BY GARY S. BEKKUM — Founder & Contributing Writer
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(Spies, Lies and Polygraph Tape) — Christopher C. Kit Green is a remarkably talented artist, who is best known as the former CIA Life Sciences analyst monitoring psychic perception research at Stanford Research Institute in the 1970s.
Over the years, Green has also acted as an independent contractor and consultant to various elements in the U.S. Department of Defense and the CIA in the field of neuroscience.
In 2008, I assisted in arranging a meeting between Dr. Green and a Chinese researcher who had devised an objective physics experiment to test for a telepathic connection between two human test subjects.
Shan Gao, the Chinese physicist, had thought long and hard for many years about resolving unsettled issues in the quantum theory.
At one of his website pages, Gao explains:
“In the early morning of 12 October 1993, I experienced a sudden enlightenment. At that moment, I felt that my body permeated the whole universe and I was united with it … A clear picture then appeared: a particle is jumping in a random and discontinuous way. It is not inert but active; it moves purely by its own free will … I realized that although there is the cause of the change of motion, which is force, motion itself has no cause, and thus it must be essentially random, i.e., God must play dice.”
By the late 1990s, Gao had developed his idea into a quantum theory of discontinuous motion, a theory he felt might also explain reports of strange paranormal telepathic connections between persons who are separated from each other.
In a series of papers, Gao published his ideas about telepathy, including an idea for an experiment to test for a quantum communication channel between two individuals.
Gao decided it might be possible for human consciousness — human awareness — to perceive a quantum superposition state. Unlike the standard interpretation of quantum theory, Gao’s non-linear discontinuous motion quantum theory allowed, in principle, for faster-than-light-speed signaling, called Quantum Superluminal Communication (QSC).
“According to the model, the telepathy process mainly includes three phases. The first phase is to form the quantum entanglement state of brains, the second phase is to hold the entanglement state of brains, and the third phase is to collapse the entanglement state of brains. When the entanglement state of brains is collapsed by a certain measurement on one of the subjects, the brain states of both subjects turn to be definite states from entanglement state, and the other subject will perceive the change at a distance according to the Quantum Superluminal Communication principle. When in the entanglement state or superposition state, no definite perception relating to the state exists, whereas when the superposition state collapses into a definite state, a definite perception relating to the collapse state appears. Then the telepathy between the subjects may appear.”
In 2008, Dr. Green had moved to China to act as assistant dean for Asia Pacific of the Wayne State School of Medicine, where he was able to meet Gao and discuss ideas for a telepathy experiment.
Dr. Green’s idea was to use fMRI brain scanning machines to objectively observe and record human test subjects in telepathically entangled states.
“I want to put a remote viewer person with proven skills at receiving mentation from a sender in one magnet, and the proven sender in a second magnet simultaneously,” Green had explained to me, in 2006.
“I understand that you were able to meet Shan in China?” I asked Green, by email. “I am wondering about the experiment mentioned to me by Shan … Is this the same as your previous idea to use fMRI?”
“I had a great meeting with Shan, and yes, the experiment is the same,” Green replied, verifying what I had already heard.
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In a series of email messages obtained by STARstream Research, Dr. Green warmly explained to various colleagues on both sides of the globe a concept for conducting a joint experiment.
“We have an idea, and the protocol, and want to extend in an fMRI experiment,” Green explained, “something attempted at Persinger’s laboratory in Montreal — and also at Harvard School of Medicine. In both cases we can improve on the experiment.”
Green went on to describe how the initial Chinese-American effort would proceed.
“The joint experiment would be a pilot study — at first with one subject, a normal healthy male in his 20s, and one outside the magnet in the Institute of Advanced Studies at Austin [former CIA-sponsored remote viewing researcher Dr. Hal Puthoff’s institute].”
In December 2008, Green and Gao presented their ideas on the quantum entanglement of brains experiment for the Chinese science academy.
“Shan Gao did a wonderful job today at his academy briefing,” Green wrote to me, “He impressed very tough and hard physicists. There are several who would very much like to work with us … thank you for hooking me up with Shan.”
Green would later tease an audience of dozens on a widely distributed email list forwarded by physicist Dr. Jack Sarfatti in San Francisco, shortly after the academy briefing.
“I was there because someone wanted a lab I am familiar with in Detroit to partner with Princeton University and Harvard School of Medicine … in an experiment using fMRI on quantum entanglement of brains … I had said several months ago I would support it if it was self-funded — except for my time of three hours a week for three months to read the MRI brain scans.”
The same month Gao and Green presented their idea to test telepathy using fMRI brain scans, Gao directed us to the results of an actual fMRI experiment by a group at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, in Bangalore, India published by the International Journal of Yoga.
To our knowledge … Ours is probably the first fMRI study to examine the neuroanatomical correlates of telepathy. fMRI offers methodological advantages of nonradioactive and noninvasive real-time imaging of the brain … This study’s findings are suggestive of an association between telepathy and the right parahippocampal gyrus. The methodological rigor, isolated and robust brain activation with telepathy, and established theoretical relevance of this brain region with reference to paranormal phenomena highlight the need for further studies using advanced fusion imaging techniques (simultaneous fMRI, EEG, and magnetoencephalography) to examine telepathy.
Story continues in part six … To catch this Skinwalker, it takes a thief
I’d like to express a special thank you to Shan Gao and Kit Green for keeping me updated on their progress regarding the experimental protocols discussed in this story.
Kit Green’s Mindtap
- Spies, lies, brain scanners and telepathy
- Attack at Skinwalker Ranch
- Sleight of Planet SERPO
- “We can watch a person decide to lie in real time”
- The Experiment
- To catch this Skinwalker, it takes a thief
Copyright (c) 2013 Gary S. Bekkum | STARstream Research | STARpod.us | PsycheLeaks — All rights reserved.
Image credit: National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services


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