Thursday, April 20, 2006

Quantum remote viewing

If you mention 'remote viewing' to any serious scientist, be ready to be scoffed at. Oh, I've scoffed at it myself.

It's not telepathy. It involves viewing a scene at a distance, perhaps even on the other side of the world, but not through the eyes of another. Impossible, obviously.

Quantum physics says not.

Apparently, every photon emitted travels not just in a direct line, but simultaneously along every possible pathway. That means, when you look at something, the photons travelling from that object to your eyes travel in a straight line but simultaneously travel along every other possible route - including bouncing off every point in the universe at the same time. The act of seeing - analogous to the act of measuring the photon - fixes its path as the one you see. Don't worry, even I haven't fully grasped this concept yet.

So if you could filter, and select the pathways, you could 'see' absolutely anything, anywhere. You could gaze over the surface of Mars, admire the clouds of Jupiter, delve into the acidic world of Venus, even skim the surface of the sun.

All you need to do is learn how to determine which pathway you want to see. It sounds difficult. It might be impossible.

I say it's worth investigating.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

How would you begin to investigate such a thing?

Romulus Crowe said...

First you have to find some people who claim to be able to do it. Weeding out the fakes is easy. Working out how the apparently genuine do what they do is the hard part. I'd need a physicist with an open mind. There must be one, surely?

Anonymous said...

But where would you look for that sort?

Anonymous said...

Here's a thought. Maybe you could find an open-minded sort at that orb conference thingee. Of course, since you're planning to deny him lunch, he may not be as open-minded as usual. Hungry people get cranky.

Romulus Crowe said...

It's open-minded I need, not vacant.

Anonymous said...

Then you will feed him lunch? Wise of you to see the sense in not leaving him vacant - stomach-wise.

I'd bet he'd be even more open-minded if you slipped him an after lunch cocktail or two. You're making a good decision, Romulus.

Now off to the orb convention and good luck to you. ;)

Romulus Crowe said...

You think I'd look for a scientist at an orb convention? No, I need someone far less gullible.

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