Remote viewing began as a term coined by Ingo Swann to describe gaining information about distant targets. It describes a trained skill that lets a person perceive details beyond normal senses.
Many people have intuitive flashes. The program for study started in the 1970s and grew as researchers and the government tested the faculty for intelligence use.
Professional remote viewers and scientists found this is a learnable faculty. With regular practice, viewers refine natural abilities and improve accuracy over time.
Reports from remote viewers describe unique experiences when they remote view locations or events across the world. The method is structured to give consistent results for more than just a few gifted people.
Key Takeaways
- Ingo Swann coined the phrase and helped shape the program in the 1970s.
- Remote viewing is a learnable skill, not only a natural gift.
- Government studies explored the faculty for possible intelligence value.
- Practice over time boosts a viewer’s perception and accuracy.
- Many people report vivid experiences when they remote view distant events.
- For exercises and practice, see remote viewing exercises.
Understanding the Basics of Remote Viewing
Scientific tests revealed that the ability to perceive distant targets is not limited to a few gifted individuals.
The Stanford Research Institute found this method can be taught to many people. The research showed the brain naturally has the capacity for this type of perception.
With steady practice, any person can sharpen their skills. Training emphasizes filters for mental noise and clear, repeatable procedures.
- Practice builds accuracy and confidence.
- A structured way of learning makes the process reliable.
- Many report life benefits as the skill becomes part of daily routine.
Patience matters: progress is gradual as the brain learns to focus and ignore distractions.

| Trait | Early Benefit | Practice Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Learnability | Accessible to most people | Short daily sessions |
| Mental clarity | Less noise, clearer impressions | Focus and breath work |
| Integration | Improved intuition in life | Keep a practice journal |
For practical exercises and related techniques, see sending healing energy.
The Origins of the Government Research Program
Researchers at the Stanford Research Institute launched experiments to see if human consciousness could reach beyond the body. Funding from the CIA in the 1970s supported this formal line of research.
The SRI team, led by physicists Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff, invited people such as Ingo Swann to test focused perception. Swann introduced numerical coordinates to help a viewer lock onto a specific location or target.

The Stanford Research Institute Experiments
SRI trials measured whether trained people could report accurate details about distant locations. Results suggested a repeatable signal in some sessions. That finding led to further study and training methods.
Expansion into Military Intelligence
The work grew into a broader program during the Cold War. The Stargate program ran for years and cost about $20 million before declassification in 1995.
| Year | Lead | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 1970s | Russell Targ & Harold Puthoff | Lab experiments, coordinates method |
| 1980s | Military teams | Operational intelligence uses |
| 1995 | Government | Program closed and declassified |
Notable figures like Joe McMoneagle showed that a trained viewer could supply usable information about events around the world. The program changed the lives of many remote viewers and altered views on human abilities.
How Does Controlled Remote Viewing Work
The method starts by teaching a person to notice raw sensory impressions before meaning. The training asks a viewer to separate signal from the noise in the mind. That early separation helps clean the path for true perceptions.
Sessions begin with simple data: colors, textures, and shapes. The viewer records these basic impressions first. Only later does the person try naming a place, object, or person.
This way reduces guessing. The brain wants quick answers, so the program stresses suspending judgment. Keeping words off the page early preserves subtle information.

Maintaining a calm state of consciousness lets impressions arrive with less distortion. Many viewers find first impressions are often the most accurate.
- Start with raw sensations.
- Note textures, colors, and simple shapes.
- Delay labels until later stages.
- Stay receptive and record without editing.
| Step | Focus | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Signal separation | Filter mental noise | Short, quiet sessions |
| Initial sensing | Textures and colors | Write without naming |
| Verification | Target details | Compare impressions later |
| Integration | Refine ability | Keep a practice journal |
For a related perspective on perception training, see clairvoyant secrets revealed. This material complements program methods and helps a new viewer understand their own impressions.
The Six Stages of the CRV Methodology
The six-stage CRV sequence guides a viewer from a simple impression to a layered model of the target. It maps a clear path so a person can collect reliable data without jumping to conclusions.

Initial Sensory Impressions
Stage 1 is the launch point. The viewer gets a brief glimpse of the target’s basic nature.
Stage 2 captures raw sensations: colors, smells, textures, and simple shapes. These early impressions are recorded before labels appear.
Dimensionality and Sketching
Stage 3 asks the viewer to map space and scale. Simple sketches link the mind to the location and lock in structure.
Advanced Conceptual Data
Stage 4 opens complex conceptual information. The person begins to receive meanings, relationships, and context.
Stage 5 mines off-signal-line details for deeper facts, while Stage 6 builds a three-dimensional model of the scene. Over the years this method gave better results than unstructured practice, helping remote viewers refine abilities and trust perception.
For related training and perspectives, see psychic powers.
Scientific Perspectives on Psychic Functioning
Over many years, statisticians and experimenters have applied science to questions about perception beyond the senses.
Major studies include the PEAR lab at Princeton, which ran two decades of experiments on intention and random number generators. Those tests suggested an effect of consciousness on physical systems in the world.
Statistician Jessica Utts reviewed government data and concluded the program’s results met standard scientific criteria. Independent analyses by Dean Radin used meta‑analysis to show small but consistent perception effects across many studies.

- Research over years supports that viewers report impressions beyond chance.
- Meta‑analyses find a reliable, small effect in the population.
- Lab work suggests the body and brain can access distant information.
| Study | Focus | Finding |
|---|---|---|
| PEAR lab (Princeton) | Intention on RNGs | Small, replicable effect over years |
| SRI program | Perception of distant targets | Consistent impressions above chance |
| Meta‑analyses | Across multiple studies | Statistically significant, small effects |
What this means: when researchers apply scientific standards, many results point to genuine perception effects rather than fraud or pure chance. For background on related psi research, see what is ESP.
Developing Your Own Remote Viewing Skills
A steady routine and a curious, open mind help a person grow this ability. Start with short sessions and build them into your weekly schedule.
Practice matters: simple sensing drills train the brain to notice impressions without rushing to a label. Keep notes and compare results over time.
The Importance of Ambiguity and Practice
Embrace uncertainty. Let impressions arrive without forcing meaning. That pause reduces guessing and improves later verification.

Many resources connect learners to the field. Groups like the International Remote Viewers Association offer guidance and a point of contact for new viewers.
“Consistent practice strengthens the link between your mind and the target.”
- You do not need a special gift; the program was built for any interested person.
- Balance curiosity with skepticism; the science and research are still evolving.
- Reading accounts from experienced remote viewers gives useful roadmaps and context.
For a related perspective on psychic perception, see exploring clairvoyant abilities. With time and steady practice, many find their life and beliefs shift as new experiences arrive.
Conclusion
Exploring distant impressions can change expectations about human awareness. Remote viewing invites you to test perception and gather meaningful information beyond the obvious.
The old government program made this field public, and many remote viewers kept training after declassification. With simple practice, a curious person can develop the ability to notice subtle cues and report them with care.
Try short, regular sessions and keep notes. A disciplined viewer learns to separate early impressions from quick judgments. That habit protects clarity and boosts accuracy.
Remain open and question your beliefs about consciousness. Whether you value the science or the personal experience, remote viewing offers a clear path to new insight.