Come Dance. The Data Is Listening.
This is not about proving anything.
It is about asking a question clearly enough that the answer — whatever it is — means something.
Does the field respond when we move as one?
We have the data. We have the devices. We are reaching out to researchers across Europe. And on March 31, we are running the most measured ecstatic dance session we have ever done.
What happens on March 31
Sufi whirling guided by Lizelot — initiated into a centuries-old Persian Sufi order. Live daf by Farid Sheek — Iranian-Dutch composer from a lineage of Sufi musicians, Concertgebouw performer. Voice alchemy by Maurice Spees — weaving sacred sound through tone, breath, and electronic layers.
Two independent random number generators running simultaneously. Our phone-based TRNG and the Wyrdoscope from Wyrd Technologies, housing the original Princeton PEAR lab hardware.
No separation between performers and dancers. No audience. One field. Two measurements.
Why this matters
For 30 years, researchers at Princeton found that group coherence affects random systems. The data is published. The methodology is documented. But the question is still open.
We are not here to close it. We are here to ask it again — with better tools, better methodology, and a community that knows what it feels like to move as one.
Come dance. The data is listening.
March 31 | Nijmegen | Sufi Edition Early bird €15 Tickets via Hipsy
Explore the live data: play.ecstaticoracle.dance