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This is the first time in the history of mankind that there is a technology capable to ease tensions in society and reduce societal violence and which has been validated by measurements and scientific studies.

 

 Predicted in advance: Predictions were lodged with the press and other scientists that significant decreases in violent crime would occur when the group  of advanced TM-Sidhi program participants reached or exceeded the theoretically predicted threshold of the square root of 1% of the U.S. population.

 
 
 "Given that there are now multiple studies showing a highly significant relationship between a large group practicing the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi programs and decreased violence in society, this obviously has implications for crime prevention," Dr. Dillbeck said.


 
The group that gathered in the period 2007-2010 has now somewhat dispersed. Dr. Dillbeck suggests that if governments were to support the establishment of groups in various countries, so that these groups could be maintained over long periods, it could have a remarkable effect in reducing hostilities and fostering coherence among nations, which could be assessed by further research.

Societal Violence and Collective Consciousness and Peace-Promoting Technologies

Editor's Note: This is the first time in the history of mankind that there is a technology capable to ease tensions in society and reduce societal violence and which has been validated by measurements and scientific studies. This technology is inexpensive relative to the amounts used in one minute of war. This deserves the interest of officials and executives of all governments.

Chart: During 2007-2010 when the size of a group of advanced TM-Sidhi program participants exceeded the threshold predicted to reduce negative trends (√1%), there was a significant shift in the US national homicide rate and urban violent crime. Relative to the baseline period of 2002-2006, the drop in homicide rate was 21.2% (5.3% per year) and 18.5% (4.6% per year) for violent crime.

Societal Violence and Collective Consciousness Reduction of U.S. Homicide and Urban Violent Crime Rates

Can large group meditation lower the crime rate?

The most recent in a series of studies spanning decades suggests again that a sufficiently large group practicing an advanced program of Transcendental Meditation, the TM-Sidhi program, is associated with decreased social violence.

For the period 2007-2010, when there was a sufficiently large group, statistical analysis found a significant decrease in both the national homicide rate and urban violent crime rate compared to trends during the baseline period of 2002-2006.

The total drop in the homicide rate relative to the baseline average rate was 21.2% over the four-year intervention period (5.3% per year). Analysis of monthly data showed that a rising trend of U.S. homicides during the baseline period 2002-2006 was reversed during the intervention period 2007-2010 of the study (see graph).

Predicted in advance

Starting in July 2006, advanced meditators assembled at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, to create a group large enough to have this influence on the U.S. as a whole.

Predictions were lodged with the press and other scientists that significant decreases in violent crime would occur when the group reached or exceeded the theoretically predicted threshold of the square root of 1% of the U.S. population. By January 2007 the group exceeded the required size of 1,725 participants, the square root of 1% of the U.S. population at the time, and remained above or near that level through 2010.

The study was published in SAGE Open on the 6th April 2016. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).

A new hypothesis in the social sciences

"I understand it's a new hypothesis in the social sciences that meditation could have a stress-reducing and coherence-creating effect in society," said lead author Michael Dillbeck. "But such research is increasingly suggesting that there's a field effect of consciousness. If you get a large enough group together practicing this technique to experience the field quality of consciousness, these extended 'field-like' effects are expressed in society."

The hypothesis of a field effect of consciousness implies that there is an underlying connection between individuals in much the same way that physics has uncovered greater unity beneath the diversity of matter and energy fields. The more powerfully that underlying field is enlivened, the greater the unifying influence of peace and harmony on the surface levels of life.

The hypothesis was first proposed in 1960 by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who introduced the Transcendental Meditation technique. This hypothesis was first confirmed by published research in the 1970s and 1980s when it was observed that those cities that had 1% of the population practicing Transcendental Meditation showed significant increases in positive trends.

The effect was found to be even greater when the advanced TM-Sidhi program was introduced, with observations suggesting that just the square root of 1% of a population could increase harmony and improve diverse measures of the quality of life in society.

Nine peer-reviewed articles, comprising 14 studies, have now been published that support this hypothesized effect.

Rigorous statistical analysis

The study's authors used a battery of diagnostic tests to establish the validity of the key statistical assumptions of the analysis.

They also found that alternative hypotheses, such as economic trends, incarceration rates, seasonal cycles, demographic changes, and policing strategies, weren't sufficient to explain the observed reduction.

For example, violent crime rates fell significantly during the severe recession of 2007-2009 rather than rising as widely expected.

According to a leading expert on crime and the economy, this was the first time since World War II in which crime rates failed to rise during a major economic downturn.

Important implications for crime prevention

"Given that there are now multiple studies showing a highly significant relationship between a large group practicing the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi programs and decreased violence in society, this obviously has implications for crime prevention," Dr. Dillbeck said.

The group that gathered in the period 2007-2010 has now somewhat dispersed. Dr. Dillbeck suggests that if governments were to support the establishment of groups in various countries, so that these groups could be maintained over long periods, it could have a remarkable effect in reducing hostilities and fostering coherence among nations, which could be assessed by further research.

Dillbeck M. C., Cavanaugh K. L. « Societal Violence and Collective Consciousness - Reduction of U.S. Homicide and Urban Violent Crime Rates. », 14 April 201 , <dx.doi.org>, Other link : <sgo.sagepub.com>

DOI: 10.1177/2158244016637891

Global Union of Scientists for Peace « Can group meditation prevent violent crime? Surprisingly, the data suggests yes: New study », <gusp.org>