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Originally Posted by mkirkpatrick You are right to be skeptical Pat .However the CİA spent millıons of dollars on the program.and so too dıd the Russıans. İ dont thınk they would have wasted millions of dollars on a wıshful notıon do you! İ personally accept thıs as a real faculty of mankınd.just that we dont know how to use it. |
I'd be alot more skeptical also, and as it stands now, I'm moderately skeptical. What decreases my severe skepticism to moderate is the number of scientists and engineers who believe 'psi' abilities such as remote viewing exists, and they back up their views with what appear to be reliable statistics. I have studied statistics (and accounting) and know full well that a talented statistician (or accountant) can make numbers back up almost any argument.
(Hey I'm not insinuating statisticians or accountants are a dishonest group!

)
Anyway, I found Dean Radin's book, "Entangled Minds," to contain a very convincing amount of information supporting 'psi'. Also, Courtney Brown's book, "Remote Viewing: The Science and Theory of Nonphysical Perception," is somewhat convincing.
Yet I have to see it to believe it, and do my own 'stats' after I see it.
I recommend these 2 books for skeptics.
Also, here are a few scientists who have studied or believed psi exists:
Sir Francis Bacon, Sir Wm. Crookes, Wolfgang Pauli, Alan Turing, John Eccles, astronaut Edgar Mitchell, scientists at Sony's ESPER lab, Robt. Jahn and scientists at the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Lab, someone at the U.S. Patent Office who issued patent no. 5830064 for a psi-operated electronic switch, Wm. Tiller, Dr. Ian Stephenson, etc...... Also Einstein wrote the preface to Upton Sinclair's book on psi, "The Mental Radio"...
Oh yeah, the govt. is not shy about using your tax dollars on what some think is ridiculous, for example SETI, and an extensive GAO report on Roswell from a few years back, which I assume wasn't cheap.
stevemc2