Time Loops

Precognition, Retrocausation, & the Unconscious

Time is not what you think it is. Neither are you.

Time Loops is a landmark survey of the evidence for one of the most taboo topics in the sciences, the purported ESP ability known as precognition—seeing, knowing, or being influenced by the future. In this comprehensive examination of the topic, Wargo shows that the evidence gathered over more than a century in parapsychology laboratories is more than compelling, despite skeptical claims to the contrary. Moreover, over just the past two decades, the idea that the future can affect the past is gaining ground in physics. So-called retrocausation might be a constituent of ordinary reality that has been misrecognized for a century as randomness (quantum uncertainty) at the smallest scales. At the same time, trends in biology are showing how weird quantum effects are central in some biological systems, possibly even the nervous system.

Drawing widely on scientific literatures as well as psychoanalytic theory, Wargo builds a case that we should think of the brain as a tesseract, a four-dimensional information processor. It gives individuals oblique but valuable information about upheavals and learning experiences in their future, both in dreams and in waking life via intuition and artistic inspiration. The new understanding of precognition as a kind of “memory for things future” also offers a 21st-century reframing of older occultist and depth-psychological ideas like Carl Jung’s concept, synchronicity. One of the major implications of this reframing is that it shows how our biographies may be shaped by causally circular situations—the “time loops” of the title. Some dream or inkling unintendedly leads to the future experience that was foreseen.

Uninformed skeptics of ESP phenomena no longer have much basis to dismiss precognition. It does not go against physics, the evidence for it is overwhelming, and it could even help make sense of a wide variety of common but “paranormal” human experiences that mainstream sciences have ignored until now because they seemed to violate Enlightenment understandings of causality. Those understandings have become obsolete.

First published in 2018 by Anomalist Books, Time Loops has now been re-released in a new Cup+Saucer press edition that includes a Foreword by Rice University historian of religions, Jeffrey J. Kripal.

Order Time Loops on Amazon.