Precognition Test and train your precognitive ability
About Precognition
Scientific interest in precognition was stimulated by the publication in 1927 of An Experiment With Time by British aeronautical engineer J.W. Dunne. In this, Dunne describes many examples of his own and friends' dreams that appeared to predict future events. From these, he develops a theory of time in which past, present and future are all accessible to consciousness.
Louisa E. Rhine
In the 1930s, Dunne's influential book came to the attention of parapsychologists J.B. Rhine and his wife Louisa at Duke University. Louisa Rhine's research interest was in spontaneous psychic experiences, and she collected a large number of cases that seemed to demonstrate precognitive abilities, noting, like Dunne, that these seemed especially associated with dreams.
J.B. Rhine is famous for his pioneering experimental research into extrasensory perception (telepathy and clairvoyance) using card guessing procedures. Rhine and others realized that the card-guessing methodology also lends itself to testing for precognition. In this case, the receiver guesses the card before it has been selected or viewed.
Recently, parapsychologists have explored the possibility that precognitive ability may be largely unconscious. To test for this, unconscious responses are recorded rather than asking the receiver to make conscious choices.
The tests shown below allow you to explore both conscious and unconscious precognition and to enter our precognition championship! If you get one of the highest scores, we will even add you to our list of champions!