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1.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 307-10, 344, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560360

RESUMEN

The concept of complementarity, originally proposed by Bohr in a microphysical context, and subsequently extended by himself, Heisenberg and Pauli to encompass subjective as well as objective dimensions of human experience, can be further expanded to apply to many common attitudes of human consciousness. At issue is the replacement of strict polar opposition of superficially antithetical consciousness capacities, such as analysis and synthesis, logic and intuition, or doing and being, by more generous conjugation that allows the pairs to operate in constructive triangulation and harmony. In this format, the physical principle of uncertainty also acquires metaphoric relevance in limiting the attainable sharpness of specification of any consciousness complements, and may serve to define their optimum balance in establishing reality. These principles thus lend themselves to representation of wave-like vs. particle-like operations of consciousness; to trade-offs between rigor and ambience in consciousness research; to generic masculine/feminine reinforcement; and to the interplay of science and spirit in any creative enterprise.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica , Estado de Conciencia , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Proyectos de Investigación , Biorretroalimentación Psicológica , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Teoría Cuántica , Estados Unidos
2.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 227-33, 341, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560343

RESUMEN

A 16-year empirical assessment of anomalous human/machine interactions provides strong evidence that consciousness can add information to otherwise random digital strings. A parallel program of remote perception studies establishes the inverse process: the anomalous acquisition of information about distant physical targets. Remarkably, neither of these extraordinary capabilities shows any dependence on either the distance or the time separating the participant from the target. The relevance of these consciousness abilities to human health follows from recognition that physiology entails myriad subtle information processes, all of which involve some degree of randomicity in their normal functions, and thus may be similarly influenced by conscious volition.

3.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 235-43, 341, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560345

RESUMEN

The possibility of a proactive role for consciousness in the establishment of physical reality has been addressed via an extensive 26-year program investigating physical anomalies in human/machine interactions and non-sensory acquisition of information about remote geographical locations. Empirical databases comprising many hundreds of millions of random events confirm that information can be introduced into, or extracted from, otherwise random physical processes solely through the agencies of human intention and subjective resonance. Much of the evidence mitigates the likelihood that the anomalies are manifestations of neo-cortical cognitive activity. Rather, they may be expressions of a deeper information organizing capacity of biological origin that emerges from the uncertainty inherent in the complexity of all living systems.

4.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 254-69, 343-4, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560347

RESUMEN

This article has four purposes: 1) to present for the first time in archival form all results of some 25 years of remote perception research at this laboratory; 2) to describe all of the analytical scoring methods developed over the course of this program to quantify the amount of anomalous information acquired in the experiments; 3) to display a remarkable anti-correlation between the objective specificity of those methods and the anomalous yield of the experiments; and 4) to discuss the phenomenological and pragmatic implications of this complementarity. The formal database comprises 653 experimental trials performed over several phases of investigation. The scoring methods involve various arrays of descriptor queries that can be addressed to both the physical targets and the percipients' description thereof, the responses to which provide the basis for numerical evaluation and statistical assessment of the degree of anomalous information acquired. Twenty-four such recipes have been employed, with queries posed in binary, ternary, quaternary, and ten-level distributive formats. Thus treated, the database yields a composite z-score against chance of 5.418 (p = 3 x 10(-8), one-tailed). Numerous subsidiary analyses agree that these overall results are not significantly affected by any of the secondary protocol parameters tested, or by variations in descriptor effectiveness, possible participant response biases, target distance from the percipient, or time interval between perception effort and agent target visitation. However, over the course of the program there has been a striking diminution of the anomalous yield that appears to be associated with the participants' growing attention to, and dependence upon, the progressively more detailed descriptor formats and with the corresponding reduction in the content of the accompanying free-response transcripts. The possibility that increased emphasis on objective quantification of the phenomenon somehow may have inhibited its inherently subjective expression is explored in several contexts, ranging from contemporary signal processing technologies to ancient divination traditions. An intrinsic complementarity is suggested between the analytical and intuitive aspects of the remote perception process that, like its more familiar counterpart in quantum science, brings with it an inescapable uncertainty that limits the extent to which such anomalous effects can be simultaneously produced and evaluated.


Asunto(s)
Estado de Conciencia , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Proyectos de Investigación , Telepatía , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto , Interpretación Estadística de Datos , Humanos , Laboratorios , Curación Mental , Modelos Psicológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , New Jersey , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estudios Retrospectivos , Universidades
5.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 311-24, 344-5, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560361

RESUMEN

While ongoing empirical research into anomalous mind/matter interactions continues to reaffirm the reality of such phenomena, it has heretofore failed to stimulate viable theoretical models, or even to suggest effective strategies for more productive experimentation. In contrast to prevalent presumption, re-examination of several large databases from this laboratory raises doubt that such effects are produced by direct attention of the conscious mind to the observable physical processes addressed. Rather, an alternative route is indicated wherein unconscious mind and intangible physical mechanisms are invoked to achieve anomalous acquisition of mental information about, or anomalous mental influence upon, otherwise inaccessible material processes. Implications for more effective experiments include subtler feedback schemes that facilitate submission of conscious intention to unconscious mental processing; physical target systems that provide a richness of intangible potentialities; operators who are amenable to such interactions; and an environmental ambience that supports the composite strategy. Theoretical requisites include better understanding of the information dialogue between conscious and unconscious aspects of mind; more pragmatic formulations of the relations between tangible and intangible physical processes; and most importantly, cogent representation of the merging of mental and material dimensions into indistinguishability at their deepest levels.


Asunto(s)
Biorretroalimentación Psicológica , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Modelos Psicológicos , Proyectos de Investigación , Inconsciente en Psicología , Investigación Biomédica , Humanos , Procesos Mentales , Estados Unidos
6.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 205-26, 340-1, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560342

RESUMEN

For more than a quarter century, the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR) laboratory has engaged in a broad range of experiments on consciousness-related physical anomalies and has proposed a corresponding selection of theoretical models that have combined to illuminate the fundamental nature of the provocative phenomena that emerge. Productive pursuit of this topic has inescapably involved a spectrum of political, cultural, personal, and interpersonal factors that are normally not encountered in more conventional scientific scholarship, but have both enriched and complicated the enterprise in many ways. Some of the insights gleaned from the work are objectively specifiable, such as the scale and structural character of the anomalous effects; their relative insensitivity to objective physical correlates, including distance and time; the oscillating sequential patterns of performance they display; the major discrepancies between male and female achievements; and their irregular replicability at all levels of experience. But many others relate to subjective issues, such as the responsiveness of the effects to conscious and unconscious intention and to individual and collective resonance; the relevance of ambience and attitude in their generation; and the importance of intrinsic uncertainty as a source of the anomalies. This blend of empirical features predicates radical excursions of the dedicated models, and hence of the more general scientific paradigms, to allow consciousness and its subjective information processing capacities a proactive role in the establishment of objective reality, with all of the complications of specificity, causality, and reproducibility that entails. The attendant complexities of conceptualization, formulation, and implementation notwithstanding, pragmatic applications of these phenomena in many sectors of public endeavor now can be foreseen.


Asunto(s)
Estado de Conciencia , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Modelos Psicológicos , Proyectos de Investigación , Humanos , Laboratorios , Curación Mental , New Jersey , Universidades
7.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 295-305, 344, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560358

RESUMEN

Over the greater portion of its long scholarly history, the particular form of human observation, reasoning, and technical deployment we properly term "science" has relied at least as much on subjective experience and inspiration as it has on objective experiments and theories. Only over the past few centuries has subjectivity been progressively excluded from the practice of science, leaving an essentially secular analytical paradigm. Quite recently, however, a compounding constellation of newly inexplicable physical evidence, coupled with a growing scholarly interest in the nature and capability of human consciousness, are beginning to suggest that this sterilization of science may have been excessive and could ultimately limit its epistemological reach and cultural relevance. In particular, an array of demonstrable consciousness-related anomalous physical phenomena, a persistent pattern of biological and medical anomalies, systematic studies of mind/brain relationships and the mechanics of human creativity, and a burgeoning catalogue of human factors effects within contemporary information processing technologies, all display empirical correlations with subjective aspects that greatly complicate, and in many cases preclude, their comprehension on strictly objective grounds. However, any disciplined re-admission of subjective elements into rigorous scientific methodology will hinge on the precision with which they can be defined, measured, and represented, and on the resilience of established scientific techniques to their inclusion. For example, any neo-subjective science, while retaining the logical rigor, empirical/theoretical dialogue, and cultural purpose of its rigidly objective predecessor, would have the following requirements: acknowledgment of a proactive role for human consciousness; more explicit and profound use of interdisciplinary metaphors; more generous interpretations of measurability, replicability, and resonance; a reduction of ontological aspirations; and an overarching teleological causality. Most importantly, the subjective and objective aspects of this holistic science would have to stand in mutually respectful and constructive complementarity to one another if the composite discipline were to fulfill itself and its role in society.


Asunto(s)
Investigación Biomédica , Estado de Conciencia , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Proyectos de Investigación , Investigación Empírica , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , Teoría Cuántica
8.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 326-37, 345, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560363

RESUMEN

The failure of contemporary scientific theory to correlate and explicate anomalous consciousness-related physical phenomena may trace to inadequate comprehension of the process of information exchange between the mind and its ultimate source. Elevation of the subjective capacities of consciousness to complementary status with the more objective physical senses, along with recognition of the bi-directional capabilities of both categories, allows establishment of resonant channels of communication between the mind and its source environment that can exceed conventional expectations. In this manner, order can be introduced into randomnicity, and self-consistent realities can be extracted from transcendent chaos. The key elements in tuning these channels to amplify such information creation are the physiological and psychological filters imposed upon them, some of which can be enhanced or altered by conscious or unconscious attention. Specifically, such attitudinal tactics as openness to alternative perspectives, utilization of transdisciplinary metaphors, self-sacrificial resonance, tolerance of uncertainty, and replacement of dualistic rigor by mental complementarity can enable experiential realities that are responsive to intention, desire, or need, to an extent consistent with prevailing empirical evidence.


Asunto(s)
Biorretroalimentación Psicológica , Procesos Mentales , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Desempeño Psicomotor , Proyectos de Investigación , Inconsciente en Psicología , Investigación Biomédica , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Teoría Cuántica , Estados Unidos
9.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 338, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560364

RESUMEN

Any proposed endophysical models need to acknowledge a number of subjective correlates that have been well established in such objectively quantifiable experimental contexts as anomalous human/machine interactions and remote perception information acquisition. Most notable of these factors are conscious and unconscious intention; gender disparities; serial position effects; intrinsic uncertainties; elusive replicability; and emotional resonance between the participants and the devices, process, and tasks. Perhaps even more pertinent are the insensitivities of the anomalous effects to spatial and temporal separations of the participants form the physical targets. Inclusion of subjective coordinates in the models, and exclusion of physical distance and time, raise formidable issues of specification, quantification, and dynamical formulation from both the physical and psychological perspectives. A few primitive examples of possible approaches are presented.


Asunto(s)
Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Teoría Cuántica , Proyectos de Investigación , Inconsciente en Psicología , Biorretroalimentación Psicológica , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Estados Unidos
10.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 244-53, 341-3, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560346

RESUMEN

Strong correlations between output distribution means of a variety of random binary processes and pre-stated intentions of some 100 individual human operators have been established over a 12-year experimental program. More than 1000 experimental series, employing four different categories of random devices and several distinctive protocols, show comparable magnitudes of anomalous mean shifts from chance expectation, with similar distribution structures. Although the absolute effect sizes are quite small, of the order of 10(-4) bits deviation per bit processed, over the huge databases accumulated, the composite effect exceeds 7sigma (p approximately 3.5 x 10(-13)). These data display significant disparities between female and male operator performances, and consistent serial position effects in individual and collective results. Data generated by operators far removed from the machines and exerting their efforts at times other than those of machine operation show similar effect sizes and structural details to those of the local, on-time experiments. Most other secondary parameters tested are found to have little effect on the scale and character of the results, with one important exception: studies performed using fully deterministic pseudorandom sources, either hard-wired or algorithmic, yield null overall mean shifts, and display no other anomalous features.


Asunto(s)
Estado de Conciencia , Relaciones Metafisicas Mente-Cuerpo , Modelos Psicológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , Proyectos de Investigación , Telepatía , Femenino , Humanos , Laboratorios , Masculino , Curación Mental , New Jersey , Curva ROC , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estudios Retrospectivos , Factores Sexuales , Universidades
11.
Explore (NY) ; 3(3): 279-93, 344, 2007.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17560356

RESUMEN

Based on formal analysis of 18 exploratory applications, 12 of which have been reported previously, a testable general hypothesis for FieldREG experiments has been postulated, namely that data taken in environments fostering relatively intense or profound subjective resonance will show larger deviations of the mean relative to chance expectation than those generated in more pragmatic assemblies. The 61 subsequent FieldREG applications reported here comprise 21 hypothesis-based formal replications, along with 40 further explorations designed to learn more about the circumstances that favor anomalous deviations. The results of the formal replications strongly confirm the general hypothesis, yielding a composite probability against chance for the resonant subset of 2.2 x 10(-6) compared to 0.91 for the mundane subset. The exploratory work suggests other venues in which anomalous effects of group consciousness can be expected, and also identifies a number of situations that do not appear to be conducive to such responses.


Asunto(s)
Estado de Conciencia , Teoría Cuántica , Proyectos de Investigación , Telepatía , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto , Interpretación Estadística de Datos , Procesos de Grupo , Humanos , Curación Mental , Modelos Psicológicos , Modelos Estadísticos , New Jersey , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Semiconductores , Universidades
12.
Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand) ; 51(7): 703-14, 2005 Dec 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16359620

RESUMEN

The possibility of a proactive role for consciousness in the establishment of physical reality has been addressed via an extensive 26-year program investigating physical anomalies in human/machine interactions and non-sensory acquisition of information about remote geographical locations. Empirical databases comprising many hundreds of millions of random events confirm that information can be introduced into, or extracted from, otherwise random physical processes solely through the agencies of human intention and subjective resonance. Much of the evidence mitigates the likelihood that the anomalies are manifestations of neo-cortical cognitive activity. Rather, they may be expressions of a deeper information organizing capacity of biological origin that emerges from the uncertainty inherent in the complexity of all living systems.


Asunto(s)
Comprensión , Estado de Conciencia , Conocimiento , Vida , Percepción , Animales , Cognición , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Autoimagen
13.
Altern Ther Health Med ; 2(3): 32-8, 1996 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8795900

RESUMEN

A 16-year empirical assessment of anomalous human/machine interactions provides strong evidence that consciousness can add information to otherwise random digital strings. A parallel program of remote perception studies establishes the inverse process: the anomalous acquisition of information about distant physical targets. Remarkably, neither of these extraordinary capabilities shows any dependence on either the distance or the time separating the participant from the target. The relevance of these consciousness abilities to human health follows from recognition that physiology entails myriad subtle information processes, all of which involve some degree of randomicity in their normal functions, and thus may be similarly influenced by conscious volition.


Asunto(s)
Estado de Conciencia , Servicios de Información , Salud Pública , Humanos
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