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Title: The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time, and Predictions for the New Millennium by Joseph McMoneagle, Charles T. Tart ISBN: 1-57174-102-X Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: November, 1998 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $12.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.71 (24 reviews)
Rating: 3
Summary: It's a mixed bag
Comment: I like the books format even though it's more like a report than a story, making things a bit easier to find.
As others have mentioned, some of the authors precognative visions have come true while others have not and this makes a skeptic worry that it's all just a matter of guessing. It's difficult to accept the guessing/chance hypothesis if one is very familiar with the scientific work on remote viewing / precognition and the criticisms of debunkers. Precognition doesn't mean omniscience, the phenomena is real and it's more an issue of precent reliability beyond chance - the reliability measure of chance is zero.
I like looking for a consistent series of events as a guide but even a single seperate event maybe an accurate future image, it's they're interpretation that's the problem. Did the viewer pick-up prevalent news or thoughts at some point in the future but didn't pick-up that they later turned out to be false? After those times have come and gone, one can check the dates with what the author has said and see how things turned out. This may actually be a confirmation of the vision but not of it's meaning.
Another worry I have is the authors connections to US intelligence agencies. If taken seriously, this information can be vital to US and other interests. How much of this book was intended as disinformation?
Rating: 4
Summary: remote viewing, put to the test
Comment: Remote viewing is a specialist type of psychic/clairvoyant technique, that can be used to assess other areas of space and time. Mcmoneagle travels into the past and future and predicts the reality he finds there. Whether remote viewing actually works or not is debatable, I haven't seen the scientific evidence, so I will remain open minded, until I do. Mcmoneagle claims a 60% success rate, validated by a scientific review board whilst he worked on the Stargate project for the U.S. government. Even if you can't accept the idea of remote viewing as a genuine phenomenon there is a great deal of interest in this book.
If a panel of experts were asked to assess the shape of the future, within the next 100 years and beyond, they would be hard pressed to come up with more original ideas than Mcmoneagle does. If you compare this book to Nostradamus's prophecies you will find that they are much more specific and are fortunately not encoded, as Mcmoneagle unlike Nostradamus does not have to worry about religious persecution for his views. All that remains is to wait and assess the accuracy of the predictions. Judging by the large amount of material, it won't be until about 2030 that enough predictions can be evaluated to give a valid statistical rate of accuracy.
If Mcmoneagle is correct about some of his major predictions then it would create a great deal of interest in remote viewing. The major predictions include Iraq invading Iran to eliminate alleged Kurdish terrorists before the end of 2003. A silver bullet cure for most cancers and the development of an aids vaccine by 2008. An earthquake in upstate New York in 2050, the most expensive natural disaster in the history of the U.S.A. and a coherent signal from space, from another planet in another solar system in our galaxy in 2008 which no one is able to decipher.
Mcmoneagle also remote views the year 3000, which is almost a utopia. He is very optimistic about the distant future of humanity, with 600 years of peace after two great wars before 2400. The author goes back into the past,in order to check on humanity's origins; He finds a race that is seeded on the planet by an alien intelligence ( a la Sitchen, Marrs, Clow, Von Danicken et al) 30 to 50 million years after the dinosaur age. The race is similar to a cross between a sea otter and a human and lives close to the shore line, exploiting natural resources from the sea and close to the shore. This creature eventually moves inland as it evolves into humanity, Mcmoneagle doesn't mention anything about tree climbing, although this could have happened if the ground cover was very dense or there were a great deal of predators on the ground, forcing this species into the trees. This prediction is a bit out there, but not totally beyond the realms of possibility. Mcmoneagle has put his head on the chopping block with the amount and level of detail in the predictions, at least you can't accuse him of being too vague.
( reviewed by Melchizedeck )
Rating: 5
Summary: Joe predicts future & why it can't be known with certainty!
Comment: I have known Joe for more than a decade. I first met him at the Monroe Institute. This stuff is real. I have watched him be given a set of computer generated latittude and longitude map coordinates and a date and had him somehow "go" there and accurately describe what he saw. He tried to teach me how to do it, but I don't have his talent.
What I really like about Joe is his total lack of ego envolvement in what he predicts. He does not come across like "Weird Willy from the Mystical East who Sees All and Knows All" - Lord knows I've met enough of them. If you met him you would be amazed at how down to earth he is. He is the first to admit that some of what he "sees" doesn't happen. He takes up the first third of the book explaining why and some of the techniques of Remote Viewing.
If you read this book carefully he explains that the future is NOT determined. The future is a plastic set of evolving interrelated possibilities. Some of these possibilities happen, some collapse, many are interrelated - if "A" happens then "B" & "C" will happen.
Joe and his friends, like Ed Dames, et al, are constantly trying to find ways to become more accurate. Sometimes there is a difference of opinion, sometimes the majority is right somethimes the majority is wrong. I have absolute faith in his integrity. He tells you what he sees.
Yes, some of his predictions did not come true. But he accurately predicted the mid 2000 stock market collapse. The book was published in 1997.
The only difficulty I find with the book is organization, which comes from the way the remote viewers do their thing. They target one date and one topic in the future at a time. The book tells you what they saw. But just like history, future events are always interrelated. War, and stock market flucuations, as we have seen, may be the result of from terrorist acts.
If you want insight into the future, at any rate, his book is a big improvement over the Rorschalk test unintelligible mumblings of Nostradamus wherein anyone can see whatever they wish. A lot of very important people rely on what Joe McMoneagle sees.
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Title: Remote Viewing Secrets: A Handbook by Joseph McMoneagle ISBN: 1571741593 Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: May, 2000 List Price(USD): $14.95 |
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Title: Mind Trek: Exploring Consciousness, Time, and Space Through Remote Viewing by Joe McMoneagle, Joseph McMoneagle, Charles T. Tart ISBN: 1878901729 Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: July, 1997 List Price(USD): $12.95 |
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Title: The Stargate Chronicles: Memoirs of a Psychic Spy by Joseph McMoneagle ISBN: 1571742255 Publisher: Hampton Roads Pub Co Pub. Date: September, 2002 List Price(USD): $24.95 |
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Title: The Seventh Sense: The Secrets of Remote Viewing as Told by a "Psychic Spy" for the U.S. Military by Lyn Buchanan ISBN: 0743462688 Publisher: Pocket Books Pub. Date: 01 February, 2003 List Price(USD): $14.00 |
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Title: Psychic Warrior : The True Story of America's Foremost Psychic Spy and the Cover-Up of the CIA's Top-Secret Stargate Program by David Morehouse ISBN: 0312964137 Publisher: St. Martin's Press Pub. Date: 15 January, 1998 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
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