Disc Price: $24.95
Add to Cart
Click here to continue shopping
|
 |
Courtney Brown - Remote Viewing and the Displaced-Target Phenomenon (IRVA 2007)
Dr. Courtney Brown gives an entertaining and highly animated account of his theories behind how remote viewing works and how to overcome some of the more vexing problems getting in the way of remote viewing success. He gives an extensive account of what he thinks makes displacement happen (he tells us it is a telepathic link between viewer and tasker); based on his own experience, he offers suggestions on how to properly do public demonstration sessions; he explains the characteristics of good remote viewing targets versus bad ones, and wraps up with an explanation of SAM, a computer program designed to enhance the evaluation and management of remote viewing session results.
Courtney Brown is a mathematician and social scientist who teaches in the Department of Political Science at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. He received his Ph.D. degree from Washington University in 1982 in political science with an emphasis on mathematical modeling. He began his teaching career as a college calculus instructor in Africa before moving on to teach nonlinear differential and difference equation modeling in the social sciences at UCLA, Emory University, and the University of Michigan. He has published numerous works on applied nonlinear mathematical modeling and recently a book on another of his interests, political music.
He is the Director and founder of The Farsight Institute, a nonprofit research and educational organization dedicated to the study of remote viewing. His latest book Remote Viewing: The Science and Theory of Nonphysical Perception analyzes data and develops a new theory that explains the remote viewing phenomenon as a consequence of superposition formation on the quantum level.
Title #243381 Format: DVD-R
|