Multiple laboratories have reported physiological and psychological changes associated with future events that are designed to be unpredictable by normal sensory means. Such phenomena seem to be examples of retrocausality at the macroscopic level. Here I will discuss the characteristics of seemingly retrocausal effects in biology and psychology, specifically examining a biological and a psychological form of precognition, predictive anticipatory activity (PAA) and implicit precognition. The aim of this examination is to offer an analysis of the constraints posed by the characteristics of macroscopic retrocausal effects. Such constraints are critical to assessing any physical theory that purports to explain these effects. Following a brief introduction to recent research on PAA and implicit precognition, I will describe what I believe we have learned so far about the nature of these effects, and conclude with a testable, yet embryonic, model of macroscopic retrocausal phenomena.
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Research Article|
May 31 2017
Examining the nature of retrocausal effects in biology and psychology
Julia Mossbridge
Julia Mossbridge
a)
1Visiting Scholar, Department of Psychology,
Northwestern University
, Evanston, IL 60208, USA
2Scientist,
Institute of Noetic Sciences
, Petaluma, CA, 94952, USA
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a)
Corresponding author: [email protected]
AIP Conf. Proc. 1841, 030004 (2017)
Citation
Julia Mossbridge; Examining the nature of retrocausal effects in biology and psychology. AIP Conf. Proc. 31 May 2017; 1841 (1): 030004. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4982775
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