COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING
INTRODUCTION
A. General
The following definitions and descriptions are provided
to acquaint the reader with the remote viewing phenomenon
and a typical remote viewing session.
1. Definitions:
a. Remote Viewing (RV): The name of a method of psychoenergetic
perception. A term coined by SRI-International and defined
as "the acquisition and description, by mental means,
of information blocked from ordinary perception by distance,
shielding or time."
b. Coordinate Remote Viewing (CRV): The process of remote
viewing using geographic coordinates for cueing or prompting.
c. 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.
d. 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. The monitor plays an especially
important role in training beginning viewers.
2. Descriptions:
a. Remote Viewing Session: In a remote viewing session an
individual or "viewer" attempts to acquire and describe
by mental means alone information about a designated site.
The viewer is not told what the site is that must be described
but is provided a cue or prompt which designates the site.
b. Session Dynamics: In conducting a coordinate remote viewing
session, a remote viewer and a monitor begin by seating themselves
at the opposite ends of a table in a special remote viewing
room equipped with paper and pens, a tape recorder, and a
TV camera which allows either recording for documentation,
or monitoring by individuals outside the room. The room is
homogeneously-colored, acoustic-tiled, and featureless, with
light controlled by a dimmer, so that environmental distractions
can be minimized. The session begins when the monitor provides
cueing or prompting information (geographic coordinates in
this case) to the remote viewer. The remote viewer is given
no additional identifying information, and at this point has
no conscious knowledge of the actual site. For training purposes,
the monitor is allowed to know enough about the site to enable
him to determine when accurate versus inaccurate information
is being provided. The session then proceeds with the monitor
repeating the prompting information at appropriate intervals
and providing necessary feedback. The remote viewer generates
verbal responses and sketches, until a coherent response to
the overall task requirement emerges.
c. Post Session Dynamics: After the session is over, the
remote viewer and monitor obtain specific information about
the site in picture/descriptive form. The remote viewer and
monitor then discuss the session results.
B. Background:
In early 1980, an SRI - International (SRI-I) subcontractor
developed a training procedure known as Coordinate Remote
Viewing to satisfy R&D demands on SRI-I to enhance the
reliability (scientific replicability) of remote viewing (RV).
The subcontractor's approach to improving the reliability
of RV was to focus on the control of those factor that in
his view tend to introduce "noise" into the RV product
(imaginative, environmental, and interviewer overlays). The
basic components of this training procedure consist of:
(1) Repeated site-address (geographic coordinate) presentation,
with quick-reaction response by the remote viewing; coupled
with a restrictive format for reporting perceived information
(to minimize imaginative overlays).
(2) The use of a specially-designed, acoustic-tiled, relatively
featureless, homogeneously-colored "viewing chamber"
(to minimize environmental overlays).
(3) The adoption of a strictly-prescribed, limited interviewer
patter (to minimize interviewer overlays).
The training procedure requires that the trainee learn a
progressive, multi-stage acquisition process postulated to
correspond to increased contact with the site. At present
there are six "stages" of training. In general,
these stages progress as follows:
(1) "Stage I" sites (islands, mountains, deserts,
etc.).
(2) "Stage II" sites (sites of quality sensory
value--sites which are uniquely describable through touch,
taste, sound, color, or odor--such as glaciers, volcanoes,
industrial plants, etc.).
(3) "Stage III" sites (sites possessing significant
dimensional characteristics such as buildings, bridges, airfields,
etc.).
(4) "Stage IV" sites for which the trainee begins
to form qualitative mental percepts (technical area, military
feeling, research, etc.).
(5) "Stage V" sites for which the trainee learns
to "interrogate" qualitative mental percepts in
an attempt to product analytical target descriptions (aircraft
tracking radar, biomedical research facility, tank production
plant, etc.).
(6) "Stage VI" sites which involve the trainee
in direct, three-dimensional assessment and modeling of the
site and/or the relationship of site elements to one another
(airplanes inside one of three camouflaged hangars or a military
compound with a command building, barracks, motor pool, and
underground weapons storage area).
The following document has been prepared to serve as a comprehensive
explanation of the theory and mechanics of CRV as developed
by SRI-I. It is intended for individuals who have no in-depth
understanding of the technology and as a guide for future
training programs. Particular attention should be paid to
the glossary at the end of the document and to the terms as
defined in the text, as they are the only acceptable definitions
to be used when addressing the methodology presented.
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