INACS Remote Searching Project
Can we reliably locate missing objects? A Validation Study of Remote Searching Presented by James King and Robert Price Tuesday, November 18, 2014, 6:30–9 p.m. Austin Center for Spiritual Living (map) $5 non-member donation appreciated! Join Jim King, INACS’ founder, and Bob Price, INACS’ research director, as they describe their recently completed four-year study into remote searching. The proposal for this study was the recipient of the International Remote Viewing Association’s 2012 Warcollier Prize, honoring the most promising research proposal in the area of remote viewing. While many people are familiar with remote viewing since details of the US government’s secret program were made public in the late 1990s, most are not familiar with a closely-related ability, remote searching (sometimes referred to as remote dowsing, or simply dowsing). In simplest terms, whereas remote viewing involves describing an unknown object often at a known location, remote searching involves determining the location of a known object. If remote searching could be successfully accomplished in a controlled and reliable manner, the implications would be enormous. Remote searching could be extremely useful in locating missing children, prisoners of war, the missing Malaysian flight MH370, or



