COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING
GLOSSARY
"A" Component: The "feeling/motion" component
of the ideogram. The "feeling/motion" is essentially
the impression of the physical consistency (hard, soft, solid,
fluid, gaseous, etc.) and contour/shape/motion of the site.
For example, the monitor has selected, unknown to the viewer,
a mountain as the trainee's site. At the iteration of the
coordinate, the trainee produces an appropriate ideogram,
and responds verbally, at the same time as he writes it: "Rising
up, peak, down." This is the "motion" sensation
he experienced as his pen produced the ideogram. He then says
"solid," having experienced the site as being solid
as opposed to fluid or airy. This is the "feeling"
component of the Stage 1 process. There are at least five
possible types of feelings: solidity, liquidity, energetic,
airiness (that is, where there is more air space than anything
else, such as some suspension bridges might manifest), and
temperature. Other feeling descriptors are possible, but encountered
only in rare circumstances and connected with unusual sites.
These components and how they are expressed in structure will
be discussed more fully below. Though in discussions of theory
this aspect is usually address as "feeling/motion,"
it will normally be the case in actual session work that the
motion aspect is decoded first with the feeling portion coming
second.
AOL ("Analytic Overlay"): The analytic response
of the viewer's mind to signal line input. An AOL is usually
wrong, especially in early stages, but often does possess
valid elements of the site[5] that are contained in the signal
line; hence, a light house may produce an AOL of "factory
chimney" because of its tall, cylindrical shape. AOLs
may be recognized in several ways. First, if there is a comparator
present ("it looks like...", "it's sort of...",
etc.) the information present will almost inevitably be an
AOL, and should always be treated as one. Secondly, a mental
image that is sharp, clear, and static--that is, there is
no motion present in it, and in fact it appears virtually
to be a mental photograph of the site--is also certainly AOL.[6]
Hesitation in production of the "B" component in
Stage I coordinate remote viewing, or a response that is out
of structure anywhere in the system[7] are also generally
sure indicators that AOL is present. Finally, the monitor
or viewer can frequently detect AOL by the inflection of the
viewer's voice or other micro behaviors.[8] Data delivered
as a question rather than a statement should be recognized
as usually being AOL.
AOLs are dealt with by declaring/objectifying them as soon
as they are recognized, and writing "AOL Break"
on the right side of the paper, then writing a brief description
of the AOL immediately under that. This serves to acknowledge
to the viewer's system that the AOL has been recognized and
duly recorded and that it is not what is desired, thereby
purging the system of unwanted noise and debris and allowing
the signal line in its purity to be acquired and decoded properly.
AOL Matching: With the expansion in aperture inherent in
Stage III, and after appropriate AI, the AOL phenomenon develops
to where a viewer's AOL may match or nearly match the actual
signal line impression of the site. For example, if the site
were Westminster Abbey, the viewer might produce the AOL of
Notre Dame cathedral. Or he might even actually get an image
of Westminster Abbey that nevertheless fills all the criteria
for an AOL. According to theory, the matching AOL is superimposed
over the true signal line. It is however possible with practice
to distinguish the vague parameters of the true signal line
"behind" the bright, distinct, but somewhat translucent
image of the AOL. The viewer must become proficient at "seeing
through" the AOL to the signal line. Use of "seeing
through" here must not be taken to imply any visual image
in the accepted sense of the word, but rather as a metaphor
best describing the perceptory effect that manifests itself.
AOL/S: Virtually synonymous with the previously considered
term "AOL Matching," AOL/Signal occurs when an AOL
produced by the viewer's analytic mental machinery almost
exactly matches the site, and the viewer can to some extent
"look" through the AOL image to perceive the actual
site. The advantage of AOL/S in Stage IV is that it allows
the information to be used without calling a break. One can
ask, "What is this trying to tell me about the site?"
As an example, the viewer may perceive the Verazzano Narrows
Bridge when in fact the site is actually the George Washington
Bridge.
AOL Drive: Although mentioned before, AOL Drive becomes a
serious concern beginning in Stage III. It occurs when the
viewer's system is caught up in an AOL to the extent that
the viewer at least temporarily believes he is on the signal
line, even though he is not. When two or more similar AOLs
are observed in close proximity, AOL drive should be suspected.
AOL drive is indicated by one or more of the following: repeating
signals; signal line ending in blackness; peculiar (for that
particular viewer) participation in the signal line; and/or
peacocking. Causes for AOL drive include accepting a false
"B" component in Stage I; or accepting a false sketch
or undeclared AOL in Stage III. Undeclared AOLs can spawn
AOL drive in all other stages beyond Stage III as well. Once
it is realized that AOL drive is present, the viewer should
take an "AOL/D Break" (as discussed under STRUCTURE),
then review his data to determine at what point he accepted
the AOL as legitimate data. After a sufficient break the viewer
should resume the session with the data obtained before the
AOL drive began. Listed below are two subspecies of AOL drive.
Ratcheting: The recurrence of the same AOL over and over
again as if trapped in a feedback loop.
AOL "Peacocking": The rapid unfolding, one right
after another, of a series of brilliant AOLs, each building
from one before, analogous to the unfolding of a peacock's
tail.
Aesthetic: Sensitivity of response to given site.
Aperture: An opening or open space; hole, gap, cleft, chasm,
slit. In radar, the electronic gate that controls the width
and dispersion pattern of the radiating signal or wave.
Attributes: An attribute is a characteristic or quality of
a person or thing. "Attributes" applies to those
characteristics of the site that contributed to cognitron
formation and the aforementioned viewer response: "quiet,"
"dimly lit," "echoing," "large,"
etc.
Auditory: Of or pertaining to hearing, to the sense of hearing,
or to the organs of hearing. Perceived through or resulting
from the sense of hearing.
B
"B" Component: The first (spontaneous) analytic
response to the ideogram and "A" component.
Breaks: The mechanism developed to allow the system to be
put on "hold," providing the opportunity to flush
out AOLs, deal with temporary inclemencies, or make system
adjustments, allowing a fresh start with new momentum.
Break (Break): If at any point in the system the viewer must
take a break that does not fit into any of the other categories,
a "Break" is declared. It has been recommended that
a break not be taken if the signal line is coming through
strong and clear. If the break is extensive--say for twenty
minutes or more, it is appropriate to objectify "Resume"
and the time at the point of resumption.
The viewer declares a break by objectifying "AOL Break,"
"AI Break," "Bilo Break," etc., as appropriate,
usually in the right hand margin of the paper. Immediately
underneath he briefly objectifies in one or a few words the
cause or content of what occasioned the necessity for a break.
There are seven types of breaks:
AOL Break: As mentioned above, allows the signal line to
be put on hold while AOL is expelled from the system.
Confusion Break (often, "Conf Bk"): When the viewer
becomes confused by events in his environment or information
in the signal line to the degree that impressions he is receiving
are hopelessly entangled, a Confusion Break is called. Whatever
time necessary is allowed for the confusion to dissipate,
and when necessary the cause for confusion is declared much
like it is done with AOL. The RV process is then resumed with
an iteration of the coordinate.
Too Much Break ("TM Break"): When too much information
is provided by the signal line all at once for the viewer
to handle, a "Too Much Break" is called and written
down (objectified), telling the system to slow down and supply
information in order of importance. After the overload is
dissipated, the viewer may resume from the break, normally
with the reiteration of the coordinates. A too much break
is often indicated by an overly elaborate ideogram or ideograms.
Aesthetic Impact Break ("AI Break"): Will be discussed
in conjunction with Stage III.
AOL Drive Break (AOL-D Bk): This type of break becomes necessary
when an AOL or related AOLs have overpowered the system and
are "driving" the process (as evidenced by the recurrence
of a specific AOL two or more times), producing nothing but
spurious information.[10] Once the AOL-Drive is objectified,
the break time taken will usually need to be longer than that
for a normal AOL to allow the viewer to fully break contact
and allow to dissipate the objectionable analytic loop.
Bi-location Break (Bilo Bk): When the viewer perceives he
is too much absorbed in and transferred to the site and cannot
therefore appropriately debrief and objectify site information,
or that he is too aware of and contained within the here-and-now
of the remote viewing room, only weakly connected with the
signal line, a Bilo break must be declared and objectified
to allow the viewer to back out, and then get properly recoupled
with the signal line again.[11]
C
Coding/Encoding/Decoding: The information conveyed on the
signal line is "encoded," that is translated into
an information system (a code) allowing data to be "transmitted"
by the signal line. Upon receiving the signal, the viewer
must "decode" this information through proper structure
to make it accessible. This concept is very similar to radio
propagation theory, in which the main carrier signal is modulated
to convey the desired information.
Coordinate Remote Viewing (CRV): The process of remote viewing
using geographic coordinates for cueing or prompting.
D
Dimension: Extension in a single line or direction as length,
breadth and thickness or depth. A line has one dimension,
length. A plane has two dimensions, length and breadth. A
solid or cube has three dimensions, length, breadth and thickness.
Dimensionals: "Dimensionals" have a broader meaning
in Stage IV than in Stage III. In Stage IV, more detailed
and complex dimensionals can be expected and are now considered
to be in structure and therefore more reliable. "Spired,"
"twisted," "edged," "partitioned,"
etc. are only a few examples.
Drawing: The act of representing something by line, etc.
E
Emotional Impact: The perceived emotions or feelings of the
people at the site or of the viewer. Sometimes the site itself
possesses an element of emotional impact, which is imprinted
with long or powerful associations with human emotional response.
Evoking: (Evoke: "to call forth or up; to summon; to
call forth a response; elicit.") Iteration of the coordinate
or alternate prompting method is the mechanism which "evokes"
the signal line, calling it up, causing it to impinge on the
autonomic nervous system and unconsciousness for transmittal
through the viewer and on to objectification (discussed at
length in STRUCTURE).
F
Feedback: Those responses provided during the session to
the viewer to indicate if he has detected and properly decoded
site-relevant information; or, information provided at some
point after completion of the RV session or project to "close
the loop"
Correct (abbreviated "C"): The data bit presented
by the trainee viewer is assessed by the monitor to be a true
component of the site.
Probably Correct ("PC"): Data presented cannot
be fully assessed by the monitor as being accurate site information,
but it would be reasonable to assume because of its nature
that the information is valid for the site.
Near Site ("N"): Data objectified by the viewer
are elements of objects or locations near the site.
Can't Feed Back ("CFB"): Monitor has insufficient
feedback information to evaluate data produced by the viewer.
Site ("S"): Tells the former that he has successfully
acquired and debriefed the site. In elementary training sessions,
this usually signifies the termination of the session. At
later stages, when further information remains to be derived
from the site, the session may continue on beyond full acquisition
of the site.
Silence: When information objectified by the trainee viewer
is patently incorrect, the monitor simply remains silent,
which the viewer may freely interpret as an incorrect response.
In line with the learning theory upon which this system is
based, the intent is to avoid reinforcing any negative behavior
or response. Therefore, there is no feedback for an incorrect
response; and any other feedback information is strictly limited
to those as defined above.
It should be noted here that the above refers to earlier stages
of the training process. Later stages do away with in-session
feedback to the viewer, and at even later stages the monitor
himself is denied access to any site information or feedback
until the session is over.
G
Gestalt: A unified whole; a configuration, pattern, or organized
field having specific properties that cannot be derived from
the summation of its component parts.
Major Gestalt: The overall impression presented by all elements
of the site taken for their composite interactive meaning.
The one concept that more than all others would be the best
description of the site.
I
I/A/B Sequence: The core of all CRV structure, the "I/A/B"
sequence is the fundamental element of Stage I, which is itself
in turn the foundation for site acquisition[2] and further
site detection and decoding in subsequent CRV stages. The
sequence is composed of an ideogram (the "I"), which
is a spontaneous graphic representation of the site's major
gestalt; the "A" component or "feeling/motion"
involved in the ideogram; and the "B" component,
or first analytic response to the signal line. (A full discussion
may be found in the Stage I section below.)
Idea: Mental conception; a vague impression; a hazy perception;
a model or archetype.
Ideogram: The "I" component of the I/A/B sequence.
The ideogram is the spontaneous graphic representation of
the major gestalt, manifested by the motion of the viewer's
pen on paper, which motion is produced by the impingement
of the signal line on the autonomic nervous system and the
reflexive transmission of the resultant nervous energy to
the muscles of the viewer's hand and arm. The objectified
ideogram has no "scale;" that is, the size of the
ideogram relative to the paper seems to have no relevance
to the actual size of any component at the site.
Impact: A striking together; changes, moods, emotions, sometimes
very gross, but may be very weak or very subtle.
Inclemencies: Personal considerations that might degrade
or even preclude psychic functioning. Muscle pains, colds,
allergies, menstrual cramps, hangovers, mental and emotional
stress, etc., could cause increased difficulty to the viewer
in accessing the signal line, but could be "worked through,"
and ultimately are only minor nuisances. Only hunger and a
pressing need to eliminate body wastes cause the system to
totally not function. It is important, though, that the viewer
identify and declare any inclemencies either at the first
of the session or as they are recognized, since unattended
agendas such as these can color or distort the viewer's functioning
if not eliminated from the system through objectification
(see below). Preferably, the monitor will ask the viewer if
he has any personal inclemencies even before the first iteration
of the coordinate so as to purge the system as much as possible
before beginning the session proper.
Intangibles: Qualities of the site that are perhaps abstract
or not specifically defined by tangible aspects of the site,
such as purposes, non-physical qualities, categorizations,
etc.; i.e., "governmental," "foreign,"
"medical," "church," "administrative,"
"business," "data-processing," "museum,"
"library," etc.
M
Matrix: Something within which something else originates
or takes form or develops. A place or point of origin or growth.
Mobility: The state or quality of being mobile.
Monitor: The individual who assists the viewer in a remote
viewing session. The monitor provides the coordinate, observes
the viewer to help insure he stays in proper structure (discussed
below), records relevant session information, provides appropriate
feedback when required, and provides objective analytic support
to the viewer as necessary.[4] The monitor plays an especially
important role in training beginning viewers.
Motion: The act or process of moving.
O
Objects: An object is a thing that can be seen or touched.
"Objects" can be understood as those physical items
present at the site that helped cause the cognitron to form
in the viewer's mind and hence prompt his response of "religious;"
i.e., "robes," "candles," "incense,"
etc.
Objectification: The act of physically saying out loud and
writing down information. In this methodology, objectification
serves several important functions. First, it allows the information
derived from the signal line to be recorded and expelled from
the system, freeing the viewer to receive further information
and become better in tune with the signal line. Secondly,
it makes the system independently aware that its contributions
have been acknowledged and recorded. Thirdly, it allows re-input
of the information into the system as necessary for further
prompting. In effect, objectification "gives reality"
to the signal line and the information it conveys. Finally,
objectification allows non-signal line derived material (inclemencies,
AOLs, etc.) that might otherwise clutter the system and mask
valid signal line data to be expelled.
P
Perceptible: That which can be grasped mentally through the
senses.
Prompt: To incite to move or to action; move or inspire by
suggestion.
R
Remote Viewer: Often referred to in the text simply as "viewer,"
the remote viewer is a person who employs his mental faculties
to perceive and obtain information to which he has no other
access and of which he has no previous knowledge concerning
persons, places, events, or objects separated from him by
time, distance, or other intervening obstacles.
Remote Viewing (RV): The name of a method of psychoenergetic
perception.[1] A term coined by SRI-International[2] and defined
as "the acquisition and description, by mental means,
of information blocked from ordinary perception by distance,
shielding or time."[3]
Rendering: Version; translation (often highly detailed).
S
Self-Correcting Characteristic: The tendency of the ideogram
to re-present itself if improperly or incompletely decoded.
If at the iteration of the coordinate an ideogram is produced
and then decoded with the wrong "A" & "B"
components, or not completely decoded, upon the next iteration
of the coordinate the same ideogram will appear, thereby informing
the viewer that he has made an error somewhere in the procedure.
On rare occasions, the ideogram will be re-presented even
when it has been properly decoded. This almost inevitably
occurs if the site is extremely uniform, such as the middle
of an ocean, a sandy desert, glacier, etc., where nothing
else but one single aspect is present.
Sense: Any of the faculties, as sight, hearing, smell, taste,
or touch, by which man perceives stimuli originating from
outside or inside the body.
Sensory: Of or pertaining to the senses or sensations.
Signal: Something that incites into action; an immediate
cause or impulse. In radio propagation theory, the carrier
wave that is received by the radio or radar receiving set.
Signal Line: The hypothesized train of signals emanating
from the Matrix (discussed below) and perceived by the remote
viewer, which transports the information obtained through
the remote viewing process.
Sketch: To draw the general outline without much detail;
to describe the principle points (idea) of.
Subjects: "Subject" is defined as "something
dealt with in a discussion, study, etc.," "Subjects"
are emanations that might serve a nominative function in describing
the site, or be abstract intangibles, or they could be more
specific terms dealing with function, purpose, nature, activities,
inhabitants, etc., of the site: in the above example, "reverence,"
"worship," "respect," "harmonious
chanting," etc.
T
Tactile: Of, pertaining to, endowed with, or affecting the
sense of touch. Perceptible to the touch; capable of being
touched; tangible.
Tangibles: Objects or characteristics at the site which have
solid, "touchable" impact on the perceptions of
the viewer, i.e., tables, chairs, tanks, liquids, trees, buildings,
intense smells, noises, colors, temperatures, machinery, etc.
Topics: "Topic" is defined as "a subject of
discourse or of a treatise; a theme for discussion."
Closely related to "subjects," "topics"
often prove to be sub-elements of one or more of the subjects
already listed, and frequently are quite specific: "mass,"
"Catholic," "priest," "communion,"
and so forth. An interesting phenomenon to be here considered
is that just as one of the subjects encountered may produce
several topics, a topic itself may in turn be considered as
a subject and produce topics of its own. This construction
appears to be very hierarchical and "fractalized,"
with larger cognitrons being subdivided into smaller ones,
which in turn can be further divided, and so on. In fact,
any emanation thus "broken out," or "stage-fived"
can itself often be further "stage-fived," and subdivided
into its own object/attribute/subject/topic categories.
Track: To trace by means of vestiges, evidence, etc.; to
follow with a line.
V
Vision: One of the faculties of the sensorum, connected to
the visual senses out of which the brain constructs an image.
W
Wave: A disturbance or variation that transfers itself and
energy progressively from point to point in a medium or in
space in such a way that each particle or element influences
the adjacent ones and that may be in the form of an elastic
deformation or of a variation of level or pressure, of electric
or magnetic intensity, of electric potential, or of temperature.
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