Remote Viewing
Ancient Chronology
In exploring the ancient past, some researchers have turned to unconventional methods such as Remote Viewing—a channeling technique used to perceive distant or hidden locations without physical contact. Edmund Meadows, a British researcher, approached ancient chronology through this lens, combining remote viewing with analysis of biblical texts, Sitchin's work, and comparative history.
Meadows’ point stems from the work of Zecharia Sitchin, who argued that the Sumerian accounts of the Anunnaki pointed to advanced beings who visited Earth thousands of years ago. Sitchin emphasized philological and archaeological evidence, and Meadows framed his inquiry in terms of cycles, calendars, and the astrological “Ages” that marked shifts in human civilization.
The debate over chronology is central. Questions about the Great Sphinx of Giza—whether it eroded by water in prehistoric times or was carved during the reign of Pharaoh Khafre—highlight how different interpretations of dating can drastically alter our view of human history. Meadows examined how biblical genealogies, Jewish tradition, and even Egyptian records might have been adjusted or rewritten over the centuries, creating a timeline that masks older origins.
In this framework, Meadows suggested that human history cannot be understood solely through archaeology or scripture; it requires attention to hidden layers of influence, whether extraterrestrial, spiritual, or encoded in ancient systems of timekeeping.