Clairvoyance

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Clairvoyance — from French clair (clear) + voyance (vision) — is the historic name for the purported faculty of acquiring information about objects, events, or persons not accessible to ordinary senses. Within the Cosmic Codex cluster, clairvoyance is the parent-faculty name in the Psychic Abilities taxonomy, anchoring remote viewing, precognition, and mediumship in a common lineage.

DOCUMENTEDEpistemic statuscategory
MethodsDocumented in mainstream parapsychology programme record (SRI/Stargate, PEAR, GCP, Ganzfeld meta-analyses); effect-sizes typically small with replication-contest history.
FalsifierDocumentary record shown to be fabricated or systematically misrepresented; pre-registered meta-replication batch fails decisively across multiple independent labs.
Confidencemedium
Last reviewed2026-05-12

Historical Lineage

The term clairvoyance enters formal use in 18th-century French Mesmerist literature, becomes central in 19th-century Spiritualist and Theosophical discourse, and is the source-term for 20th-century parapsychology's "extrasensory perception" (ESP) framework as J. B. Rhine and colleagues at Duke (1930s-1960s) operationalised it.

  • Mesmerist period (late 18th c.). Reports of "clairvoyant somnambulism" — patients in induced trance describing distant locations or future events.
  • Spiritualist period (mid 19th c.). Public mediums (Hydesville Fox sisters 1848 forward) presenting clairvoyant readings as standard repertoire.
  • Society for Psychical Research (founded 1882). First sustained scholarly investigation under William Crookes, Henry Sidgwick, F.W.H. Myers; produced Phantasms of the Living (1886) compiling case reports.
  • Rhine programme (1930s-1960s). Operationalised clairvoyance as card-guessing tasks at Duke University; published Extra-Sensory Perception (1934). Established the field of parapsychology as experimental discipline.
  • Project Stargate era (1972-1995). Renamed remote viewing under SRI / SAIC government contracting; produced coordinate-targeted operational protocol.
  • Contemporary post-Stargate (1995-present). Decentralised academic and private research; meta-analyses (Bem & Honorton 1994 Ganzfeld; Storm et al. 2010+; Cardeña 2018 American Psychologist review) document modest but persistent effects.

The cluster's commitment is that this lineage is real history, not occult-fringe — even at the level of mainstream academic engagement, the modest claimed effect has been seriously investigated.

Faculty Distinctions

Within the cluster taxonomy:

  • Clairvoyance — the parent faculty: clear-perception not coordinate-targeted, not necessarily contemporaneous, not specifically temporal.
  • Remote Viewing — coordinate-targeted, contemporaneous, spatial — the Stargate-protocol operationalisation.
  • Precognition — temporally forward-targeted — the Bem-style operationalisation.
  • Time Viewing (K1) — coordinate-targeted across temporal axis — cluster extension of RV.
  • Telepathy — mind-to-mind specific, not object-targeted.
  • Mediumship — purported coupling with discarnate consciousness specifically.

Clairvoyance is the umbrella faculty; the others are operationally-narrower variants under distinct protocols.

Documented Research Highlights

  • Rhine 1934 ESP. Card-guessing protocol across thousands of trials; positive departure from chance at small effect-size.
  • Targ & Puthoff 1974 Nature. Coordinate-targeted RV with above-chance hit-rate under double-blind judging; controversial but not cleanly replication-refuted.
  • Bem & Honorton 1994 Psychological Bulletin. Ganzfeld meta-analysis reporting cumulative effect.
  • Utts 1995 AIR review. Statistical Assessment Service statistician's review of Stargate data; concluded statistically significant effects in some studies though disputing operational utility.
  • Storm, Tressoldi & Di Risio 2010 Psychological Bulletin. Updated Ganzfeld meta-analysis covering 1997-2008 studies; reported persistence of small effect.
  • Cardeña 2018 American Psychologist. Establishment-journal review acknowledging the empirical record without endorsing mechanism claims.

The cumulative documented record supports a small effect with mixed-quality methodology; the cluster acknowledges that the strongest reading mainstream science has accepted is "evidence base is suggestive but not decisive."

Cluster Extensions

Cluster-specific clairvoyance claims:

  • Trainability framework. Cluster claim that systematic training (Tho'ra Clan Psychic Training Program) increases reliable expression — partially supported by reports of operator-skill variance in Stargate programme.
  • Substrate mechanism. Cluster claim of psi-field mediation via biological-substrate coupling — beyond mainstream-physics establishment.
  • Modality range. Cluster recognises visual-clairvoyant, auditory-clairaudient, kinesthetic-clairsentient, and somatic-clairgustant modalities as faculty variants.
  • Operator-class differentiation. Cluster claim that specific operator classes (Wanderers, higher-density operators) have native faculty above population baseline.

Skeptic Counter-Framework

Mainstream-skeptic position includes:

  • Small effects, low replication. Even strongest meta-analyses report small effects; replication record is mixed.
  • Cold-reading sufficiency. Many uncontrolled clairvoyance demonstrations admit Forer-effect and cold-reading accounts.
  • Selection and publication bias. Positive-result studies may be over-published.
  • Methodological loosening. Effects tend to attenuate under tighter protocols.

Detailed dialectic at Psychic Abilities Are Fake (this batch).

Cluster Connections

Quality-of-Engagement Discriminators

  • Lineage vs claim. Real research-lineage exists; the mechanism claim is separable.
  • Effect-size honesty. Documented effects are small; cluster honesty acknowledges this.
  • Methodological gate. Tighter protocols produce smaller effects; this is the cluster's expected pattern, not an embarrassment.