Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Can you change your world?

Quantum Physics tells us that the apparently so-solid world around us an illusion, that atoms are mostly space and the nucleus - the biggest part - is infinitesimally small. If an atom were the size of Old Trafford Stadium the nucleus would be the size of a stud on Wayne Rooney's boot, but vibrating so fast that it creates the illusion of something solid. Some quantum physicists think the world is holographic in nature - a projection from a higher level.

Now for some logic: every part of the negative of a hologram contains the whole hologram, just as each cell of your body contains the genetic information of your whole body. You are part of the universe, so you are part of the hologram and thus part of the negative. If you change yourself you change the negative. If you change the negative you change the hologram. Thus, in a very real sense, you can the change the world in accordance with your will if it is holographic.

1 comments:

  1. Me thinks that "some" of our scientists are now attempting to simplify their astronomical amount ofcalculations work by saying that the micro and macro heavens can be studied just fine as though it is all simply a holographic projection into cosmological shells. This is, after all, what they seem to actually experience from their current perspective - or is it?

    This is a very old idea but such perspective would seem to be backwards if there is to be any such thing as objectivity, although many will argue there is no such thing to be had except that which is born of some consensus. What mankind can actually perceive and thus think it "knows" of the universe is actually based upon that which is "projected" into us via the eyes, ears and other senses and then processed by the brain with each human mind having it's own set boundaries and limitations. An internal hologram? I'll buy that.

    The resulting internally "learned reality" stands opposed to our long evolved tendency to instinctively extend these sensory derived conclusions outwards as being truly representative of any objective reality (if such exists). Thus anything more than two dimensional pictures of our world or universe is simply the mind's subjective imagination having been put to work (binary vision is an internal process two pictures).

    So perhaps the "lazy" scientists with the "old ideas" have it at least half-right or simply inside out after all, but with humans there's always the following topic(s) to also consider:
    http://abyss.uoregon.edu/~js/cosmo/lectures/lec24.html

    So what is within your own power to actually change in your own world? If you change the way you perceive things by learning and knowing more in order to be better (or at least differently) aware of what's happening, then you are in a better position to more fully appreciate the true grand glory of it all while at the same time earlier "worries" can become quite mundane in circumspect.

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