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COLLECTIVE CONSCIOUSNESS: THE PRINCETON EXPERIMENT
If collective consciousness exists, and if it’s detectable with existing technology, then, in the Princeton experiment, it should affect REG-generated data during events where large numbers of people are thinking about the same thing at the same time. Examples of events would include:
- A major terrorist attack such as 9/11
- An election
- A natural disaster such as a major earthquake or hurricane
- A mass-media event such as an international fundraising musical extravaganza
When comparing the data from one REG with the data from another, you would expect to find no statistical correlations beyond what would be expected by chance, if human thinking did not influence the electronically-generated data from the REGs.
But the results of the Princeton experiment, which have been reported continuously since 1998, show numerous statistically significant REG data correlations associated with major humanly important events. The closer the event is physically located to a REG, the greater the effect on the REG data.
While the results neither “prove” nor “disprove” specific cause-and-effect claims, they do provide solid evidence supporting the collective consciousness hypothesis of the investigators.
The scientific rigour with which the monitoring and reporting system was established, and the results it has produced, make the Princeton experiment one of the most fascinating ever devised. You can find out about it and have a look at the results to date (and even the raw data) at their website:
http://Noosphere.Princeton.edu