Remote viewing isn't new and it isn't fringe in the sense most people assume. It's been studied under controlled conditions for more than 50 years — in government programs, in university labs, and in peer-reviewed journals. Here's a short, honest tour.
The original Nature paper from SRI International. The first peer-reviewed publication describing what became known as remote viewing. Any serious conversation about the field starts here.
Read on Nature.com ↗Twenty years of U.S. government-funded remote viewing research (1972–1995), now publicly available. Thousands of pages of session transcripts, protocols, and program reviews. The raw primary source.
CIA FOIA reading room ↗Founded by astronaut Edgar Mitchell in 1973. Ongoing research on consciousness, including precognition and remote viewing, with a publicly accessible paper library.
IONS research library ↗The institutional descendant of J. B. Rhine's original parapsychology lab at Duke University (founded 1935). Long-running publication record spanning the full history of controlled psi research.
Rhine publications ↗Nine experiments by a respected Cornell psychologist, published in a top-tier journal, reporting evidence for precognition. Triggered a decade of replication attempts and helped launch psychology's broader reproducibility conversation.
Read the paper ↗A follow-up meta-analysis across 90 independent replication attempts from 33 laboratories in 14 countries. Overall effect remained statistically significant. Still debated — as it should be. Included here for honesty.
Read on PLOS ONE ↗Meta-analysis of 26 studies showing that human physiology reliably anticipates unpredictable future stimuli by a few seconds. Robust effect, small magnitude, and surprisingly consistent across labs.
Read on Frontiers ↗Our practice rests on research that's still in progress — much of it published or supported by Applied Love Labs, the 501(c)(3) founded by our own Julia Mossbridge. Project donations from our clients flow there.
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