Authors
- Maj Gen (Retd) Kulwant Singh, PhD, UYSM,
- John Hagelin, PhD
- and David Leffler, PhD
“All truth passes through three stages.
First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.”
– Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)
The attack by gunmen on Mumbai’s landmarks and hotels shows that the
armed forces of India, despite their advanced technologies and valiant
efforts, are still struggling to eliminate violent extremism and cannot
guarantee peace for the nation. Clearly a new approach is needed.
Violent extremism is a human problem requiring human solutions. The
underlying cause of extremist social violence is accumulated social
stress. Therefore, to protect the nation effectively, the armed forces
need first to reduce the collective societal stress in India.
A new technology of defense now exists that can accomplish this goal.
It is based upon the latest discoveries in the fields of physics,
neuroscience, and physiology. Ultimately, it is based on the discovery of
the unified field of all the laws of nature — the most fundamental and
powerful level of nature’s dynamics. Extensive research has confirmed
its effectiveness. This new technology is easily applied, highly
cost-effective, and can prevent disruption and attack from within the
country or outside the country.
This approach is known today as the Invincible Defense Technology (IDT).
It has its roots in ancient Vedic technologies of consciousness, revived
in modern times by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi as a non-religious approach to
peace. These technologies of consciousness directly access and harness the
unified field on the deepest level of human experience — pure
consciousness itself. Extensive scientific research indicates that this
approach reduces collective societal stress, eliminates extremism and
thereby snuffs out war and terrorism. Over the past three decades it has
been quietly and successfully used by members of many faiths to defuse and
eliminate conflict.
The approach involves the creation of large groups of peace-creating
experts practicing Invincible Defense Technology together. A Prevention
Wing of the Military consisting of approximately 2% to 3% of the military
of India could easily achieve this goal. This special unit would be
trained in the Vedic technologies of consciousness revived by Maharishi
— the Transcendental Meditation (TM) and TM-Sidhi programs — and would
practice these techniques in large groups, twice a day.
Extensive research shows that the size of the group needed to reduce
social stress in a given population should exceed the square root of 1% of
the population size. To calculate this number, multiply the population
size by 0.01, and then take the square root of the result. The population
of India, for example, is about 1,121,800,000, and 1,121,800,000 x 0.01 =
11,218,000. The square root of 11,218,000 is approximately 3,350, so a
group of at least 3,350 IDT experts is needed to create the desired effect
of national peace.
Studies show that when the required threshold of IDT experts is
crossed, crime rates go down in the affected population, quality of life
indices go up, and terrorism and war abate. Scientists refer to this
phenomenon as the Maharishi Effect in honor of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who
first predicted it. As an example of this effect, in 1993 a two-month
Maharishi Effect intervention was implemented in Washington, DC, the
capital city of the US. Predictions of specific drops in crime and other
indices were lodged in advance with government leaders and newspapers. An
independent Project Review Board approved the research protocol. The
findings showed that crime fell 24 percent below expected levels when the
group size reached its maximum. Temperature, weekend effects, and previous
trends in the data failed to account for these changes. The study was
published in Social Indicators Research (1999, vol. 47, 153-201).
Over 50 studies have shown that IDT works. The causal mechanism has
been postulated to be a field effect of consciousness — a spillover
effect on the level of the unified field from the peace-creating group
into the larger population. On this basis, a study in the Journal of
Social Behavior and Personality (2005, vol. 17, #1, pp. 339-373)
additionally offers a proposed explanation of causality in biological
terms. Research conducted on the powerful neurotransmitter serotonin shows
that it produces feelings of contentment, happiness and even euphoria. Low
levels of serotonin, according to research, correlate with violence,
aggression, and poor emotional moods. The IDT study showed that higher
numbers of IDT experts correlated with a marked increase in serotonin
production among other community members. These results were statistically
significant and followed the attendance figures in the IDT group. This
finding offers a plausible neurophysiologic mechanism to explain reduced
hostility and aggression in society at large.
The Maharishi Effect has also been documented on a worldwide scale in a
study published in the Journal of Offender Rehabilitation (2003,
vol. 36, #1-4, 283-302) using data provided by the Rand Corporation. When
large assemblies of IDT experts exceeded the Maharishi Effect threshold
for the world during the years 1983-1985, terrorism decreased globally
72%, international conflict decreased 33%, and violence within nations was
reduced without intrusion by other governments.
In the 1990s, the military in Mozambique used IDT to end its civil war.
Today, The Netherlands, Bolivia, Colombia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Peru
have enough practitioners of IDT to create the Maharishi Effect. The
United States of America is close to achieving the requisite number of IDT
experts through its Invincible America Assembly in Fairfield, Iowa. And a
group large enough to have a global effect is planned for India. But these
are all civilian groups, and most require financial support.
Since the military of India is funded by the government and its
personnel are paid to perform their duties and protect the nation, an IDT
group in the military would not be subject to fluctuations of donors,
jobs, student graduations, and optional activities. It would be a
permanent peace-creating group for the nation.
The armed forces of India are responsible for protecting India, and are
obligated to thoroughly examine realistic, scientifically proven methods
for ending war and terrorism. IDT is such a method. Therefore, we feel it
is the duty of the military of India to create a Prevention Wing of the
Military and make India truly invincible.
About the Authors:
Major General (Dr.) Kulwant Singh, (Retd) UYSM
leads
an international group of generals and defence experts that advocates
Invincible Defence Technology.
Dr. John Hagelin
is the Director of the Institute of
Science, Technology and Public Policy (ISTPP), an organization in the
United States that advocates prevention-oriented technologies. He is a
Harvard-trained quantum physicist who won the prestigious Kilby Award, and
appeared in the feature films The Secret and What the Bleep
Do We Know?
Dr. David Leffler, a United States Air Force veteran,
is the Executive Director of the Center for Advanced Military Science
(CAMS) at ISTPP.