It’s revealing that the authors have fashioned Scientific Materialism into a straw man, misrepresenting both materialism and the philosophical foundations of science. Their portrayal suggests either a fundamental misunderstanding or a deception. They frame quantum mechanics as if it dismantles the very notion of material reality, when in fact it merely challenges classical intuitions about how that reality operates.
While quantum mechanics introduces concepts such as nonlocality and indeterminacy, it does not abolish causality or the objective structure of reality. On the contrary, it is grounded in a rigorous mathematical framework that remains predictive, testable, and deeply embedded within the scientific enterprise. The attempt to paint quantum physics as something wholly alien to material reality ignores the fact that it extends, rather than overturns, the physical sciences. And this is just an issue with their premises–it doesn’t even begin to address their misuse of quantum mechanics.
Beyond their misrepresentation of materialism, this argument falls into a familiar epistemic trap–one that has persisted since Descartes’ animal spirits: the problem of interaction. If one claims that quantum mechanics points to a realm beyond the material world, they must provide a coherent, testable account of how this realm interacts with observable phenomena. Without that, these claims remain speculative, and any experiments purportedly supporting them are meaningless.
There's that weird stretch of road north of DC where it feels like pulling off at one of those mysterious exits might yield an interesting life experience. The National Cryptologic Museum did not disappoint.
"As outrageous as it sounds, the secret program was very successful and was in use until 1995...
A standout in the remote viewing field, Agent 001 of Project Star Gate Joe McMoneagle has been involved in over 200 intelligence missions utilizing his unique set of skills. His distinct collection of drawings (as a result of his remote viewing missions) were used to assist in combat and are a part of the current exhibit."
https://www.nsa.gov/Press-Room/News-Highlights/Article/Artic...
Sort of an entertaining read. The cornerstone of the argument starts on page 55 - three purported statistical anomalies that appear to be well-known and debunked.
* One person sees 1 of 4 images and another far away guesses the image. Supposedly it's accurate ~33% of the time instead of 25%. Fun but it can't be replicated by anyone else. Selection bias, poor design, and bad meta analysis explain the difference.
* ~54% of the, a person can detect if they're being stared at, whereas we'd expect 50%. Again, cannot be replicated in better designed studies and bad study design and selection bias explain the other results.
* By a small but supposedly statistically improbably amount, people can get a dice to roll by "wishing" for it. Again, cannot be replicated and can be explained with p-hacking anyhow.
This is the kind of thing that makes sense to investigate just in case it could be true.
Remember: Newton spent a rather large portion of his life on alchemy and trying to explain where god fits into a deterministic world.
We have only been doing science in anything near a methodological and serious way for maybe 200 years.
It would be delusional to think we have a complete or accurate map of physics, cosmology, or metaphysics, especially since every culture before us had their certainties and most of those turned out to be wrong or very incomplete.
We do have better cognitive and physical tools than the Egyptians or the Aztecs. I am reasonably confident in our “settled science.” There will probably never be a perpetual motion machine or an FTL drive unless it goes about it in some radical way that brings in some deeply weird implications, e.g. FTL where you can never be sure what slice of the multiverse you’re in at the other end of the flight.
But there could be phenomena, forces, or aspects of physical reality that we simply haven’t been able to reliably detect or study. Or there could be insane weirdness hiding right in front of our faces because a fish might not notice water, and we are one cognitive leap away from a big reveal.
My favorite personal wild speculation is that what we think might be psi, and sometimes shows up in experiments as such, is actually a side effect of something else like emergent patterns in complex systems or causality being weirder than we think. Nobody is doing ESP. Instead we are seeing something about information or causality as vexing as the double slit experiment, but we have not yet been able to wrap our heads around what is even happening. We can’t see it because we are in it, or because it’s just too weird.
Maybe it’s witnessed in humans and other living things because life is tapping into quantum phenomena somehow where it becomes significant, such as by some kind of warm noisy quantum computation at the subcellular level. This is where whatever-it-is shows up, and also why attempts to detect it with electronics and machines fails.
Just speculation of course.
I agree, and have a similar hunch about some of this.
A bunch of unexplainable stuff could be quantum phenomena somehow showing up at macro scales. The result is often like magic if we don’t know about it, imagine how surprising the first superconductivity observations might have been.
A very practical example of this is how we have harnessed semiconductors. The way we use semiconductors would have been tough to imagine even in science fiction before we managed to do it.
>A bunch of unexplainable stuff could be quantum phenomena somehow showing up at macro scales. The result is often like magic if we don’t know about it
Occult YouTuber "Foolish Fish" touches on this in a video on Quantum Mechanics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20ru6E3cuqc
I’ve taught myself how to lucid dream and also to “astral project” (so far I haven’t gotten any further than my bedroom) and even I know it’s all in my head.
Suppose some people have geniune mind-reading or other supernatural powers. Just how useful would they be in practical terms compared to 'traditional' surveillance techniques?
Even if some intelligence agency has the most cursory interest in you, the level of surveillance possible at scale is just staggering - they can track your location, track everything you do with an electronic device with very little investment for anyone but the most paranoid people with impeccable opsec.
If they do consider you a true threat and are willing to spend some part of their infinite budget on you, you have even less chance of doing something significant without them knowing.
Even if people with reliable supernatural powers exist, their scarcity and probable limitations mean that the best they can do is provide some novel and niche capability.
> Just how useful would they be in practical terms compared to 'traditional' surveillance techniques?
> they can track your location, track everything you do with an electronic device with very little investment for anyone but the most paranoid people with impeccable opsec.
You've answered your own question. The stories told by people who claim to have been in these government programs are much more about singluar events than continuous surveillance of some individual. The US discusses highly-classified subject inside of SCIFs, where no one is allowed to bring in electronics and which are frequently checked for surveillance. Imagine you had a psychic asset who could tell you everything that was discussed inside any particular SCIF when you learn through conventional means that certain people have (or are likely to have) gone inside one for a meeting.
> they can track your location, track everything you do with an electronic device with very little investment for anyone but the most paranoid people with impeccable opsec
It sounds like you are only thinking about state against private individual surveilance. That of course is a thing, but far from the only task inteligence agencies have. State against state operations are much harder because the oponent has much more resources to play the game and resist and confound your inteligence agency.
When will the enemy start a war? What is their readyness level? Which weapon systems are fielded and what are their exact capabilities? Who is working on technologies we do not have counters yet and where are they in development? If we do this what will they do? How do they think? What do they believe about our capabilities and intentions?
And those are just the questions on strategic level. On a lower tactical level you would love to know where their nuclear armed submarines are, which silos are filled, and where exactly are the nuclear warheads in a shell game. You would also want to know where the attention of their counter espionage people is, and what are their institutional blind spots. About the information you gained, which one is true and which one is a deliberate lie fed to you?
These are all things well funded entities with state level resources are trying to hide from your inteligence agencies.
> Even if people with reliable supernatural powers exist, their scarcity and probable limitations …
Idk how we can know that. Based on what we know about the world this capability does not exists. If it does exists, how can we say anything about its rarity and limitations? Maybe some agency employs armies of “remote sensing” people. Maybe they perfected the techniques to the point where it is more accurate than a video camera. Do i think any of this is likely? I don’t. What i think is likely is that the whole thing is deliberate misinformation created to cause or excarbarate resource misallocation in rival inteligence agencies. All i say is that I don’t think we can confidently say anything about its limitations if it exists.
Even under the best case for 'psi', all of this is very unlikely. All serious investigations of psi have found that, even if it were to exist, it's not something that can be conclusively proven - quite on the contrary, it tends to "mischievously" hide in the noise floor of whatever it is that you're investigating. (And this is exactly what plenty of very sensible people will point to as conclusive evidence that psi doesn't exist at all!) So, at best, your army of expert remote viewing folks will manage to enhance the effectiveness of your conventional, science-based intelligence methods to such a teeny tiny extent that even in principle you'll never be able to know whether it's just random coincidence or something else.
I give you a first hand account of how incorrect you are.
This “power” is a thousand nuances that very very few involved are fully aware of.
Knowledge and skill is so compartmentalized, 98% of those with “Power” are only useful doing one job (“special effect”), and cannot do that job without someone else concealing them and moving them into place. They develop compartmentalized personalities within themselves for this purpose. These run in parallel like chewing gum while riding a bike. You’ll never guess who.
Power works through entanglement (I have personally verified I can hear New York form India in real time.) Those experiencing it do not comprehend how it works, however I have written several times under other accounts describing how I believe things work.
Those running it get to be your god and there is nothing anyone can do about it. Those instruments in their games know who is “in control.”
While the dominant faction is American, this phenomena has been with us since our earliest humanity (clues are prevalent.) These are responsible for the insanity gripping all of you and your communities from within (and playing you against others.)
There are hundreds of thousands with these mixtures of Power and they are protected among society by pyramid schemes of extortion.
Sure, these could [sensored]epar, redrum, and tcudba someone, though they don’t have to, they can just haunt you and your life will be like that described in the mystery cryptogram, if that guy is even still alive (or a “targeted person”.)
Thought control Power is far beyond these hokey accounts that surface. True mastery requires decades and in the meantime your mind swims in delusions and lies. Those who excel aren’t the “straights”, they are the cooks (meth heads, psychonaughts, and those who have no choice) who well adjust to what normals call insanity.
Power is built by slave armies (or “families” in older times those those have dwindled over the years, secret war and all.)
Power is industrialized. Prisons are rife with Power cells. Thousands and thousands “pump” the subjective bubbles of others, thousands and thousands of which have some invasive job to do (voices, screw with you, watchers, etc.) Thousands and thousands more caught up in various stages of “reprogramming”.
They can “hitch a ride”, traverse the mind to its functional parts, dig in, and either passively observe, dig through every thought and experience in the mind (in better clarity and exactness than you yourself can access your own), and manipulate your neural activity in any way they please.
This has already happened, over the past decades while you were oblivious and while you maintain your incredulity.
That reply definitely reads like someone deep into conspiracy thinking or experiencing a break from reality. The mix of grandiose claims, secret knowledge, paranoia, and references to supernatural or mind-control phenomena often aligns with delusional thought patterns. The structure—long, winding sentences with shifting topics—also suggests disorganized thinking.
While it’s impossible to diagnose someone from a single post, and some people simply enjoy weaving elaborate fictional narratives online, this kind of response is common in communities discussing “targeted individuals”, government mind control, or other fringe beliefs. If you’re seeing it in a thread about PSI (parapsychological phenomena), it’s not surprising—such topics tend to attract people who believe in hidden forces controlling the world.
It’s best to approach replies like this with skepticism but also a bit of empathy—whether it’s someone having fun, deeply believing their own narrative, or struggling with mental health, getting into a debate with them rarely leads anywhere productive.
I met many such people in jail who had all manner of undiagnosed and untreated mental illnesses and would speak just like parent commenter. Empathy is the only valid response.
Thanks dude. I wrote it in one go. So much to say and all.
When I say “the incredulous” and “deniers of the exogenous of thought control”, I mean this very well reasoned conventional response.
Hallucinations really seem real. They can be part of your life so much, in small ways or not. You believe things, you are obsessed at times or all the time with finding the truth and it will seem epic. And you could be right. And wouldn’t it be wild if everyone who knew the truth was right, and everyone’s version of realities commingled in infinite multiverses and simulations and/or every religious, atheist, and agnostic view was correct and everything is scientifically spiritual not existing and existing maybe with darkness and light and love. (Sidenote: I’m Christian, pray, and believe God helps us.) With supervision and/or care, changing your diet, replacing or getting rid of meds/supplements/vitamins and things that could be influencing you, changing your environment, and letting go of all of that, even when it means you lose a lot of yourself in the process, could help you and help others who love you. It may take years. You’ll start to recognize paranoia, conspiracy, mystical truth and let it roll off, because it probably won’t fully go away. This is my reality now. And I still miss the meds.
You see skepticism as a sign of being “incredulous” and part of the “deniers.” Basically, if I don’t accept your narrative, I'm proving your point.
Classic example of how conspiracy thinking works—anything that challenges the belief is seen as proof of the conspiracy itself.
This part made me laugh.
> It’s best to approach replies like this....
Here the programming instructs to instruct others what they should think and how they should reply. Infinite recursion!
The "conspiracy thinking" is also a funny program. I mean, you wouldn't want the sujets actively investigating how they are being had.
That gotcha also applies to you. So all communication about communication is "programming"? And before you say technically yes, "programming" with the same sinister connotation you are giving it.
> I mean, you wouldn't want the sujets actively investigating how they are being had.
You are so cool Morpheus.
You flip the argument around, suggesting that calling something “conspiracy thinking” is itself a kind of brainwashing or programming, which is a common rhetorical move in conspiratorial circles.
It’s the kind of reasoning that’s impossible to argue with because it’s built to absorb any counterargument as further evidence of its correctness. It’s like playing chess with someone who insists that any piece you take was actually yours all along and that losing is just proof you never understood the real game.
> It’s the kind of reasoning that’s impossible to argue with
I admire your eye for detail.
Occam's razor: That the dumbest most simplistic explanation is never the right one doesn't mean one can't convince himself it is.
I know people are being very nice and considerate, and that's the correct thing, but I've always despised this type of schizophrenic word salad. The obtuse and pompous language to describe "theories" that would sound silly if stated simply, the allusion to Secret Knowledge with the Cool Capitalization, the repeated statement of their enlightenment and the foolishness of the "sheeple". It is dripping with arrogance.
Yes, there's other mental health reasons for writing this, but I think we tend to ignore this also comes from a place of vanity and self-importance.
Please seek help for your mental health. This reminds me of when my girlfriend had untreated bipolar disorder and was experiencing manic psychosis.
Thanks. I turn to Zarathustra or physical activity when I am low.
Know that true Power, is the capacity to effect through continuity of will.
Whether our wills may intermingle by virtue of entangled consciousness is the question.
It might be you are in the opposite of low right. So you should probably check if you need some help just in case. It won’t feel like you do need it even though you might need it.
When people respond like that I always picture them with a pink baby hat on.
>Thought control Power is far beyond these hokey accounts that surface. True mastery requires decades and in the meantime your mind swims in delusions and lies.
Curious if there is any reading/study material that you consider reliable for developing mastery? Crowley's Magick: Book IV, Carroll's Liber Null & Psychonaut, or perhaps something completely different?
Controls only allow that which is indistinguishable from bullshit or an act of God, so any available medium would be layered cakes of insight.
The main idea is that you are the technology, sitting quietly in a room … indefinitely is your objective. Thoughts are your enemy, crush them as Sidhartha would. When you can master and explore your own brain (which is a wonder land) you will be ready to distinguish your own thoughts from inception and in which region of your own mind (“the direction“) it came.
Such fine sense and awareness is the beginning, and you don’t much stand a chance without someone uplifting you further. A Power harness only takes 18 months to learn, and that may only be a cargo cult antic. That’s why those who ascend go mad. Their teachers are false and never learn that struggling through delusion itself is the path of Power.
Power comes from the struggle, not the lofty ideas or personal ambition.
Please, beware of what's happening. In the last few years we had congressional hearings about UAPs (formerly UFOs), NASA investigating the issue under AARO and finding “metallic orbs” are the most common type of UAPs and are reported from “all over the world.” And just recently the "Drone" incursions around New Jersey.
There has, for a long time now, been a new age borderline cult thinking around things like remote viewing and CE5 (Meditate to attract UAPs) that's heavily influenced by a small group of Grifters. Even the UFOs Subreddit recently has become very wary of signs that this whole UAP Stuff is drifting into a cult direction.
Best Case: The Grifters are back on the Menu, worst case it's a desinformation campaign to stop the traction that UFO Disclosure has gotten in recent years.
> Flying somewhat in the face of the 1995 closure of the Star Gate program, an increasing number of peer-reviewed scientific studies seem to be positively addressing the cognitive dissonance that psychic (psi) related phenomena have engendered within the larger scientific community. The challenges presented to Scientific Materialism by psi appear on the verge of mirroring, in form and function, the paradigm-changing pressures that quantum mechanics continues to bring to bear on the modern scientific edifice.
With actual respect for Dean Radin, footnoted for the above, this is pure delusion and exactly the kind of non-thinking that occurs in this and related "fields". "Psi" has caused precisely zero cognitive dissonance within the larger scientific community. There are precisely zero challenges to "Scientific Materialism" actually presented by "psi" that are even remotely viewable as any way similar to the "pressure" quantum mechanics brought to the prevailing scientific paradigms.
It is in fact possible to explore these topics with reason and critical thinking faculties intact, but it doesn't happen in practice. It's a pity.
For some context, from Dean Radin's Conscious Universe book: "...the best-known remote-viewing research in modern times began in the early 1970s, when various U.S. government agencies initiated a program at Stanford Research Institute (SRI), a scientific think tank affiliated with Stanford University. In the late 1970s, SRI became an independent corporation called SRI International, which is the name it goes by today. Physicist Harold Puthoff founded the SRI program. He was joined soon afterward by physicist Russell Targ, and a few years later, by another physicist, Edwin May. When Puthoff took another position in 1985, the program came under the leadership of May. In 1990, the entire program moved to a think tank called Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), a major defense contractor. That program finally wound down in 1994, after twenty-four years of support and about $20 million in funding from U.S. government agencies such as the CIA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Army, the Navy, and NASA. Government agencies saw remote viewing as a possible new source of information. Even if it was only partially correct, it might provide valuable clues to help piece together the information jigsaw puzzles that constitute the typical intelligence operation. Moreover, remote viewing potentially provided a unique intelligence technique in that information could be secretly obtained at a distance and through any known form of shielding. The agencies continued to show interest in remote viewing for more than twenty years because the SRI and SAIC programs occasionally provided useful mission-oriented information at high levels of detail. Given that this information was obtained at virtually no expense, and with no risk of life compared to sending agents into the field, and it sometimes provided information otherwise blocked by shielding or hidden structures, it is clear why military and intelligence agencies were interested."
Here he recounts the Pat Price remote viewing 'leak' from his time at SRI: https://www.instagram.com/demystifysci/reel/DBgnKkKPW9H/
I wasn't aware there still was government interest. In the non-governmental domain, The Rhine Research Center hosts a monthly Remote Viewing Group. Long ago when I was listening to Alex Tsakoris's Skeptiko podcast I remember hearing about amateur psi research groups. I am pretty sure that with all the technology, insights in methodology, statistics and cognitive biases we are better suited to see if there is such a thing as psi - even though years ago at a congress I heard that one of the ideas of parapsychologists was that the more you want to prove that psi exists the less hard results you are getting. How to account for that? Keep an open mind, not grasping? Coincidentally that's the attitude tantric buddhists and other groups are cultivating.
since it seems like government recruitment doesn't filter out people with such views, the government will end up with people in it who have such views. Some of those might eventually end up in charge of some stuff.
> the more you want to prove that psi exists the less hard results you are getting.
Funny that.
For those who haven't seen it yet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Men_Who_Stare_at_Goats_(fi...
It has been ages since I read it, but in Sagan's The Demon Haunted World -- which if you haven't read it is a paean to skepticism -- toward the end, he admitted that he found three areas of "psi research" to possibly require more examination. One was remote viewing.
As an aside, I miss Sagan. The above highlights some of his humility.
East of the Rockies, you’re on with Maj. Ed Dames.
Just a minute, let me turn off my radio (proceeds to fumble for 4 minutes)
Can we have some context?
It looks like circa 2010 the US was still trying to find out if it could use telepathy to spy on people.
I have only read the introduction and the conclusion (page 61) out of boredom and to find out what this was about.
I have no idea what "psi" is (EDIT: seems to be short for "psychic") - might be in the earlier pages, and I have no desire to find out.
Their introduction basically says that collecting intelligence is hard - to summarize the many sentences in one phrase - and therefore looking into alternative methods of "parapsychology" is worth it.
> Conclusion:
> Following on the heels of thousands of years of human experience, decades of well-conceived and increasingly scrupulous experimentation are finally providing compelling evidence for the existence of at least some forms of psi including remote viewing.
> The cognitive dissonance this evidence engenders within the larger scientific community mirrors in form and function that which has been created by the paradigm-changing pressures quantum physics continues to bring to bear on the modern scientific edifice.
> Simply put, reality is far stranger than classical physics could possibly imagine. Given the increasingly sharp lens through which modern physics views our reality, it grows increasingly likely that there will be established a theoretical framework capable of rationally explaining the existence of psi.
Riiiight.....
This part is funny:
One of the most difficult elements reported by viewers involved in the U.S. RV program was the nearly complete lack of feedback received following operational taskings. According to viewers, feedback is essential in helping them to acquire the inner insight needed to differentiate accurate impressions from inaccurate ones (...) tasking agencies should be required to provide the AE with not only a list of the key questions being asked, but also with all the related data currently possessed
I can guess exactly how old you are, but only if you tell me your date of birth.
I think it's saying that you're supposed to tell them how old you really are after they make the guess.
Yeah, the first part says "after I make a prediction, tell me exactly how far off I was so I can predict it again." The second part seems to say "I can only predict your age if you tell me everything you know about your age."
Cold reading - sorry "ESP" - is always easier with data to work from. It's just good science.
> I have no idea what "psi" is
Psi is the theorized ability in parapsychology for any sort of conventionally impossible ability. Telekinesis, mind reading, etc., it's all psi.
The thing about parapsychology is that there is a very barely statistical evidence for it. But if you dig into it, the strongest predictor of whether or not a study will find evidence for psi is... if the experimenter believes in psi. As I've heard someone else put it, parapsychology is a natural test of the scientific method--it's something which is impossible by the rest of science, so we should find no evidence for it, and if we're finding systematic evidence for it, it indicates a failure of the scientific method to weed out statistically random hypotheses.
Thanks for saving me time. Especially this part:
"""The cognitive dissonance this evidence engenders within the larger scientific community mirrors in form and function that which has been created by the paradigm-changing pressures quantum physics continues to bring to bear on the modern scientific edifice."""
Where my reaction was "Oh for crying out loud".
QM is many things, including "very difficult", but it's not cognitive dissonance — well, once you get past the "lies for kids" version told in pop science, at least.
Back when it was first introduced it was quite controversial for a long time. However "continues to bring to bear" is a fairly inexcusable thing to say.
Anyone here ever have a psychic experience they would be comfortable talking about?
Relevant (old) article: https://slatestarcodex.com/2014/04/28/the-control-group-is-o... .
Love that article, was hoping someone would post it.
I doubt any of it is real, but I do sometimes wonder how well the experiments and data analysis would fare if the mechanisms were strongly impacted by subtle case by case differences. Similar to how the data on antidepressants looks pretty bad until you perform a multi-drug analysis assuming that most drugs will be incompatible with a given patient (a topic he has also written about).
Clicked thinking this was related to OpenAI/Softbank.
If this is older, why is it called Stargate 2?
Should OpenAI/Softbank/Oracle then be "Stargate 3"?
Or if we want to be 'smoking man' conspiracy, maybe they have merged AI to a brain to enhance ESP?
Yes the recent project is the 3rd usage of the name, but it's unrelated.
This was the original:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stargate_Project_(U.S._Army_...
TFA is about the apparent continuation of that same work from the 70s.