Product Description
The book you hold in your hands is revolutionary, a groundbreaking exploration of the science of intention. It is also the first book to invite you, the reader, to take an active part in its original research. Drawing on the findings of leading scientists on human consciousness from around the world, The Intention Experiment demonstrates that thought is a thing that affects other things. Thought generates its own palpable energy that you can use to improve your life, to help others around you, and to change the world.In The Intention Experiment, internationally bestselling author Lynne McTaggart, an award-winning science journalist and leading figure in the human consciousness studies community, presents a gripping scientific detective story and takes you on a mind-blowing journey to the farthest reaches of consciousness. She profiles the colorful pioneers in intention science and works with a team of renowned scientists from around the world, including physicist Fritz-Albert Popp of the International Institute of Biophysics and Dr. Gary Schwartz, professor of psychology, medicine, and neurology at the University of Arizona, to determine the effects of focused group intention on scientifically quantifiable targets -- animal, plant, and human. The Intention Experiment builds on the discoveries of McTaggart's first book, international bestseller The Field: The Quest for the Secret Force of the Universe, which documented discoveries that point to the existence of a quantum energy field. The Field created a picture of an interconnected universe and a scientific explanation for many of the most profound human mysteries, from alternative medicine and spiritual healing to extrasensory perception and the collective unconscious. The Intention Experiment shows you myriad ways that all this information can be incorporated into your life. After narrating the exciting developments in the science of intention, McTaggart offers a practical program to get in touch with your own thoughts, to increase the activity and strength of your intentions, and to begin achieving real change in your life. After you've begun to realize the amazing potential of focused intention, and the times when it is most powerful, McTaggart invites you to participate in an unprecedented experiment: Using The Intention Experiment website to coordinate your involvement and track results, you and other participants around the world will focus your power of intention on specific targets, giving you the opportunity to become a part of scientific history. The Intention Experiment redefines what a book does. It is the first "living" book in three dimensions. The book's text and website are inextricably linked, forming the hub of an entirely self-funded research program, the ultimate aim of which is philanthropic. An original piece of scientific investigation that involves the reader in its quest, The Intention Experiment explores human thought and intention as a tangible energy -- an inexhaustible but simple resource with an awesome potential to focus our lives, heal our illnesses, clean up our communities, and improve the planet. The Intention Experiment also forces you to rethink what it is to be human. As it proves, we're connected to everyone and everything, and that discovery demands that we pay better attention to our thoughts, intentions, and actions. Here's how you can.
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Very happy
I prefer Sarah Shikitao-Brown's book, Tao Cycle Therapy: Natural Happiness via Self Directed Cure for Chronic Anxiety & Depression [Updated 2008 3nd Edition] but this one is the second best book I've read this year. It really makes you want to believe. I've always agreed with the concept, but I get a little annoyed when it starts to get a little too mystical for my taste. However, it's fairly easy to ignore that part of it and focus on the practical message.
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Very Well Written
It's put together perfectly, very well laid out and organized which makes it fairly easy to read. I'm not in love with the concept, but if you are, this a well thought out and professionally written book. Also try, Sarah Shikitao-Brown's book.
Tao Cycle Therapy: Natural Happiness via Self Directed Cure for Chronic Anxiety & Depression [Updated 2008 3nd Edition]
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show me the money!!!!!!!!!!! ( dukeofearl54 )
I had listened to a ten hour unabridged audiobook of this book and have found nearly all the material irrelevant. This book does not even touch on how to make money or fill up your own bank accounts. If the reader wants a real good book on self-improvement, then I would suggest The Work We Were Born To Do by Nick Williams. I am reading through the book, using a journal and doing the exercises. I expect to see significant improvement in one year.
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Inspirational despite lack of accuracy ( kauffman@hslc.org )
My criteria for non-fiction books of a scientific nature is extensive referencing with numbered citations, a good index, some diagrams, photos, graphs, tables, a clear structure, and high accuracy. This book has the first two, as well as an engaging, if not very scientific, writing style. Usually the use of 100% text is a hint that all is not well technically. As good as the writing is, some intransitive verbs are abused, and "research" is mistakenly used as a verb.
A great deal of research on ESP and psychokinesis (PK) is summarized to show that these phenomena are real. Prayer is also discussed with an honest presentation of a half dozen trials that showed that prayer does not work, as well as some that showed it does. Meditation and focusing thoughts are detailed. This leads gradually to the idea of The Intention Experiment as a mass projection of mental will toward a particular goal, such as healing a cancer in a specific person, at a specific time or times to send your thoughts. This is the current example on the website. A worldwide network of like-minded researchers, for whom donations are requested on the website, is supposed to give an honest evaluation of the results. If a Big Pharma drug trial were carried out in such a non objective manner, what would we think of it?
In praising the work of the Princeton Engineering Anomalous Research (PEAR) Laboratory on ESP and PK, McTaggart did not mention that a major discovery of the lab was that their random number generators (RNGs) were found to drift off random by themselves. Or that the PK effects were small enough to be in the noise level, supposedly attaining statistical significance only after huge numbers of repetition. My personal visit to the PEAR lab with an old friend and believer resulted in 3 types of machines (ball bearings dropping on and deflected by pegs to give a bell curve distribution, an RNG normally producing numbers that sum to zero, and a pendulum with a known period) all showing a slightly opposite tendency to the previously announced intention. A local skeptical technician in the PEAR lab said (in private) that "...they have nothing...".
A major failing of McTaggart was in giving too many examples with too little detail, writing that some experiment in PK gave a positive result (with a citation), but not how positive, or what percent of tries were positive, or what was the probability of chance for the result. There were some exceptions, as on the effect of praying on p161. Mass wishing (or praying) has had plenty of opportunity to achieve a result, as then a new ruler of a country proves to be a vicious dictator whom a majority of subjects wish ousted or dead. No clear result of thought or intention has ever been proven; only assassination works.
One good way to judge the veracity of an author is to note his accuracy on topics you are certain about. If normal science and technology are treated competently, it is reasonable to give the author some slack on paranormal topics. This was not the case with this book. Example 1 on p166 on "effect size" has aspirin considered to be "...one of the most successful heart attack preventives of modern times... has an effect size of 0.032..." I have no idea from this how an effect size is calculated, and aspirin, while preventing about 30% of heart attacks in men who never had one according to the best trials, does not increase lifespan because of side effects, and thus is not worth taking. See: Joel M. Kauffman, "Should You Take Aspirin to Prevent Heart Attack?", J. Scientific Exploration 14 (4), 623-41 (2000). Example 2 on p169: The beta-blocker propranolol is said to be recognized as extremely effective. At what? The type of effect was not given. Trials showed it not to lower heart disease incidence or to increase lifespan by a statistically significant period. See: Psaty BM et al., JAMA 1997;277:739. Example 3 on p178: The German biologist "Popp has a number of extremely sensitive photocount detectors at his disposal, which can register an intensity of visible light of about 10-17 watts per square centimeter, analogous to the light coming from a candle several miles away." Well, I would hope so, because the light at the surface of a 100 watt light bulb is about 1 watt/cm2. And that was one powerful candle! A list of several dozen shaky claims may be had by e-mailing me at kauffman37@yahoo.com.
So does ESP or PK exist? Maybe, but this is not the book to rely on for an answer. A short one with opposing views and a really scientific mindset which I recommend is: Paranormal Phenomena: Opposing Viewpoints, Greenhaven Press, San Diego, CA, 1997.
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Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World
Easy to read, Very powerful and enlightening on how our intention can affect our lives and everyone around us.
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