9/11 and Global Consciousness

by Patrick J. Kiger, newswatch.nationalgeographic.com

Chances are, you probably remember exactly what you were doing on the morning of September 11, 2001, at the moment when you first learned about the attack on the World Trade Center. And if you were one of the millions who stared in horror at the television images of smoke billowing from the crippled towers, you undoubtedly can recall the intense, excruciatingly painful surge of grief and anger and sadness that you felt.Global Consciousness Project Video Link

You may be surprised, however, to learn that Princeton University researchers believe that so many people around the world were affected in the same way that their collective mental energy actually altered the operation of computers.
Those findings, which have aroused some controversy in the scientific world, were produced by Princeton's Global Consciousness Project, whose goal is to determine whether, and if so to what extent, human consciousness—that is, our minds' awareness of the world in which we exist—can synchronize and act coherently.

"I think the data are pretty much indisputably in support of that we do interconnect, we interact, we're not isolated," the project's director, Roger Nelson, explains in this video on the organization's website. "My consciousness, inside my skull, and yours, extend out into the world, and they intermix. We're a little like neurons, in a giant brain, that we know nothing about