Exploring Consciousness · Remote Viewing
Remote Viewing Practice
Develop your natural ability to perceive information beyond the reach of your physical senses. Choose an exercise below, record your impressions, then reveal the target and rate your accuracy.
Coordinate Targets
Receive a random 8-digit coordinate for a real location on Earth. Record your impressions and sketches, then reveal the target photograph and GPS coordinates.
Associative RV (ARV)
Receive a 4-digit target number with no question attached. Perceive the associated image, record your impressions, then compare both images to your sketch and choose which one you were viewing.
What is Remote Viewing?
Remote viewing is the scientific, protocol-driven practice of perceiving information about a distant target using non-local consciousness. Developed at Stanford Research Institute in the 1970s and used by U.S. intelligence agencies for over 20 years (the STARGATE program), it is a learnable skill — not a rare gift.
The exercises on this page use the same basic methodology: a coordinate or number is assigned to a target, you record raw impressions before seeing the target, and then you compare your perceptions to the actual feedback.
Tips for Better Sessions
- Relax first — 2 minutes of slow breathing makes a measurable difference
- Write or sketch before you think — capture the first impression, not the analyzed one
- Record feelings, temperatures, textures, and motion — not just visual images
- The analytical mind is your challenge — if you catch yourself reasoning, write "AOL" (Analytic Overlay) and move on
- Rate every session honestly — patterns in your misses teach you as much as your hits
- Keep a dedicated RV journal across sessions to track your developing channels
Remote Viewing Judging Form
Unified 7-Point Accuracy Scale
This form provides a standardized framework for the blind evaluation of remote viewing sessions against their intended targets. It is designed for use by independent judges who assess session transcripts without prior knowledge of the target, ensuring objectivity and methodological rigour in the evaluation process.
The core of the form is the Unified 7-Point Accuracy Scale, which synthesizes Joe McMoneagle's long-form session accuracy rating system with the blind judging protocols developed by Russell Targ and Hal Puthoff at Stanford Research Institute. The scale runs from 1 (no meaningful correspondence) to 7 (excellent, specific, unambiguous match), with each level precisely defined to minimize subjective interpretation and support consistent scoring across judges and sessions.