Imagine standing under a vast, animated Aurora Borealis, and seeing
it change colors as you changed your thoughts. This exact situation
led Russian medical doctor Alexander Trofimov into his
groundbreaking research on human consciousness, in collaboration
with Vlail P. Kaznacheev, and following in the footsteps of the
great 20th century physicist Nikolai Kozyrev.
Kozyrev devised reproducible experiments that prove the existence of
a “torsional energy field” beyond electromagnetism and gravity,
which travels much faster than light. He called it the “flow of
time.” Others, Einstein among them, have called it “ether.” Others
call it “zero point energy.”
Within this “flow of time,” the past, present, and future all exist
at the same time, and in every place. This discovery sets the stage
for all psychic phenomena to be scientifically explainable. Trofimov
and Kaznacheev have, for the past thirty years, been experimentally
developing the practical explanations, and have made some surprising
discoveries.
Trofimov is general director at the ISRIC in Novosibirsk. His main
experimental apparatus in his laboratory consists of two hollow,
metal (aluminum), person-sized tubes, equipped with mattresses and
drinking water, similar to the picture directly above.
The first, dubbed “Kozyrev’s Mirrors,” reflects thought energy
(which exists within the “flow of time”) back to the thinker. This
apparatus, invented by Kozyrev, gives access to intensified
consciousness and altered states, including non-linear time —
similar to a deep meditational state.
Trofimov’s work has consisted of “remote viewing” experiments
across both distance and time. They discovered that results are more
positive when the “sender” is in the far north, where the
electromagnetic field is less powerful. So they invented a second
apparatus that shields an experimental subject from the local
electromagnetic field. Within this apparatus, their subjects can
reliably access all place and time — past, present, and future —
instantaneously. Construction specifications for these apparatus are
published in Russian scientific literature.
Among Trofimov and Kaznacheev’s conclusions are:
The implication is that the global electromagnetic soup of cell phones, radio, television and electric appliances actually impedes our innate communication abilities. The further implication is that expanded human consciousness is mechanically producible now, which raises the vast ethical question of how these apparatus can be most beneficially used.