In 1979, Itzhak Bentov died suspiciously in a plane crash, just 2 years after publishing his book "Stalking the Wild Pendulum: On the Mechanics of Consciousness".

There are multiple reasons to be suspicious of the circumstances of Bentov's death. For starters, he was the inventor of the first rocket used by Israel in Israel's War for Independence back in the 1940s. I'll just leave that right there.

Bentov wasn't just on Israel's radar though. In 2021, the CIA released some 20 year old documents on some research they declassified in 2003 called The Gateway Experience. This was research into the paranormal phenomenon known as remote viewing aka astral projection. In a letter dated 9 June 1983, LTC Wayne M McDonnell says he "had recourse to the biomedical models developed by Itzhak Bentov to obtain information concerning the physical aspects of this process."

His model of the universe is a torus which is a form echoed fractally throughout the universe. Chapter 1 of his book does an excellent job of explaining how physical reality is a hologram. The excellence doesn't stop at the final chapter, either. The appendix biomechanically explains what Bentov and Dr. Lee Sannells called "the physio-kundalini syndrome".

Bentov's work is like a skeleton key for cosmology. That's why his death was suspicious. It came just 2 years after he published his book that rips the face off of reality.

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*Dr. Lee Sannella

I've read stalking the wild pendulum 3 times and everytime I read it it's like a different book

I have so many books I need to read. I need to read Bentov's 2nd book, published after his death by his wife who pieced together what she could of his unpublished ideas and 2nd work in progress.

His stuff is highly correct as best as I can tell. Much of what he talks about is validated by independent other sources who arrived at the same conclusions Bentov did but through different methods.

It's super hard to ignore that his work was referenced in now declassified remote viewing research and that he died 2 years after writing the first book.

I have read Lee Sannella's book. That was worth it. Bentov wrote an Appendix for it.

Bentov's work got me thinking in certain ways that led me to make conceptual breakthroughs in my own research. To call that book inspiring or inspired is an understatement.