
July 19, 1996: Remote Viewing - Courtney Brown
The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III
July 4, 20232h 50m
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Show Notes
Dr. Courtney Brown, tenured professor of political science at Emory University and head of the Farsight Institute, provides a detailed scientific framework for understanding remote viewing. He describes how the U.S. military spent two decades developing trainable mental protocols at Stanford Research Institute that achieved 85 percent accuracy in intelligence operations, and explains that the procedures work by shifting awareness to a dimmer perceptual channel projected by what he calls the subspace aspect of human consciousness.
Brown outlines the Farsight Institute's blind protocol method, where remote viewers are given only random four-digit numbers corresponding to undisclosed targets, then accurately describe locations, events, and people they have never seen. He reports that all 31 students trained at the institute have successfully learned the technique, with professional-level viewers achieving near-perfect accuracy on verified physical targets. The discussion moves into remote viewing of extraterrestrial subjects, the Adam and Eve narrative as a genetic uplift project, and the discovery of an ET library being used for patent development.
The episode raises profound questions about consciousness, the soul, and the ethics of a technology that eliminates all secrets. Brown argues that remote viewing constitutes laboratory proof of the human soul's existence and frames physical life as an accelerated school for spiritual development within intentionally limited bodies.
Brown outlines the Farsight Institute's blind protocol method, where remote viewers are given only random four-digit numbers corresponding to undisclosed targets, then accurately describe locations, events, and people they have never seen. He reports that all 31 students trained at the institute have successfully learned the technique, with professional-level viewers achieving near-perfect accuracy on verified physical targets. The discussion moves into remote viewing of extraterrestrial subjects, the Adam and Eve narrative as a genetic uplift project, and the discovery of an ET library being used for patent development.
The episode raises profound questions about consciousness, the soul, and the ethics of a technology that eliminates all secrets. Brown argues that remote viewing constitutes laboratory proof of the human soul's existence and frames physical life as an accelerated school for spiritual development within intentionally limited bodies.