The Science of Time Travel: Consciousness Navigation Through Temporal Probabilities
Bashar discusses time travel not as hardware-based machinery but as consciousness technology. He explains that time is not a linear river but a vast ocean of simultaneous probabilities. 'Time travel' is therefore not movement along a line but shifting focus from one probability to another.
In physical terms, this would require creating a localized field that matches the frequency signature of a different probable moment. Bashar notes that some classified military experiments have inadvertently created such fields, resulting in phenomena like the Philadelphia Experiment (which he describes as a real event with disastrous consequences due to improper frequency calibration).
He distinguishes between:
- Physical time travel—moving the body to another probability coordinate.
- Consciousness time travel—experiencing another time through remote viewing or astral projection.
- Timeline creation—shifting your present frequency to align with a different probable past or future, effectively 'changing history' from your personal perspective.
He warns that physical time travel is extremely dangerous and energetically costly; consciousness-based exploration is far more practical and safe.