What happens when you turn spacetime upside-down?
Why some physicists really think there's a 'mirror universe' hiding in spacetime : Read more
Why some physicists really think there's a 'mirror universe' hiding in spacetime : Read more
We still believe that the world is flat and if you go to the edge of the planet; you would fall off.
Not being a scientist the answer to my question might be obvious. At time zero the detonation would be an expanding sphere not one or two flat expanding circles. Further if the expanding flat circles are correct would not the centre/centres move further forward then the edges unless of course the expansion is moving at the speed of light.
Questioning the nature of reality and our form, fit and function in it for decades, some insights have occurred and the holistic picture seems a bit different, although I'm still working on being able to articulate it well. We seem to forget about including consciousness as well as matter.
to articulate it well. We seem to forget about including consciousness as well as matter.
From that POV, and from understanding garnered from a profound NDE as a teen in my first year in college, stating that the universe is seeking to replicate itself in order to experience its creation might be a little closer to the truth. James Gardner mentions that in Biocosm, and it feels congruent. Like another of his surname, Howard, and his notions of multiple intelligences in play, cognition of an experience is not always definable in words. of the a pulse of that (as we know from quantum studies) leaves ripples across the electromagnetic spectrum as it slows to condense into form.
Questioning the nature of reality and our form, fit and function in it for decades, some insights have occurred and the holistic picture seems a bit different, although I'm still working on being able to articulate it well. We seem to forget about including consciousness as well as matter.
From that POV, and from understanding garnered from a profound NDE as a teen in my first year in college, stating that the universe is seeking to replicate itself in order to experience its creation might be a little closer to the truth. James Gardner mentions that in Biocosm, and it feels congruent. Like another of his surname, Howard, and his notions of multiple intelligences in play, cognition of an experience is not always definable in words.
If I understand what I was shown correctly and in simple terms, there is a 'Great Light' of assimilation, which is the eternal aspect of 'soul' perhaps. In it, a juxtaposition of all-knowing and curiosity exist, an individuation with unrestricted access within a collective body of knowledge. There, the questions of who am I and what am I here to do get answered, facilitating a trail of questions that may last a lifetime in seeking a perfected form, fit and function in the world.
Further exploration revealed individuated consciousness as points of light on a vast field of indigo. The return felt like a rush of energy compressing into my body lying across my dorm room bed. I was able to feel the sensation void of thought initially, a kind of effervescent feeling that stayed for a few moments until I started thinking again, beginning with the obvious, "What the heck just happened?" I digress...
Like the electromagnetic spectrum, there is layering of 'bandwidth' across it, with certain frequency ranges that have a 'reality' within them, like a rainbow of sorts with each color layer having distinct features and a 'world' within it. Of the plethora of postulates, I like Neppe and Close, who offer that consciousness, space and time are tethered across dimensions. They call it the Triadic Dimensional Distinction Vortical Paradigm. An experience like the Multi-plane Awareness Technique developed by William Swygaard in the 1950s, way ahead of its time, offers some experiential proof.
From a POV of cosmic consciousness condensing into form, as references to a point of light in the center of our being is strewn across mystery schools, with every heart beat our 'energy' expands and contracts in spherical movements, mirroring the pulse of the universe only exponentially sped up. We don't have the tech lens to view it just yet, though it will probably be a product of quantum mechanics inquiry soon. The Big Bang may have indeed been an explosion of consciousness, a pulse of light that (as we know from quantum studies) leaves ripples across the electromagnetic spectrum as it slows to condense into form.