How it works
Associative Remote Viewing (ARV) is a simple loop. Instead of asking someone to "predict the market" — which is abstract — we ask them to do something the mind is much better at: sense an image they will be shown at a specific future time.
The time loop
- Pair. For a future question with two possible results, we secretly pair each result with a distinct image, and commit that pairing on-chain (a hash) before anyone views.
- View. Viewers relax, set intention, and describe the image they'll be shown later — eyes closed, voice first. They never see a market.
- Judge. Each viewer compares their own impressions to the two candidate images and moves a single slider toward the better match, expressing confidence.
- Aggregate. Reputation-weighted consensus is calibrated into a probability. A price-aware gate decides whether there's an edge worth acting on.
- Feedback & resolve. When the market resolves, the winning result's image is revealed — and every viewer is shown the correct image at a precise time, closing the loop. The pairing is revealed on-chain so anyone can verify it was fixed in advance.
Why it's honest
The whole system is built to measure whether an edge exists, not to assume one. The dashboard shows the running result; the methodology explains the integrity safeguards.