Remote Mental Interactions: A Review of Theoretical Modeling of Psychophysical Anomalies

Remote Mental Interactions: A Review of Theoretical Modeling of Psychophysical Anomalies: This article presents a review of theoretical modeling of psychophysical anomalies. It originates from my involvement with the Journal of Non-Locality and Remote Mental Interactions (JNLRMI) which was founded by Lian Sidorov in the wake of research institutions of previous decades, such as SRI, IONS, PEARS, and MRU. JNLRMI began as an attempt to bridge widely scattered evidence and ideas on the frontline of mind-matter research (energetics, remote mind-mind and mind-matter interactions). JNLRMI was a challenging and exhilarating journey, sustained by multidisciplinary readership interest in the subject.

Part 1 of this article contains Introduction; Make Me Want to Psi; Open Sesame; From Trance to Creativity; Psi Deeply; Hypnosis & SP; Dream of Telepathy and Beyond; and Cyber Psi Training.

Part 2 of this article contains Biophysics of Psi; Shaving with Occam's Razor; Editor's Note in JNLRMI 2(1) by Lian Sidorov; Editor's Note in JNLRMI 2(2) by Lian Sidorov; The Mind in Time: A Round Table Discussion on Causality, Physics and Parapsychology moderated by Lian Sidorov; and Memes, Societies and the Functional Architecture of the Collective Unconscious by Lian Sidorov.

Part 3 of this article contains a round-table discussion on memory, information and the limits of identity entitled “Who and where is the Self?” moderated by JNLRMI Editor, Lian Sidorov, and participated by Roger Nelson, Stanley Krippner, Jim Tucker, Mark Germine, Chris King, Matti Pitkanen and Gerry Zeitlin. Such discussions help researchers re-contextualize what has come before, determine where we “are” in deciphering the minscape, and where we are going by suggesting pertinent open-ended questions.

Part 4 of this article contains the continuation of the round-table discussion on memory, information and the limits of identity entitled “Who and where is the Self?” started in Part 3. This overview is an attempt to create a Big Picture view on the state of the art from which further experimental routes can be deduced. The round-table was moderated by JNLRMI Editor, Lian Sidorov, with respondents Roger Nelson, Stanley Krippner, Jim Tucker, Mark Germine, Chris King, Matti Pitkanen and Gerry Zeitlin.