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| The Ultimate Time Machine: A Remote Viewer's Perception of Time, and Predictions for the New Millennium: A Remote Viewers Perception of Time, and Predictions for the New Millennium | 
enlarge | Authors: Joseph Mcmoneagle, Charles T. Tart Publisher: Hampton Roads Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 (35.19 RON) Buy New: $10.17 (23.94 RON) You Save: $4.78 (11.25 RON) (32%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 201366
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 280 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 157174102X Dewey Decimal Number: 133.9 EAN: 9781571741028 ASIN: 157174102X
Publication Date: October 1, 1998 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Save $10.00 when you spend $50.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review If you crossed the writings of Ken Wilber and the prophecies of Nostradamus, you would probably end up with something close to The Ultimate Time Machine, a unique philosophical perspective on the nature of the past, present, and future. As a remote viewer with a respected record of accuracy and over 30 years of work with the United States government and in the private sector, McMoneagle is one of the most qualified people in the 20th century for predicting what the future may hold. While many readers will initially be attracted to the prophetic aspects of The Ultimate Time Machine, the most rewarding aspect of this book is McMoneagle's perception of time. For most of us, time is a tool for marking the events in our lives--what time is that business meeting? how old is he? when was the first wheel made?--but McMoneagle suggests that the future, and even the past, are not necessarily on the fixed, linear path that we think they are, but actually are connected in a flexible web that we continually influence with the ultimate time machines, ourselves. --Brian Patterson
Product Description
Joseph McMoneagle is an extraordinary remote viewer, a "psychic spy," whose experiences have given him a special insight into the nature of time and human perception. For more than seventeen years, he was a researcher and remote viewer for the top-secret Army project STARGATE. For years after that, he journeyed through time while working in a consciousness-development lab with out-of-body experience pioneer Robert A. Monroe. McMoneagle explores the questions that philosophers have for centuries debated: Does time really exist? Do our actions today really affect our future? Can we change the past? Do we slip between alternate realities? In The Ultimate Time Machine, McMoneagle delivers new insights into these mysteries, including:
- First-hand information--including transcripts from lab sessions--on the origins of humanity, the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, and the building of the Egyptian pyramids.
- Provocative suggestions about the nature of time, creation, and a constantly changing past.
- A detailed picture of our immediate future through the year 2075.
- More than 150 very explicit predictions on world population, aging, religious fragmentation, lifestyle changes, technological developments, and dozens of major changes to laws, customs and practices--all within a positive and constructive framework.
- A vision of the year 3000, comprising a test of what the author calls the "Verne Effect"--our ability to create and manipulate our future.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
A Room With a View...of the Future July 25, 2008 McMoneagle starts out with a brief history of Star Gate and remote viewing, then gets into his remote views of past and future people, places and events. Both the past and future and equally fascinating. When you get into viewing the future, you open yourself up for all sorts of criticism. But the author writes what he viewed, and that is interesting enough. As he explains, multiple realities and parallel universes are highly probable, so what you "believe" depends on your own paradigm.
In the past he gets into how the pyramids were built, the Kennedy assassination, and Jesus, who has a keen sense of humor. The future is broken down into several areas, like technology, social, economic, government, planetary issues, etc. If you want to know what his predictions were, buy the book. I'm not telling.
10 years after the predictions their merrits are questionable June 7, 2007 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
A book full of predictions is best judged after the "facts". In this respect its a 90% flop. Any future vision from 1998 that does not remotely perceive of 9/11 and the ensuing new american war in iraq is not worth the name. although mcmoneyagle predicts another war in iraq within a 5 year timespan from 1998 he describes it as local conflict between iran turkey and iraq fighting over the kurdish parts - and those parts where least affected by he "real" events. He is also frighteningly nationalistic. His coutry above all - in the light of the new american empire, internal reduction of democracy to an empty shell and Bush's stand against the Kyoto protocol a dangerously childish notion. I shows me that even insight from higher realms does not mean one learns from them. He writes in an entertaining way and the book is an easy read. the visions about mankinds beginings and the year 3000 are amusing, however in the light of the reliability of closer-to-home predicitons that are mostly all wrong their value is reduced to entertainment.
The Ultimate Time Machine January 10, 2007 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
The book is a bit dated, but may provide some insight into the practice of remote viewing for purposes of military intelligence, if such a practice actually still exists. No revelations.
Lost me halfway through the book December 18, 2005 3 out of 14 found this review helpful
After reading David Morehouse's Psychic Warrior and a couple of Russel Targ books and having an interest in remote viewing particularly in going ahead in years, I decided to try this book. I couldn't relate to how by remote viewing he could come up with such very extensive predictions. Even the very near future, seven years since he wrote the book, the predictions for this period were either far off or something that was already in the works in 1998 on the hits. The book was a great disappointment. I still believe in remote viewing but I think his imagination took over in his attempt at predicting the future in this book.
More entertaining than watching television October 31, 2005 5 out of 35 found this review helpful
I can attest to the author's views, because I too have precognition, telepathy, and remote viewing ability. For example, right now I see the author counting his income from the book and laughing at the gullibility of new age readers.
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