THE PRINCETON ENGINERING ANOMALIES LABORATORY OR PEAR IS CLOSING THE DOOR ON MIND MATTER RESEARCH: The Princeton Engineering
Anomalies Research laboratory, or PEAR, will shut down after years of diligently exploring interactions between mind and matter. The lab conducted parallel experimental research on telekinesis and ESP by testing for motion generated by human-machine interactions, as well as, remote perception between humans. The human-machine research involved monitoring people as they attempted to use mind power to
influence movement in a variety of mechanical, electronic, optical, acoustical,and fluid gadgets to harmonize with preformed mental intentions without using any physical interaction. Often shrouded by
controversy, the research spanned 28 years. PEAR founder, Robert G Jahn, 76, said that controversy did not trigger the verdict to pull the plug on research.It’s a combination of dwindling finances, aging equipment, and a shrinking need to generate more of the same data consistently collected during the labs 28 year mission, and will close at the end of February 2007. The repercussions from the PEAR data remain unclear, although confirming the mind’s influence on machinery is a captivating nod to the possibility that humans may be able to apply this method to facilitate self-healing, or healing of others. Critics counter that information about implications and practical applications linked to the results are unclear and difficult to extract because of the minuscule changes charted during the long-term studies. Still the lingering tantalizing inference is that the emotions or attitudes of human equipment operators may resonate with the machines they use thereby potentially influencing subtle changes in the equipment’s function. Full article: at link: