Eric Wargo, an anthropologist and science writer, has built a career exploring one of physics’ most contentious propositions: that the future is fixed and knowable. His five books examine precognition through the lens of mainstream science, drawing connections between Einstein’s relativity, Jungian psychology, and documented paranormal phenomena. Before his deep dive into these territories, Wargo spent years as an editorial director at a leading psychology organization—a conventional career path that shifted dramatically in 2009.
That year, a UFO sighting redirected Wargo’s professional trajectory entirely. Rather than returning to institutional psychology, he pursued the implications of his experience, eventually positioning his work at the intersection of physics, psychology, and the paranormal. His research engages with concepts including the block universe model, precognitive dreams, quantum mechanics, and the relationship between UFOs and time travel—subjects typically cordoned off from mainstream academic discourse.
Wargo’s central thesis challenges determinism itself: if precognition is real and explicable through established physics, what does that mean for human agency? His writing appears regularly on his Substack and at The Night Shirt, where he continues to develop arguments that the brain possesses knowledge of future events—knowledge that may manifest through dreams, intuition, and other channels science has yet to fully map.
If the future is already fixed and your subconscious mind has access to it, does that fundamentally alter how we should understand free will, responsibility, and the nature of time itself?
Source: The Why Files
