Project misson

 

 The harmony project starts with Kara's research study and publication of her dissertation while the institute is being formed. 

As a Doctoral Candidate in Integral and Transpersonal Psychology at CIIS, Kara will be conducting her dissertation research study on magnetoreception and ESP with volunteer participants in Kilauea, HI this year, incorporating the implications of unified field theory physics to make an argument that the heart field is encoding information and we have etheric communication systems in the body allowing us to sense this electromagnetic information from others.  Kara will be turning her dissertation into a book about her experience and awareness of the field and is gratefully accepting donations and benefactors who wish to support her research.  Following is the abstract of her dissertation proposal:

Magnetoreception and ESP: An Investigation into Human Magnetic Alignment, Magnetic Sensitivity, and Interoception

 

ABSTRACT

 

Magnetoreception is understood generally as the perceptual sense of magnetic fields and is known to be used by migrating species who sense the geomagnetic field for navigation, but this sense has not been established as a perceptive capacity in humans.  Human magnetoreception, if it exists, may be a mechanism associated with extrasensory perception (ESP): the apparent capacity to receive information outside of known perception.  Research into possible human magnetoreception has focused mainly on navigational behaviors in relation to the Earth's magnetic field, with some evidence to suggest humans do have a magnetic sense (Baker, 2017).  A recent study has demonstrated that human cells respond to magnetic fields (Ikeyaa & Woodward, 2021), and human organs generate magnetic fields with the heart producing the largest of all organs (McCraty, Atkinson, Tomasino, & Bradley, 2009).  It is possible that these discoveries might point towards an electromagnetic communication system within the body, which—if demonstrated—might also play a role in how the nervous system receives information externally from magnetic fields associated with others and with the environment.  The research question is as follows: Are adult humans able to sense magnetic fields consciously, as evidenced by self-report, and/or unconsciously, as evidenced by spontaneous alignment with geomagnetic fields?  The hypotheses are humans will display evidence of magnetoreception by aligning with Earth's North-South magnetic axis, as well as in a second trial aligning with an electromagnet placed in their vicinity, when deprived of visual and ordinary sensory directional cues, and humans will sense an increasing magnetic field as it approaches their own biofields.  A secondary hypothesis is higher interoception will correlate with stronger orientation to Earth's magnetic axis and with higher magnetic sensitivity.