Oh, and if you don’t take my word for it how about Richard Feynman (who very scientifically refused to believe while giving his account.)
I cite Feynman’s book: Surely you're joking mr. feynman
Firstly when he describes his experiences with sensory deprivation chambers (which is a whole cult culture dedicated to exploration through mind entanglement.)
Anecdotally, his discussion with his voices at night while drifting to sleep.
And that funny conversation he had when trying to join the army to go off to war (controls played a funny game with him, they didn’t want him charging off to war.)
It is easy to refuse to believe signs of an uncomfortable truth yet these conversations throughout history do add up.
We are not alone in our own minds, and there exists a quantum consciousness technology within us incomprehensible by ordinary modern minds.
They are playing games with us, these disembodied men with capacities easily confused with those of God or devils, take your pick.
But it fits more easily with the bi-cameral mind idea than with a telepathic control organisation. Why would anyone want to charge off to war and die? You don't need to invoke an all powerful being to dissuade someone from joining a war.
Did you read the book? It’s a good one. He was rejected (and they guy conducting the evaluation laughed secretly at him).
Feynman wanted to march off to war. Back then, that war was perceived as a righteous war. Hard to believe, I know.
And bicameral doesn’t explain away the thought controlling. Those thought controlling are a thousand miles away in the protected confines of solitude, not hiding behind a bush a dozen feet away.
I have read Surely You're Joking, Mr Feynman, but long enough ago that I don't remember much of it - handstanding while drinking water to see if swallowing was gravity driven, misdirecting ants by moving their trails around, offering women drinks at bars only if they agreed to sleep with him up-front, learning 'consequentamente' in Portuguese because the Spanish classes were full, fixing radios by thinking (and then swapping valves around), eating chocolate cake for every cafe desert so he never had to think about it again, meeting a safecracker, et al. But no memory of sensory deprivation tanks or trying to go to war.
> "those thought controlling are a thousand miles away in the protected confines of solitude, not hiding behind a bush a dozen feet away."
Have you read Jon Ronson's book The Men Who Stare At Goats[1]? An account of the US army's paranormal investigations. It is non-fiction but reads like Catch-22.
I cite Feynman’s book: Surely you're joking mr. feynman
Firstly when he describes his experiences with sensory deprivation chambers (which is a whole cult culture dedicated to exploration through mind entanglement.)
Anecdotally, his discussion with his voices at night while drifting to sleep.
And that funny conversation he had when trying to join the army to go off to war (controls played a funny game with him, they didn’t want him charging off to war.)
It is easy to refuse to believe signs of an uncomfortable truth yet these conversations throughout history do add up.
We are not alone in our own minds, and there exists a quantum consciousness technology within us incomprehensible by ordinary modern minds.
They are playing games with us, these disembodied men with capacities easily confused with those of God or devils, take your pick.