Applied Remote Viewing Including a Comparison with Electronic Remote Sensing

The Discovery of an American Brig: Fieldwork Involving Applied Remote Viewing Including a Comparison with Electronic Remote Sensing -Download the PDF

ABSTRACT

In the fall of 1987 Mobius began fieldwork, under a license from the Bahamian Government, to carry out an archaeological survey in an area of the Grand Bahama Banks encompassing some 579.15 square miles (1500 sq. km). This report compares the Remote Viewing, electronic remote sensing, and visual search process used to locate the wreck site of a previously undiscovered armed American merchantman believed to be the Brig Leander, which was found in a sub-section of the License Area known as Consensus Zone C; an area of 11.81 sq. miles (30.59 sq. km) of water. It concludes that Remote Viewing was the source of information which led to the site’s location, and that electronic remote sensing was not useful in this instance. Leander was under the Command of Captain William Johnson when she sank for unknown reasons near Beaks Cay on 6 April 1834, while returning from Manzanilla, Cuba to her homeport in Boston, Massachusetts. In addition to
location information, a total of 193 conceptual descriptive concepts concerning the site were proffered by twelve Remote Viewers. Of this, 148 concepts, or 75% of the total, could be evaluated through direct field observations, or historical research. An evaluation of this material reveals 84% Correct, 12% Partially Correct, 4% Incorrect. There is little accuracy variation across the sequence of material from the Los Angeles interviews ( 84% Corr., 13% Part. Corr., 3% Incorr.), to the on-site data (81% Corr., 11% Part. Corr., 8% Incorr.). Approximately 300 notable wrecks went down, not just in the License Area but across the entire Banks, from 1500 to 1876 as determined by a thorough search of historical records and archival material in the U.S., the U.K., Spain and the Bahamas. To make a conservative assessment of this location occurring by chance, assume the wrecks are evenly distributed not throughout the Banks, but only within the License Area. That
said, we should expect to see 6.12 boats in Consensus Zone C (11.81/579.15 x 300 6.12). The brig site is 5000 square feet (464.5 sq. m), equaling 0.00018 of a square mile. Within Consensus Zone C 65,849 sites of this size could be placed, thus yielding a grid of 65,849 cells.. If the probability of selecting this particular cell in the grid by chance exceeds p³ 0.05 then Remote Viewing can be considered a determinative factor. The probability of finding this one 5,000 square feet area is then 6.12/65,849 = p0.00009, which strongly suggests that chance is not an explanation for the location of Leander.

© copyright 1988 and 2000 by The Mobius Society

The Caravel Project: The Location, Description, and Reconstruction of Marine Sites Through Remote Viewing

The Caravel Project: The Location, Description, and Reconstruction of Marine Sites Through Remote Viewing – Download the full article PDF

ABSTRACT

The Columbus Caravels Project is a multi-phase research program designed to locate and excavate from St. Ann’s Bay, Jamaica the remains of Columbus’ last two ships, Capitana and Santiago de Palos. After an enforced exile of a year and five days, Columbus and his marooned crew were finally rescued on 29 June 1504. They departed for Hispaniola and Spain, leaving behind two of the oldest recorded shipwrecks in the Western Hemisphere, and the earliest European site in Jamaica. The Caravel Project was organized in 1982 by the Institute for Nautical Archaeology (INA) in conjunction with the Institute of Jamaica. The Mobius Society joined in the search during the summer field season of 1985. This report presents only that phase of the work involving the use of Remote Viewing data subjected to field confirmation, after employing a specialized analysis developed by Mobius for use in archaeological field searches. There were two subsequent survey’s of the Bay, and these are also addressed in the discussion section.

Location: Within a Search Area of 4.35 sq. mile during three previous seasons prior to Mobius’ investigation by magnetometer, radar, and side-scan sonar, as well as coring and caisson excavations under water and on land had produced materials from 18th-century English plantation activities, including the remains of two abandoned vessels. Remote Viewing, using a previously reported technique and prior to, and after the Mobius teams coming to Jamaica selected, and then confirmed on-site, an area of 1041 feet x 541 feet = 0.02 sq. miles as the area where finds would be made. The discovery of artifact and ship remains were made within the Remote Viewing predicted areas, and nowhere else, although substantial areas outside of the Remote Viewing locations were searched. As described and located by the Remote Viewers, previously unknown shipwreck was found in Consensus Area I. One viewer also provided a much smaller location site which, on the basis of initial success in Consensus Area I, was also pursued, with good results. Two other small single viewer sites were unproductive supporting the research premise that consensually predicted locations are more likely to be productive. A second Consensus Area because of time and sea conditions was not searched. Visual diver inspection was the confirming source of each location prediction. No excavation was carried out, although Remote Viewing suggested that ship remains were covered by several feet of overburden. Discoveries by subsequent expeditions under different direction made such discoveries. To calculate the probability of selecting these locations by chance within the Search Area, consider the finds reported as a cell in a grid of 217 similar cells. The probability of finding this one = p0.0046, which strongly suggests that chance is not an explanation for the locations. The much smaller location of material on the north side of the bay’s outer reef, as predicted by one Remote Viewer would, correspondingly, be even more improbable. Some of these remains are from unidentified ships of a period later than the Columbus wrecks, but much of the debris is unidentified, even as to period. Ultimately, for non-parapyschological reasons, identification of Capitana and Santiago de Palos may never be achieved because there may not be enough to answer in an absolute way the question of where the caravels are located.

Description and Reconstruction: Remote Viewing in addition to providing location, described the underwater and surface geography of the area to be searched, as well as providing descriptive and reconstructive data on the objects that would be found there. Overall 1012 concepts concerning Remote Viewing locations, descriptions, and reconstructions were presented during individual interviews by eight Remote Viewers, whose psychological profiles are defined by the PAS system, with the Saunders correction. An evaluation of the accuracy of Remote Viewing data, was carried out by the INA Archaeological Field Director, based on archaeological, geological, and electronic remote sensing field surveys and historical analysis. It is presented with each concept evaluated on a four point scale: “Correct,” “Partially Correct,” “Incorrect,” and “Not Evaluable.” Forty five per cent (45%) of the concepts received other than “Not Evaluable.” These concepts are arranged within a category outline, in accordance with the described methodology. This study has ten major subsets of information developed from the Remote Viewing interviews. The headings and archaeologically useful “hit” rates, comprised of a combination of “Correct” and “Partially Correct”, are: Remains, 54 per cent; Bottom Features, 80 per cent; Overburden, 90 per cent; Events Subsequent to Abandoning Ships, 62 per cent; Position of Ship Remains, 81 per cent; Differentiation of Two Ships, 60 per cent; Geology, 95 per cent; Roger Smith Archaeologist, 78 per cent; Comments re: Project, 53 per cent; Other & Miscellaneous, 76 per cent.

© copyright 1986 and 2001 by Stephan A. Schwartz, Randall J. De Mattei, and Roger C. Smith

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