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Mind Control, Psi & Consciousness
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The Precognition Paper That Detonated Psychology: How 'Feeling the Future' Broke the Rules and Then Broke the Field
In 2011 a respected Cornell professor published nine experiments in a flagship journal showing students could 'feel' the future. The findings were almost certainly an illusion — and proving how that illusion got published helped trigger psychology's replication crisis.

The Doctor Who Tried to Delete People: Inside MKULTRA Subproject 68
A celebrated psychiatrist used drug-induced comas and tape loops played for weeks to wipe his patients' minds blank, then rebuild them. The CIA paid for it, and the patients never agreed to any of it.

The CIA Dosed Its Own Scientist With LSD. Nine Days Later He Went Out a 10th-Floor Window.
In 1953, CIA chemist Sidney Gottlieb secretly slipped LSD to Army biological-warfare scientist Frank Olson. Nine days later Olson fell to his death from a New York hotel. The government called it suicide — until a 1994 exhumation and second autopsy reopened everything.

The Woman Who Was Three: How a Filmed Hypnosis Session Wrote a Diagnosis Into the Manual
Two Georgia psychiatrists filmed a housewife switching between personalities under hypnosis, turned it into a bestseller and an Oscar-winning film, and helped seed multiple personality disorder into psychiatry's official manual. The patient spent the rest of her life insisting the famous version of her story was wrong.

He Drew a Secret Soviet Crane With His Eyes Shut, Then Died in a Las Vegas Hotel Room
In 1974 a former police commissioner sat in California and sketched a giant gantry crane inside one of the Soviet Union's most secret nuclear sites, a detail later confirmed by satellite. A year later he was dead of a heart attack in Las Vegas, and the CIA file is real.

The Dean Who Spent 28 Years Watching People Bend Machines With Their Minds
An Ivy League engineering dean ran a basement lab at Princeton for nearly three decades, logging millions of trials in which ordinary people seemed to nudge random-number machines by intention alone. The effect was microscopic, statistically persistent, and it refused to disappear.

The Doctors Who Booby-Trapped the ICU Ceiling to Catch the Soul Leaving the Body
If dying patients really rise above themselves, a picture placed where only a floating eye could read it would prove it. Sam Parnia's team built that trap into real hospitals — and the answer it returned was more interesting than yes or no.

They Hid Pictures on High Shelves So the Dying Would Have to Float Up to Read Them
Dr. Sam Parnia's AWARE study placed images that could only be seen from the ceiling in dozens of hospital resuscitation bays — a genuinely falsifiable test of whether the soul leaves the body. The result is the most honest answer the field has ever produced.
Flatline At 60°F: The Woman Who Described The Operating Room While Clinically Dead
Pam Reynolds' EEG was silent, her brainstem unresponsive, her blood drained and her body chilled to 60 degrees — and she later described the unusual bone saw and a remark made by the surgeon. The fight is entirely over when, exactly, she perceived it.

The U.S. Army Pinned a Legion of Merit on a Soldier for Intelligence 'Unavailable From Any Other Source.' His Only Instrument Was His Mind
Joseph McMoneagle was the Army's Remote Viewer No. 1, and his Legion of Merit citation credits him with producing critical intelligence by remote viewing. The medal is real and the wording is on the record; what it proves is the contested part.

The Army Manual That Asked Soldiers to Stop a Goat's Heart With Their Eyes
It became a George Clooney comedy because the source material was already absurd — but the 'Warrior Monk' manual was a genuine U.S. Army document, and the goat-staring really was tried.

The 20 Years the U.S. Government Paid Psychics to Spy — and Then Posted the Files Online
For two decades the U.S. Army and CIA ran a classified program training people to psychically 'see' distant targets. The whole archive is now public, and it shows a government that took ESP seriously enough to fund it, then concluded it couldn't be trusted operationally.

They Sealed the Spoon-Bender in a Steel Room to Catch Him Cheating. They Published in Nature Instead
Before he was a TV act, Uri Geller spent weeks at the Stanford Research Institute under government-adjacent physicists who tried to expose him. The result was a 1974 paper in Nature, and a controls fight that has never fully resolved.

The U.S. Army Officer Who Told the CIA That Sound Could Pop You Out of Spacetime
A real Army intelligence officer wrote an official 1983 assessment, now declassified, concluding that the right audio frequencies could synchronize the brain's hemispheres and detach consciousness from the ordinary limits of time and space.
