Remote viewing was developed by the US Army and CIA at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) during the early 1970s and later. Housed at Fort Meade in Maryland the program was presumably ended in the mid-90s, but not before millions of dollars and thousands of man-hours were expended. Though pilloried by critics, remote viewing yielded some remarkable results during the two decades that the US government sponsored it. Working on this basis the author delved into it in 1997, compiling over 250 sessions and cataloging all of them. These logs served as the basis for this work. The book contains many actual extracts of actual logs of the sessions. The reader's view of the universe will never be the same after reading this book.
About the Author
After spending 30 years in the field of data processing, systems analysis and mangagement, the author took to writing in his retirement. Born ninth of ten children, the seventh son of the seventh son in the midst of the Great Depression, the author uses all his experiences to create consummate writing.
Unfortunately out of print