The ‘Who am I?’ feeling is just a 20-watt fountain of energy operating in the brain. But this energy doesn’t go away at death. One of the surest axioms of science is that energy never dies; it can’t be created or destroyed.
The Joint Commission is a Chicago-based organization which accredits 15,000 hospitals in the United States. The Joint Commission International (JCI) is its subsidiary which accredits hospitals outside the U.S. As the medical travel trend grows, JCI accreditation is becoming an important benchmark for quality standards.
Eat less, live longer cutting back on food can help repair the body by Dr.Ma...Healthcare consultant
Eating less can boost healthier ageing by protecting the body’s cells from harmful deterioration and the risk of cancer.
Scientists know an extreme diet does not appeal to many people but say their discovery could lead to ways of mimicking its effects and pave the way for an “anti-ageing pill.
“I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark".
Spiritual truths are being affirmed with rapid advancement in Scientific knowledge. Sharing my reading and thoughts, that goes to establish that at long last Science has mellowed over the years, the animosity is no longer there, and Spirituality and Science are slowly but surely converging in the quest of TRUTH.
The month of Ramadan is also known as the month of reflection and retrospection, and I have spent a few hours in this month to put up a presentation.
The Joint Commission is a Chicago-based organization which accredits 15,000 hospitals in the United States. The Joint Commission International (JCI) is its subsidiary which accredits hospitals outside the U.S. As the medical travel trend grows, JCI accreditation is becoming an important benchmark for quality standards.
Eat less, live longer cutting back on food can help repair the body by Dr.Ma...Healthcare consultant
Eating less can boost healthier ageing by protecting the body’s cells from harmful deterioration and the risk of cancer.
Scientists know an extreme diet does not appeal to many people but say their discovery could lead to ways of mimicking its effects and pave the way for an “anti-ageing pill.
“I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark".
Spiritual truths are being affirmed with rapid advancement in Scientific knowledge. Sharing my reading and thoughts, that goes to establish that at long last Science has mellowed over the years, the animosity is no longer there, and Spirituality and Science are slowly but surely converging in the quest of TRUTH.
The month of Ramadan is also known as the month of reflection and retrospection, and I have spent a few hours in this month to put up a presentation.
Physics and Indian Spiritual Tradition - Giulio Prisco.pdfGiulio Prisco
Transcript of my talk titled "Physics and the Indian Spiritual Tradition" at the Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture (RMIC), Kolkata, India, February 2018.
Mind over Matter—Is the mind a machine, or is it a soul? (Part 1)Gospel Conversations
Is the mind a machine, or is it a soul? This is the fast emerging modern debate - which began slowly with the materialist world view but has accelerated in the era of Artificial Intelligence. At the end of this road, lies Jesus - who has set the archetype for what it means to be human - fully human. It is immensely helpful to consider this debate over the course of its history - and in this talk, this history is what Ron lays out.
DxF2009, Utrecht: "All the time in the world"Matt Jones
Given at Design By Fire 2009, Utrecht http://www.designbyfire.nl/2009/
Talk description:
"People, places, time. The triumvirate of factors at play in mobile, social, locative services might be familiar at the surface level to designers and developers.
Our relationships to each other, the cities and places we inhabit and navigate have been transformed in the last few years by the technology, products and services that we have designed — but what about that last one of the three — time?
Using examples from the development of Dopplr.com and other services — alongside historical and science-fictional perspectives — Matt will explore what we might call neochronometry and illustrate some directions we could take as interaction designers to treat time as a material."
Wealth Generating Midas Manifestation Effect.
This is the secret principle that the elite 0.001% of the population use to alter their previously predetermined destiny…
I’ll reveal how you can secretly tap into the universe, to create unlimited wealth, health and abundance in your life. You’ll be able to do this at will, and generate real, spendable money almost at will. Trust me, you’re not going to want to miss this.
This technique taps into the hidden laws of the universe, and works every time. It doesn’t matter who you are or how old you are. It doesn’t take hours and hours of dedicated practice or training. It’s something you can do almost instantly.
Can We Know the Universe The following excerpt was publ.docxhacksoni
Can We Know the Universe?
The following excerpt was published in Broca's Brain (1979).
by Carl Sagan
"Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of nature. She shows us only
surfaces, but she is a million fathoms deep." — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.
Its goal is to find out how the world works, to seek what regularities
there may be, to penetrate the connections of things—from subnuclear
particles, which may be the constituents of all matter, to living
organisms, the human social community, and thence to the cosmos as a
whole. Our intuition is by no means an infallible guide. Our
perceptions may be distorted by training and prejudice or merely
because of the limitations of our sense organs, which, of course,
perceive directly but a small fraction of the phenomena of the world.
Even so straightforward a question as whether in the absence of friction
a pound of lead falls faster than a gram of fluff was answered
incorrectly by Aristotle and almost everyone else before the time of
Galileo. Science is based on experiment, on a willingness to challenge
old dogma, on an openness to see the universe as it really is.
Accordingly, science sometimes requires courage—at the very least the
courage to question the conventional wisdom.
Beyond this the main trick of science is to really think of something: the
shape of clouds and their occasional sharp bottom edges at the same
altitude everywhere in the sky; the formation of the dewdrop on a leaf;
the origin of a name or a word—Shakespeare, say, or "philanthropic";
the reason for human social customs—the incest taboo, for example;
how it is that a lens in sunlight can make paper burn; how a "walking
stick" got to look so much like a twig; why the Moon seems to follow us
as we walk; what prevents us from digging a hole down to the center of
the Earth; what the definition is of "down" on a spherical Earth; how it
is possible for the body to convert yesterday's lunch into today's muscle
and sinew; or how far is up—does the universe go on forever, or if it
does not, is there any meaning to the question of what lies on the other
side? Some of these questions are pretty easy. Others, especially the
last, are mysteries to which no one even today knows the answer. They
are natural questions to ask. Every culture has posed such questions in
one way or another. Almost always the proposed answers are in the
nature of "Just So Stories," attempted explanations divorced from
experiment, or even from careful comparative observations.
But the scientific cast of mind examines the world critically as if many
alternative worlds might exist, as if other things might be here which
are not. Then we are forced to ask why what we see is present and not
something else. Why are the Sun and the Moon and the planets
spheres? Why not pyramids, or cubes, or dodecahedra? Why not
irregular, jumbly shapes? Why so sym.
Talk given at the Modern Cosmism Conference, New York, October 10, 2015
http://turingchurch.com/2015/10/05/reminder-modern-cosmism-conference-saturday-in-new-york/
Learn how to use the law of attraction for your success and wealth and development of the life you want.
Learn how to use this powerful method to your advantage and use to law of attraction today.
The universe is full of mystery
The Truth about Manifestation, and what they don't want you to know...
Our earth is but tiny speck, in this unimaginably large universe. Great and powerful civilizations have risen, and fallen… and with these civilizations, vast amounts of knowledge have been lost.
#Ma
Gifford Lecture One: Cosmos, Time, MemorySean Carroll
Based on my book The Big Picture, this is the first of five lectures exploring how different ways of talking about the world fit together. The other four lectures are on YouTube.
This Power Point program visualizes the world of Quantum Mechanics for the novice physics student. Rather than consisting of static slides, the screens are designed to move dynamically in order to make the subject matter more easy to comprehend.
My attempt to explain how the universe works using speculative philosophy and physics. I use the philosophy of idealism, consciousness primary, along with modern physics. I propose that the basis of the universe is non-dual monistic idealism. Using the Buddhist metaphysics of an unconditioned basis of being (“infinite” space-time) we see how monistic idealism plays out in the non-random rules, structure, and repeating patterns of a manifested & conditioned universe. I also propose that monistic idealism is the Godel "X" (unrecognized complexity) factor that explains the existence of the manifested universe. Idealism can also explain the structural theodicy and suffering of the manifested universe. Idealism also refutes a personal theistic God as Absolute or Ultimate. I include my Neoplatonic cosmological proof of the unconditioned basis of being, a non-theistic "god."
Object Knowledge and Supersense Cognitive Modules offer possible explanations as to why physicists look for alternatives to the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics.
In India, Young Graduates Struggle by Dr. Mahboob Khan to Get Jobs.pdfHealthcare consultant
In the world’s most populous country, tens of thousands of graduates and postgraduates, many with professional degrees, such as engineering, spend years studying at the tutoring centers that have mushroomed in Indian cities, hoping to qualify for a highly sought-after government job. The chances are slim. Less than one-half of 1% of the more than 1 million who take the exam each year pass.
The middle class in India is growing unexpectedly, however they're still dealing with demanding situations in accessing excellent and low-priced healthcare. This is because of a number of of factors, such as inefficient healthcare gadget, high price of healthcare, and lack of know-how.
Chat GPT for Doctors -Revolutionizing Healthcare Communication by Dr.Mahboob.pdfHealthcare consultant
Learn how Chat GPT for doctors can revolutionize healthcare communication by improving efficiency and accuracy of patient-provider interaction.
In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) to transform healthcare. One area that has received particular attention is communication between patients and healthcare providers. The emergence of chatbots powered by AI has provided a new tool for improving the efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare communication. One of the most promising applications of AI-powered chatbots is Chat GPT for doctors.
More Related Content
Similar to Time and Death by Dr.Mahboob ali khan Phd
Physics and Indian Spiritual Tradition - Giulio Prisco.pdfGiulio Prisco
Transcript of my talk titled "Physics and the Indian Spiritual Tradition" at the Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture (RMIC), Kolkata, India, February 2018.
Mind over Matter—Is the mind a machine, or is it a soul? (Part 1)Gospel Conversations
Is the mind a machine, or is it a soul? This is the fast emerging modern debate - which began slowly with the materialist world view but has accelerated in the era of Artificial Intelligence. At the end of this road, lies Jesus - who has set the archetype for what it means to be human - fully human. It is immensely helpful to consider this debate over the course of its history - and in this talk, this history is what Ron lays out.
DxF2009, Utrecht: "All the time in the world"Matt Jones
Given at Design By Fire 2009, Utrecht http://www.designbyfire.nl/2009/
Talk description:
"People, places, time. The triumvirate of factors at play in mobile, social, locative services might be familiar at the surface level to designers and developers.
Our relationships to each other, the cities and places we inhabit and navigate have been transformed in the last few years by the technology, products and services that we have designed — but what about that last one of the three — time?
Using examples from the development of Dopplr.com and other services — alongside historical and science-fictional perspectives — Matt will explore what we might call neochronometry and illustrate some directions we could take as interaction designers to treat time as a material."
Wealth Generating Midas Manifestation Effect.
This is the secret principle that the elite 0.001% of the population use to alter their previously predetermined destiny…
I’ll reveal how you can secretly tap into the universe, to create unlimited wealth, health and abundance in your life. You’ll be able to do this at will, and generate real, spendable money almost at will. Trust me, you’re not going to want to miss this.
This technique taps into the hidden laws of the universe, and works every time. It doesn’t matter who you are or how old you are. It doesn’t take hours and hours of dedicated practice or training. It’s something you can do almost instantly.
Can We Know the Universe The following excerpt was publ.docxhacksoni
Can We Know the Universe?
The following excerpt was published in Broca's Brain (1979).
by Carl Sagan
"Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of nature. She shows us only
surfaces, but she is a million fathoms deep." — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.
Its goal is to find out how the world works, to seek what regularities
there may be, to penetrate the connections of things—from subnuclear
particles, which may be the constituents of all matter, to living
organisms, the human social community, and thence to the cosmos as a
whole. Our intuition is by no means an infallible guide. Our
perceptions may be distorted by training and prejudice or merely
because of the limitations of our sense organs, which, of course,
perceive directly but a small fraction of the phenomena of the world.
Even so straightforward a question as whether in the absence of friction
a pound of lead falls faster than a gram of fluff was answered
incorrectly by Aristotle and almost everyone else before the time of
Galileo. Science is based on experiment, on a willingness to challenge
old dogma, on an openness to see the universe as it really is.
Accordingly, science sometimes requires courage—at the very least the
courage to question the conventional wisdom.
Beyond this the main trick of science is to really think of something: the
shape of clouds and their occasional sharp bottom edges at the same
altitude everywhere in the sky; the formation of the dewdrop on a leaf;
the origin of a name or a word—Shakespeare, say, or "philanthropic";
the reason for human social customs—the incest taboo, for example;
how it is that a lens in sunlight can make paper burn; how a "walking
stick" got to look so much like a twig; why the Moon seems to follow us
as we walk; what prevents us from digging a hole down to the center of
the Earth; what the definition is of "down" on a spherical Earth; how it
is possible for the body to convert yesterday's lunch into today's muscle
and sinew; or how far is up—does the universe go on forever, or if it
does not, is there any meaning to the question of what lies on the other
side? Some of these questions are pretty easy. Others, especially the
last, are mysteries to which no one even today knows the answer. They
are natural questions to ask. Every culture has posed such questions in
one way or another. Almost always the proposed answers are in the
nature of "Just So Stories," attempted explanations divorced from
experiment, or even from careful comparative observations.
But the scientific cast of mind examines the world critically as if many
alternative worlds might exist, as if other things might be here which
are not. Then we are forced to ask why what we see is present and not
something else. Why are the Sun and the Moon and the planets
spheres? Why not pyramids, or cubes, or dodecahedra? Why not
irregular, jumbly shapes? Why so sym.
Talk given at the Modern Cosmism Conference, New York, October 10, 2015
http://turingchurch.com/2015/10/05/reminder-modern-cosmism-conference-saturday-in-new-york/
Learn how to use the law of attraction for your success and wealth and development of the life you want.
Learn how to use this powerful method to your advantage and use to law of attraction today.
The universe is full of mystery
The Truth about Manifestation, and what they don't want you to know...
Our earth is but tiny speck, in this unimaginably large universe. Great and powerful civilizations have risen, and fallen… and with these civilizations, vast amounts of knowledge have been lost.
#Ma
Gifford Lecture One: Cosmos, Time, MemorySean Carroll
Based on my book The Big Picture, this is the first of five lectures exploring how different ways of talking about the world fit together. The other four lectures are on YouTube.
This Power Point program visualizes the world of Quantum Mechanics for the novice physics student. Rather than consisting of static slides, the screens are designed to move dynamically in order to make the subject matter more easy to comprehend.
My attempt to explain how the universe works using speculative philosophy and physics. I use the philosophy of idealism, consciousness primary, along with modern physics. I propose that the basis of the universe is non-dual monistic idealism. Using the Buddhist metaphysics of an unconditioned basis of being (“infinite” space-time) we see how monistic idealism plays out in the non-random rules, structure, and repeating patterns of a manifested & conditioned universe. I also propose that monistic idealism is the Godel "X" (unrecognized complexity) factor that explains the existence of the manifested universe. Idealism can also explain the structural theodicy and suffering of the manifested universe. Idealism also refutes a personal theistic God as Absolute or Ultimate. I include my Neoplatonic cosmological proof of the unconditioned basis of being, a non-theistic "god."
Object Knowledge and Supersense Cognitive Modules offer possible explanations as to why physicists look for alternatives to the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics.
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In India, Young Graduates Struggle by Dr. Mahboob Khan to Get Jobs.pdfHealthcare consultant
In the world’s most populous country, tens of thousands of graduates and postgraduates, many with professional degrees, such as engineering, spend years studying at the tutoring centers that have mushroomed in Indian cities, hoping to qualify for a highly sought-after government job. The chances are slim. Less than one-half of 1% of the more than 1 million who take the exam each year pass.
The middle class in India is growing unexpectedly, however they're still dealing with demanding situations in accessing excellent and low-priced healthcare. This is because of a number of of factors, such as inefficient healthcare gadget, high price of healthcare, and lack of know-how.
Chat GPT for Doctors -Revolutionizing Healthcare Communication by Dr.Mahboob.pdfHealthcare consultant
Learn how Chat GPT for doctors can revolutionize healthcare communication by improving efficiency and accuracy of patient-provider interaction.
In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) to transform healthcare. One area that has received particular attention is communication between patients and healthcare providers. The emergence of chatbots powered by AI has provided a new tool for improving the efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare communication. One of the most promising applications of AI-powered chatbots is Chat GPT for doctors.
As an expert in hospital management and administration i have written this book -Hospital Management is a new theory in management faculty. Earlier a senior doctor used to perform the role of a hospital manager. However, nowadays everything demands a specialist. Almost all the things related to hospital have changed. Many categories concerning medical sciences and hospital have altered totally. There are various types of hospitals today, including ordinary hospitals, specialty hospitals and super specialty hospitals. The categories are regarding to the types of facilities they offer to the people.
Steve Jobs logged off too soon. He was a serial innovator whose illness cost the world a bright talent who was also a great company leader. I hope that the music from the hymns of praise sung to him in his waning days is playing on his iPod as he ascends into the firmament of the greatest American business leaders. If there were a Nobel prize for business, surely he would have won it. He did what he set out to do and more. He saw the potential for computing power for the masses, useful and accessible to everyone. In a phrase that drove the early Apple, he created bicycles for the mind.
“He is a charismatic leader who inspires people to follow him. A strategic thinker who can master the details. A tireless worker with incredible focus and problem-solving skills. He is well-liked by his employees but is also able
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Some of the lower vibrations, as you can see on the chart are anger, grief, shame, fear. Some of the higher vibrations are love, joy, appreciation and excitement.
Going to higher vibrations means more energy ,lower vibration is easily achieved and is default in everyone of us and is easily aggravated by gravity.
thats why anger, grief,shame and fear are more common than love ,joy appreciation and excitement.
Hospitals profitability can be increased by boosting patient satisfaction, reducing readmissions and understanding revenue cycle performance.
In this period of healthcare reform, numerous organizations continue to change their business practices so they can obtain more hospital profitability while also delivering quality care. Healthcare expenditures are expected to reach $4.4 trillion by 2022, and this high level of spending activity has hospitals currently under a lot of pressure to reduce costs.
Development of the digital economy started way before COVID-19. The exact date of the beginning may be defined in different ways, depending on different definitions of “digital economy.” The popularly understood “digital economy” phenomenon began when T-Mall was set up in 2003 and when Alipay came online in 2004. While the digital technology brings about the fourth industrial revolution, just like the steam engine, electrical machines, and computers, respectively.
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Couch potatoes as they are called are the ones who stick on to their sofas just watching the idiot box that has caused many such unwarranted developments in health.
Probably a long vacation could be a precipitating factor for inactivity while the unexpected strife in the country’s developments has brought with it some unexpected holidays. This is the time when children tend to relax but when they cross the line the human body becomes mentally and physically inactive.
While Metaverse is evolving, it holds new potential in healthcare that combines the technologies like Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality, Internet of Medical Devices, Web 3.0, intelligent cloud, edge and quantum computing along with robotics to provide new directions to healthcare.
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As per a study conducted by McKinsey, the healthcare sector had a 36% technical potential for automation. It also stated robotic process automation as one of the emerging technologies that will reshape healthcare and create between $350 billion and $410 billion in annual value by 2025.
Apply This to Your Life
We know this is boring, but you know you need to do it!
Clear an hour in your schedule somewhere in the next week, and set your filing system up!
Many inventions originated in wealthy countries and these were responsible to produce global public goods and medical goods.In which everyone got benefitted even developing and poor countries too.This transfer of knowledge is now compromised by the extension of intellectual property rights and held by high-income countries.
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Our monthly newsletter is available to read online. We hope you will join us each Sunday in person for our worship service. Make sure to subscribe and follow us on YouTube and social media.
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For the Video with audio narration, comments and texts in English, please check out the Link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zF2g_43NEa0
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1. 1
By Dr.Mahboob ali khan Phd
The ‘Who am I?’ feeling is just a 20-watt fountain of energy operating in the brain. But
this energy doesn’t go away at death. One of the surest axioms of science is that energy
never dies; it can’t be created or destroyed.
Does Death Exist? - New Theory Says 'No'
December 22, 2016
Many of us fear death.
We believe in death because we have been told we will die. We associate ourselves with the
body, and we know that bodies die. But a new scientific theory suggests that death is not the
terminal event we think.
One well-known aspect of quantum physics is that certain observations cannot be predicted
absolutely.
Instead, there is a range of possible observations each with a different probability. One
mainstream explanation, the "many-worlds" interpretation, states that each of these possible
observations corresponds to a different universe (the 'multiverse').
A new scientific theory - called biocentrism - refines these ideas. There are an infinite
number of universes, and everything that could possibly happen occurs in some universe.
Death does not exist in any real sense in these scenarios.
All possible universes exist simultaneously, regardless of what happens in any of them.
Although individual bodies are destined to self-destruct, the alive feeling - the 'Who am I?'- is
just a 20-watt fountain of energy operating in the brain.
But this energy doesn't go away at death. One of the surest axioms of science is that energy
never dies; it can neither be created nor destroyed. But does this energy transcend from one
world to the other?
Consider an experiment that was recently published in the journal Science showing that
scientists could retroactively change something that had happened in the past. Particles had
to decide how to behave when they hit a beam splitter.
Later on, the experimenter could turn a second switch on or off. It turns out that what the
observer decided at that point, determined what the particle did in the past.
Regardless of the choice you, the observer, make, it is you who will experience the outcomes
that will result. The linkages between these various histories and universes transcend our
ordinary classical ideas of space and time.
Think of the 20-watts of energy as simply holo-projecting either this or that result onto a
screen. Whether you turn the second beam splitter on or off, it's still the same battery or
agent responsible for the projection.
2. 2
According to Biocentrism, space and time are not the hard objects we think. Wave your hand
through the air - if you take everything away, what's left? Nothing.
The same thing applies for time. You can't see anything through the bone that surrounds
your brain. Everything you see and experience right now is a whirl of information occurring in
your mind. Space and time are simply the tools for putting everything together.
Death does not exist in a timeless, spaceless world.
In the end, even Einstein admitted,
"Now Besso" (an old friend) "has departed from this strange world a little
ahead of me. That means nothing. People like us… know that the distinction
between past, present, and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion."
Immortality doesn't mean a perpetual existence in time without end,
but rather resides outside of time altogether.
What Happens When You Die? - Evidence
Suggests Time Simply Reboots
December 22 ,2016
What happens when we die?
Do we rot into the ground, or do we go to heaven (or hell, if we've
been bad)?
Experiments suggest the answer is simpler than anyone thought. Without the glue of
consciousness, time essentially reboots.
The mystery of life and death can't be examined by visiting the Galapagos or looking through
a microscope.
It lies deeper. It involves our very selves. We awake in the present. There are stairs below us
that we appear to have climbed; there are stairs above us that go upward into the unknown
future.
3. 3
But the mind stands at the door by which we entered and gives us the memories by which
we go about our day. Everything is ordered and predictable. We're like cuckoo birds who
appear through a door each morning. We fancy there's a clockwork set in motion at the
beginning of time.
But if you remove everything from space, what's left? Nothing.
The same applies for time - you can't put it in a jar. You can't see through the bone
surrounding your brain (everything you experience is information in your mind). Biocentrism
tells us space and time aren't objects - they're the mind's tools for putting everything
together.
I was a young boy when I realized there was something unexplainable about life that I simply
didn't understand. I learned this from one of the last smiths in New England, when I, as a
child, tried to capture a woodchuck on his property.
Over his shop a chimney cap went round and round, squeak, squeak, rattle, rattle. One day
the blacksmith came out with his shotgun and blew it off. The noise stopped.
Mr. O'Donnell pounded metal on his anvil all day. No, I thought, I didn't want to be caught by
him. Yet, I had my purpose.
The woodchuck's hole was in such close proximity to Mr. O'Donnell's shop that I could hear
the bellows fanning his forge. I crawled noiselessly through the long grass, occasionally
stirring a grasshopper or a butterfly. After setting a new steel trap that I had just purchased at
the hardware store, I took a stake and, rock in hand, pounded it into the ground.
When I looked up, I saw Mr. O'Donnell standing there, his eyes glaring. I said nothing, trying
to restrain myself from crying. "Give me that trap, child," he said, "and come with me."
I followed him into his shop, which was crammed with all manner of tools and chimes of
different shapes and sounds hanging from the ceiling.
Starting the forge, Mr. O'Donnell tossed the trap over the coals and a tiny flame appeared
underneath, getting hotter until, with a puff it burst into flame.
"This thing can injure dogs, and even children!" he said, poking the coals
with a fork.
When the trap was red hot, he took it from the forge, and pounded it into a little square with
his hammer. He said nothing while the metal cooled.
At length, he patted me upon the shoulder, and then took up a few sketches of a dragonfly.
"I tell you what," he said. "I'll give you 50 cents for every dragonfly you
catch."
I said that would be fun, and when I parted I was so excited I forgot about my new trap.
The next day I set off with a butterfly net. The air was full of insects, the flowers with bees
and butterflies. But I didn't see any dragonflies. As I floated through the last of the meadows,
the spikes of a cattail attracted my attention. A huge dragonfly was humming round and
round, and when at last I caught it, I hopped and skipped all the way back to Mr. O'Donnell's
shop.
Taking a magnifying glass, he held the jar up to the light and made a careful study of the
dragonfly.
He fished out a number of rods, and with a little pounding, wrought a splendorous figurine
that was the perfect image of the dragonfly. It had about it a beauty as airy as the delicate
4. 4
insect.
As long as I live I will remember that day. And though Mr. O'Donnell is gone now, there still
remains in his shop that little iron dragonfly - covered with dust now - to remind me there's
something more elusive to life than the succession of shapes we see frozen into matter.
Before he died, Einstein said,
"Now Besso [an old friend] has departed from this strange world a little
ahead of me. That means nothing. People like us… know that the distinction
between past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion."
In fact, it was Einstein's theory of relativity that showed that space and time are indeed
relative to the observer.
Quantum theory ended the classical view that particles exist if we don't perceive them. But if
the world is observer-created, we shouldn't be surprised that it's destroyed with each of us.
Nor should we be surprised that space and time vanish, and with them all Newtonian
conceptions of order and prediction.
It's here at last, where we approach the imagined border of ourselves, the wooded boundary
where in the old fairy tale the fox and the hare say goodnight to each other. At death, we all
know, consciousness is gone, and so too the continuity in the connection of times and
places.
Where then, do we find ourselves?
On stairs that, like Emerson said, can be intercalated anywhere,
"like those that Hermes won with the dice of the moon, that Osiris might be
born."
We think that the past is past and the future the future. But as Einstein realized, this simply
isn't the case.
Without consciousness, space and time are nothing; in reality you can take any time -
whether past or future - as your new frame of reference. Death is a reboot that leads to all
potentialities.
That's the reality that the experiments mandate. And when I see Mr. O'Donnell's old shop, I
know that somewhere the chimney cap is still going round and round, squeak, squeak.
But it probably won't rattle for long.
Does the Past Exist Yet?
Evidence Suggests Your Past Isn't Set in Stone
December 22 ,2016
Recent discoveries require us to rethink our understanding of history.
"The histories of the universe," said renowned physicist Stephen Hawking
"depend on what is being measured, contrary to the usual idea that the
universe has an objective observer-independent history."
Is it possible we live and die in a world of illusions?
Physics tells us that objects exist in a suspended state until observed, when they collapse in
to just one outcome. Paradoxically, whether events happened in the past may not be
determined until sometime in your future - and may even depend on actions that you haven't
taken yet.
5. 5
In 2002, scientists carried out an amazing experiment, which showed that particles of
light "photons" knew - in advance - what their distant twins would do in the future.
They tested the communication between pairs of photons - whether to be either a wave or a
particle. Researchers stretched the distance one of the photons had to take to reach its
detector, so that the other photon would hit its own detector first.
The photons taking this path already finished their journeys - they either collapse into a
particle or don't before their twin encounters a scrambling device.
Somehow, the particles acted on this information before it happened, and across distances
instantaneously as if there was no space or time between them. They decided not to become
particles before their twin ever encountered the scrambler. It doesn't matter how we set up
the experiment. Our mind and its knowledge is the only thing that determines how they
behave.
Experiments consistently confirm these observer-dependent effects.
More recently (Science 315, 966, 2007), scientists in France shot photons into an apparatus,
and showed that what they did could retroactively change something that had already
happened.
As the photons passed a fork in the apparatus, they had to decide whether to behave like
particles or waves when they hit a beam splitter. Later on - well after the photons passed the
fork - the experimenter could randomly switch a second beam splitter on and off. It turns out
that what the observer decided at that point, determined what the particle actually did at the
fork in the past.
At that moment, the experimenter chose his history.
Of course, we live in the same world. Particles have a range of possible states, and it's not
until observed that they take on properties. So until the present is determined, how can there
be a past?
According to visionary physicist John Wheeler (who coined the word "black hole"),
"The quantum principle shows that there is a sense in which what an
6. 6
observer will do in the future defines what happens in the past."
Part of the past is locked in when you observe things and the "probability waves collapse."
But there's still uncertainty, for instance, as to what's underneath your feet. If you dig a hole,
there's a probability you'll find a boulder. Say you hit a boulder, the glacial movements of the
past that account for the rock being in exactly that spot will change as described in the
Science experiment.
But what about dinosaur fossils?
Fossils are really no different than anything else in nature. For instance, the carbon atoms in
your body are "fossils" created in the heart of exploding supernova stars.
Bottom line: reality begins and ends with the observer.
"We are participators," Wheeler said "in bringing about something of the
universe in the distant past."
Before his death, he stated that when observing LIGHT from a quasar, we set up a quantum
observation on an enormously large scale. It means, he said, the measurements made on
the LIGHT now, determines the path it took billions of years ago.
Like the light from Wheeler's quasar, historical events such as who killed JFK, might also
depend on events that haven't occurred yet.
There's enough uncertainty that it could be one person in one set of circumstances, or
another person in another. Although JFK was assassinated, you only possess fragments of
information about the event. But as you investigate, you collapse more and more reality.
According to biocentrism, space and time are relative to the individual observer - we each
carry them around like turtles with shells.
History is a biological phenomenon - it's the logic of what you, the animal observer
experiences. You have multiple possible futures, each with a different history like in the
Science experiment.
Consider the JFK example: say two gunmen shot at JFK, and there was an equal chance
one or the other killed him.
This would be a situation much like the famous Schrödinger's cat experiment, in which the
cat is both alive and dead - both possibilities exist until you open the BOX and investigate.
"We must re-think all that we have ever learned about the past, human
evolution and the NATURE of reality, if we are ever to find our true place in
the cosmos," says Constance Hilliard, a historian of science at UNT.
Choices you haven't made yet might determine which of your childhood friends are still alive,
or whether your dog got hit by a car yesterday.
In fact, you might even collapse realities that determine whether Noah's Ark sank.
"The universe," said John Haldane, "is not only queerer than we suppose,
but queerer than we can suppose."
Is Death the End?
Experiments Suggest You Create Time
December 22 ,2016
7. 7
When I was young, I stayed at my neighbor's house. They had a grandfather clock.
Between the tick and the tock of the pendulum, I lay awake thinking about the perverse
nature of time. Mr. Mohammad gone now. His wife amina bee, now in her nineties, greets
me with her cane when I go back to visit.
We watch our loved ones age and die, and we assume that an external entity called time is
responsible for the crime.
But experiments increasingly cast doubt on the existence of time as we know it.
In fact, the reality of time has long been questioned by philosophers and physicists. When we
speak of time, we're usually referring to change. But change isn't the same thing as time.
To measure anything's position precisely is to "lock in" on one static frame of its motion, as in
a film. Conversely, as soon as you observe movement, you can't isolate a frame, because
motion is the summation of many frames. Sharpness in one parameter induces blurriness in
the other. Consider a film of a flying arrow that stops on a single frame.
The pause enables you to know the position of the arrow with great accuracy: it's 20 feet
above the grandstand. But you've lost all information about its momentum. It's going
nowhere; its path is uncertain.
Numerous experiments confirm that such uncertainty is built into the fabric of reality.
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is a fundamental concept of quantum physics. However, it
only makes sense from a biocentric perspective. According to biocentrism, time is the inner
sense that animates the still frames of the spatial world.
Remember, you can't see through the bone surrounding your brain; everything you
experience is woven together in your mind. So what's real? If the next image is different from
the last, then it's different, period.
We can award change with the word "time," but that doesn't mean that there's an invisible
matrix in which changes occur.
At each moment we're at the edge of a paradox described by the Greek philosopher Zeno.
Because an object can't occupy two places simultaneously, he contended that an arrow is
only at one place during any given instant of its flight. To be in one place, however, is to be at
rest.
8. 8
The arrow must therefore be at rest at every instant of its flight.
Thus, motion is impossible.
But is this really a paradox?
Or rather, is it proof that time (motion) isn't a feature of the outer,
spatial world, but rather a conception of thought?
An experiment published in 1990 suggests that Zeno was right. In this experiment, scientists
demonstrated the quantum equivalent of the adage that "a WATCHED pot doesn't boil".
This behavior, the "quantum Zeno effect," turns out to be a function of observation.
"It seems," said physicist Peter Coveney, "that the act of looking at an atom
prevents it from changing".
Theoretically, if a nuclear bomb were watched intently enough - that is, if you could check its
atoms every million trillionth of a second - it wouldn't explode.
Bizarre? The problem lies not in the experiments but in our way of thinking about time.
Biocentrism is the only comprehensible way to explain these results, which are only "weird"
in the context of the existing paradigm.
In biocentrism, space and time are forms of animal intuition. They're TOOLS of the mind and
thus don't exist as external objects independent of life. When we feel poignantly that time has
elapsed, as when loved ones die, it constitutes the human perceptions of the passage and
existence of time. Our babies turn into adults. We age. That, to us, is time. It belongs with us.
New experiments confirm this concept.
In 2002, scientists carried out an amazing experiment that showed that within pairs of
particles, each particle anticipated what its twin would do in the future.
Somehow, the particles "knew" what the researcher would do before it happened, as if there
were no space or time between them. In a 2007 study published in Science, scientists shot
particles into an apparatus and showed that they could retroactively change whether
the particles behaved as photons or waves .
The particles had to "decide" what to do when they passed a fork in the apparatus. Later on,
the experimenter could flip a switch. It turns out what the observer decided at that point
determined how the particle had behaved at the fork in the past.
Thus the knowledge in our mind can determine how particles behave.
Of course, we live in the same world. Critics claim that this behavior is limited to the quantum
world. But this "two-world" view (that is, the view that there is one set of laws for quantum
objects and another for the rest of the universe, including us) has no basis in reason and is
being challenged in labs around the world.
Last year, researchers published a study inNATURE suggesting that quantum behavior
extends into the everyday realm.
Pairs of ions were coaxed to entangle, and then their properties remained bound together
when separated by large distances ("spooky action at a distance," as Einstein put it) as if
there were no time or space.
And in 2005, KHCO
3
crystals exhibited entanglement ridges half an inch high, demonstrating
that quantum behavior could nudge into the ordinary world of human-scale objects.
In the Oct. 2010 issue of Discover, theoretical physicists Stephen Hawking and Leonard
9. 9
Mlodinow state,
"There is no way to remove the observer - us - from our perceptions of the
world…
In classical physics, the past is assumed to exist as a definite series of
events, but according to quantum physics, the past, like the future, is
indefinite and exists only as a spectrum of possibilities".
That night, while lying awake at my neighbor's house, I had found the answer - that the
missing piece is with us.
As I see it, immortality doesn't mean perpetual (linear) existence in time but resides outside
of time altogether. Life is a journey that transcends our classical way of thinking. Experiment
after experiment continues to suggest that we create time, not the other way around.
Without consciousness, space and time are nothing.
At death, there's a break in the continuity of space and time; you can take any time - past or
future - as your new frame of reference and estimate all potentialities relative to it. In the end,
even Einstein acknowledged that,
"the distinction between past, present and future is only a stubbornly
persistent illusion."
Life is just one fragment of time, one brushstroke in a picture larger than ourselves, eternal
even when we die.
This is the indispensable prelude to immortality.
"Time and space are but the physiological colors which the eye maketh,"
said Ralph Waldo Emerson in his essay 'Self-Reliance.'
"But the soul is LIGHT; where it is, is day; where it was, is night."
Do You Only Live Once?
December 22 ,2016
We think we die and rot into the ground, and thus must squeeze everything in before it's too
late.
If life - yours, mine - is a just a one-time deal, then we're as likely to be screwed as
pampered. But experiments suggest this view of the world may be wrong.
Life is a flowering and adventure that transcends our ordinary linear way of thinking, an
interlude in a melody so vast and eternal that human EARS can't appreciate the tonal range
of the symphony.
10. 10
The results of quantum physics confirm that observations can't be predicted absolutely.
Instead, there's a range of possible observations each with a different probability.
One mainstream explanation, the "many-worlds" interpretation, states that there are an
infinite number of universes (the "multiverse"). Everything that can possibly happen occurs in
some universe.
The old mechanical - "we're just a bunch of atoms" - view of life loses its grip in these
scenarios.
Biocentrism extends this idea, suggesting that life is a flowering and adventure that
transcends our ordinary linear way of thinking. Although our individual bodies are destined to
self-destruct, the "me" feeling is just energy operating in the brain. But this energy doesn't go
away at death.
One of the surest principles of science is that energy never dies; it can neither be created nor
destroyed. When we die, we do so not in the random billiard ball matrix but in the
inescapable life matrix.
Life has a non-linear dimensionality - it's like a perennial flower that returns to bloom in the
multiverse.
A series of landmark experiments show that measurements an observer makes can
influence events that have already happened in the past. One experiment (Science 315, 966,
2007) confirmed that flipping a switch could retroactively change a result that had happened
before the switch was flipped.
Regardless of the choice you, the observer, make, it'll be you who will experience the
outcomes - the universes - that will result. The implications of this were clear with my sister
"Bubbles."
The earliest remembrance I have of my childhood was with her, in her play doctor's office.
"You're a little unwell," she said, handing me a cup of sand. "It's medicine.
Drink this and you'll feel better."
This I did; and as I started to drink it, Bubbles cried out "No!" and gave a gasp as if she were
swallowing it herself.
11. 11
The affection that existed between Bubbles and me was a strong one, for being my older
sister, she had always felt that it was her job to protect me. I can remember standing at the
school bus stop with my little mittens and lunchbox, when one of the older neighborhood
boys pushed me to the ground.
I was still on the ground and hurt, when I saw Bubbles running up the street.
"You touch my little brother ever again," she said, "and I'll punch your face
in."
It's difficult to believe that I, and not she, went on to become the doctor.
Although she was very bright, by 10
th
grade she'd dropped out of school and entered on a
course of destruction with drugs. The ill done to her at home had little remission. She was
beaten, ran away, and punished again. I recall her hiding under the porch, and the terror that
hung about the place; I can see the tears running down her face.
After moving out of the house I learned she was pregnant. When all the relatives refused to
go to her wedding, I told her "It's okay!" and held her hand.
The birth of "Little Bubbles" was a happy occasion, an oasis in this life in the desert. How
happy she was, and when I sat down by her side, she asked me - her little brother - if I'd be
the godfather to her child.
But all this was a SHORT event, and stands like a wild flower along an asphalt road. Little by
little her mind began to deteriorate. Although I'd seen a lot of medicine by then, it was a
matter of some emotion to me to see her child taken away. The deep remembrance I have of
her being utterly without hope, restrained and sedated with drugs.
As I went away from the hospital that day, I mingled my memories of her with tears.
Bubbles was still a pretty woman, and was found in the park once, quite distressed, her hair
hanging in her face and her CLOTHES torn; of which she knew as little as us. A while later
she was pregnant, and I can only understand that someone had taken advantage of her
again. I remember her looking at me in embarrassment, holding the baby in her arms. He
had a cute face, and I thought, didn't look like anyone we knew.
Soon after, my big sister - a once proud woman - lost even the remembrance of where she
lived.
This tale of Bubbles is one that has a thousand variations, told by many families, of tragedy
interspersed with joyous times. But plays of experience, even ones like that of my sister, are
never random, nor the end of the story.
Rather, they're interludes in a melody so vast and eternal that human EARS can't appreciate
the tonal range of the symphony.
"Whenever anything in NATURE seems to us ridiculous, absurd or evil,"
said Spinoza "it is because we have but a partial knowledge of things."
Life has a power that transcends any individual history or universe.
The story of my sister is part of a more profound drama, one that I know holds more joyful
fortunes as her life unfolds in the multiverse. As in the Science experiment, whether it's
flipping a switch or making other choices, she will experience the many outcomes and
resulting universes.
I only hope - if she becomes a doctor - the medicine goes down a lot easier than it did in her
play-office so long ago.
12. 12
Five Reasons You Won't Die
December 22 ,2016
We've been taught we're just a collection of cells, and that we die when our bodies wear out.
End of story.
I've written textbooks showing how cells can be engineered into virtually all the tissues and
organs of the human body. But a long list of scientific experiments suggests our belief in
death is based on a false premise, that the world exists independent of us - the great
observer.
A long list of scientific experiments suggests our belief in death is based on a false premise.
This article provides five compelling reasons why you won't die.
Here are five reasons you won't die.
Reason One
You're not an object, you're a special being. According to biocentrism,
nothing could exist without consciousness.
Remember you can't see through the bone surrounding your brain. Space
and time aren't objects, but rather theTOOLS our mind uses to weave
everything together.
"It will remain remarkable," said Eugene Wigner, who won
the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1963 "in whatever way our
future concepts may develop, that the very study of the
external world led to the conclusion that the content of the
consciousness is an ultimate reality."
Consider the uncertainty principle, one of the most famous and
13. 13
IMPORTANT aspects of quantum mechanics.
Experiments confirm it's built into the fabric of reality, but it only makes
sense from a biocentric perspective. If there's really a world out there with
particles just bouncing around, then we should be able to measure all their
properties. But we can't. Why should it matter to a particle what you decide
to measure?
Consider the double-slit experiment:
if one WATCHES" a subatomic particle or a bit of light pass
through slits on a barrier, it behaves like a particle and
creates solid-looking hits behind the individual slits on the
final barrier that measures the impacts.
Like a tiny bullet, it logically passes through one or the other hole. But if the
scientists do not observe the trajectory of the particle, then it exhibits the
behavior of waves that allow it pass through both holes at the same time.
Why does our observation change what happens? Answer: Because reality
is a process that requires our consciousness.
The two-slit experiment is an example of quantum effects, but experiments
involving Buckyballs and KHCO
3
crystals show that observer-dependent
behavior extends into the world of ordinary human-scale objects.
In fact, researchers recently showed (Nature 2009) that pairs of ions could
be coaxed to entangle so their physical properties remained bound together
even when separated by large distances, as if there was no space or time
between them.
Why? Because space and time aren't hard, cold objects. They're
merelyTOOLS of our understanding.
Death doesn't exist in a timeless, spaceless world.
After the death of his old friend, Albert Einstein said,
"Now Besso has departed from this strange world a little
ahead of me. That means nothing. People like us…know
that the distinction between past, present and future is only
a stubbornly persistent illusion."
In truth, your mind transcends space and time.
Reason Two
Conservation of energy is a fundamental axiom of science.
The first law of thermodynamics states that energy can't be created or
destroyed. It can only change forms. Although bodies self-destruct, the "me"
feeling is just a 20-watt cloud of energy in your head. But this energy doesn't
go away at death. A few years ago scientists showed they could retroactively
change something that happened in the past.
Particles had to "decide" how to behave when they passed a fork in an
apparatus. Later on, the experimenter could flip a switch. The results
showed that what the observer decided at that point determined how the
14. 14
particle behaved at the fork in the past.
Think of the 20-watts of energy as simply powering a PROJECTOR.
Whether you flip a switch in an experiment on or off, it's still the same battery
responsible for the projection. Like in the two-slit experiment, you collapse
physical reality. At death, this energy doesn't just dissipate into the
environment as the old mechanical worldview suggests. It has no reality
independent of you.
As Einstein's esteemed colleague John Wheeler stated,
"No phenomenon is a real phenomenon until it is an
observed phenomenon."
Each person creates their own sphere of reality - we carry space and time
around with us like turtles with shells. Thus, there is no absolute self-existing
matrix in which energy just dissipates.
Reason Three
Although we generally reject parallel universes as fiction, there's more than a
morsel of scientific truth to this genre.
A well-known aspect of quantum physics is that observations can't be
predicted absolutely. Instead, there's a range of possible observations each
with a different probability.
One mainstream explanation is the 'many-worlds' interpretation, which states
that each of these possible observations corresponds to a different universe
(the 'multiverse'). There are an infinite number of universes (including our
universe), which together comprise all of physical reality.
Everything that can possibly happen occurs in some universe. Death doesn't
exist in any real sense in these scenarios. All possible universes exist
simultaneously, regardless of what happens in any of them.
Like flipping the switch in the experiment above, you're the agent who
experiences them.
Reason Four
You will live on through your children, friends, and all who you touch during
your life, not only as part of them, but through the histories you collapse with
every action you take.
"According to quantum physics," said theoretical physicists
Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow, "the past, like the
future, is indefinite and exists only as a spectrum of
possibilities."
There's more uncertainty in bio-physical systems than anyone ever
imagined.
Reality isn't fully determined until we actually investigate (like in
15. 15
the Schrödinger's cat experiment). There are whole areas of history you
determine during your life. When you interact with someone, you collapse
more and more reality (that is, the spatio-temporal events that define your
consciousness).
When you're gone, your presence will continue like a ghost puppeteer in the
universes of those you know.
Reason Five
It's not an accident that you happen to have the fortune of being alive now
on theTOP of all infinity.
Although it could be a one-in-a-jillion chance, perhaps it's not just dumb luck,
but rather must be that way. While you'll eventually exit this reality, you, the
observer, will forever continue to collapse more and more 'nows.'
Your consciousness will always be in the present - balanced between the
infinite past and the indefinite future - moving intermittently between realities
along the edge of time, having new adventures and meeting new (and
rejoining old) friends.
Why You Will Always Exist
December 22 ,2016
You've laughed and cried. And you may even fall in love and grow old with someone, only to
be ripped apart in the end by death and disease.
The universe leaves you dead or grieving with a hole in you as big as infinity.
Can life really be reduced to the laws of physics, or are we part of
something more noble and triumphant?
Are we part of a depraved cosmic joke, the product of a vast and
ruthless universe?
Through the eyes of science, you're a speck of junk spinning around the core of the Milky
Way galaxy, which itself is whirling through the unfathomable blackness of space.
It's all in the equations, you know. Nothing to get philosophical about.
16. 16
Nobel physicist Steven Weinberg summed it up best:
The effort to understand the universe is one of the very few things that lifts
human life a little bit above the level of a farce and gives it some of the grace
of a tragedy.
Can life really be reduced to the laws of physics? Or are we - as all the great spiritual leaders
of the world have intuited - part of something higher, which is more noble and triumphant?
The latter is hard for us to rationally comprehend, since we've had more years of scientific
indoctrination than monks get in monasteries.
In Robert Heinlein's "Stranger in a Strange Land," Jubal said we're prisoners of our early
indoctrinations,
"for it is hard, very nearly impossible, to shake off one's earliest training."
We've been taught since grade school that life is an accidental byproduct of the laws of
physics, and that the Universe is a dreary play of billiard balls.
True, science has brought us countless insights that have transformed our lives. It's
amazingly good at figuring out how the parts work. The clock has been taken apart, and we
can accurately count the number of teeth in each wheel and gear.
We know Mars rotates in 24 hours, 37 minutes and 23 seconds.
What eludes us is the big picture, which unfortunately encompasses all the bottom-line
issues:
What is the NATURE of this thing we call 'reality'?
Any honest summary of the current state of explaining the universe as a whole: a swamp.
And in this Everglade, the alligators of common sense must be evaded at every turn.
Some scientists insist a Theory of Everything is just around the corner.
But it hasn't happened and won't happen until we understand a critical component of the
cosmos - a component that has been shunted out of the way because science doesn't know
what to do with it.
"Consciousness" isn't a small item; it's an utter mystery, which we think has somehow arisen
from molecules and goo.
In short, the attempt to explain the nature of the universe and what's really going on requires
an understanding of how the observer - our presence - plays a role. Our entire education and
language revolves around a mindset that assumes a separate universe "out there." It's
17. 17
further assumed we accurately perceive this external reality and play little or no role in its
appearance.
However, starting in the '20s, experiments have shown the opposite: The observer critically
influences the outcome.
The experiments have been performed so many times, with so many variations, it's
conclusively proven that a particle's behavior depends upon the very act of observation. The
results of these experiments have befuddled scientists for decades. Some of the greatest
physicists have described them as impossible to intuit.
Amazingly, if we accept a life-created reality, it all becomes simple to understand, and you
can explain some of the biggest puzzles of science. For instance, it becomes clear why
space and time - and even the properties of matter itself - depend on the observer.
Remember: You can't see through the bone surrounding your brain. Space and time are
simply the mind's tools for putting everything together.
According to current scientific myth, all your struggles and tears are ultimately in vain. After
you die and the human race is long gone, it'll be as if nothing in your life ever existed.
Not so, says biocentrism: Reality isn't a thing, it's a process that involves our consciousness.
Life is a melody so vast and eternal that human EARS can't appreciate the tonal range of the
symphony.
Time is the mind's tool that animates the notes, the individual frames of the spatial world.
"There's no way to remove the observer - us - from our perceptions of the
world," said Stephen Hawking. "The past, like the future, is indefinite and
exists only as a spectrum of possibilities."
You, the observer, collapse these possibilities, the cascade of events we call the universe.
Our consciousness animates the universe like an old phonograph. Listening to it doesn't alter
the record, and depending on where the needle is placed, you hear a certain piece of music.
This is what we call "now."
The songs before and after are the past and future. In like manner, you, your loved ones and
friends (and sadly, the villains too) endure always. The record doesn't go away.
All nows exist simultaneously, although we can only listen to the songs one by one.
Time is 'On Demand.'
"The most IMPORTANT thing I learned," said Billy Pilgrim in Kurt
Vonnegut's novel 'Slaughterhouse Five,' "was that when a person dies, he
only appears to die. He is still very much alive in the past, so it is very silly
for people to cry at his funeral. All moments, past, present and future, always
have existed, always will exist."
Return to Time
Return to Quantum
Return to The Astral Plane
Return to Consciousness and
Science
Return to Consciousness and
Human Energy