Mar 4, 2019
Stephan A. Schwartz is a Distinguished Consulting Faculty of
Saybrook University, and a Research Associate of the Cognitive
Sciences Laboratory of the Laboratories for Fundamental Research.
He is the columnist for the journal Explore, and editor of the
daily web publication Schwartzreport.netin both of which
he covers trends that are affecting the future. He also writes
regularly for The Huffington Post.
His other academic and research appointments include: Senior
Samueli Fellow for Brain, Mind and Healing of the Samueli
Institute; founder and Research Director of the Mobius laboratory;
Director of Research of the Rhine Research Center; and Senior
Fellow of The Philosophical Research Society. Government
appointments include: Special Assistant for Research and Analysis
to the Chief of Naval Operations, consultant to the Oceanographer
of the Navy. He has also been editorial staff member of National
Geographic, Associate Editor of Sea Power. And staff reporter and
feature writer for The Daily Pressand The Times
Herald.
For 40 years he has been studying the nature of consciousness,
particularly that aspect independent of space and time. Schwartz is
part of the small group that founded modern Remote Viewing
research, and is the principal researcher studying the use of
Remote Viewing in archaeology. Using Remote Viewing he discovered
Cleopatra's Palace, Marc Antony's Timonium, ruins of the Lighthouse
of Pharos, and sunken ships along the California coast, and in the
Bahamas. He also uses remote viewing to examine the future. Since
1978, he has been getting people to remote view the year 2050, and
out of that has come a complex trend analysis. His submarine
experiment, Deep Quest, using Remote Viewing helped determine that
non-local consciousness is not an electromagnetic phenomenon. Other
areas of experimental study include research into creativity,
meditation, and Therapeutic Intent/Healing.
He is the author of more than 130 technical reports and papers. In
addition to his experimental studies he has written numerous
magazine articles for Smithsonian, OMNI, American History,
American Heritage, The Washington Post, The New York Times, as
well as other magazines and newspapers. He hás produced and written
a number television documentaries, and has written four books:
The Secret Vaults of Time, The Alexandria Project, Mind Rover,
Opening to the Infinite,and his latest,The 8 Laws of
Change.
Websites:
www.stephanaschwartz.com
www.schwartzreport.net
www.explorejournal.com/contents/schwartz
The Alexandria Project:
The Alexandria Projectis the true story of how researchers
from five universities and organizations went to Egypt to put the
claims of a psychic ability known as Remote Viewing to the ultimate
test. Was it possible, under rigorously controlled conditions, for
some part of the human mind to locate and describe ancient sites
known to exist, but now lost to history? How good was Remote
Viewing when compared with electronic remote sensing technologies
traditionally used by archaeologists? This book, and the research
papers and film that accompany it, provides the surprising
answers.