Quantum Reality
January 7th, 2014
Quantum Reality: The Limitless Potential Within Everything
I have pondered the reasoning about our consciousness for some years and nothing makes more sense than the fact our consciousness creates our physical reality, it explains a lot of stuff from psychology to quantum physics. The problem is discovery, once the world was considered flat by the many ancient cultures, the paradigm of a spherical Earth was developed in Greek astronomy, beginning with Pythagoras (6th century BC), surely the collective consciousness of the time would have made it flat? Consider maybe, human intelligence and consciousness is just a spec of what actually might exist, and it is the universal collective consciousness of all sentient beings that transverse space and time, that bring matter into existence, thus our small scale and rather less experienced observations made little difference.
Entry Filed under: General
3 Comments Add your own
1. Chain | February 8th, 2014 at 9:14 am
One of the problems with science is that you have to be trained to enter the field now and are basically forced to learn the laws as written by various people that came before you. Then you have to study for years before you are accepted into the scientific community.. So Joe Blog’s having a nice simple solution to a problem will be ridiculed by those who have spent years in a dusty library learning from books..
If you think about it this is the same with everything we do, I would argue that when I was younger I would have made a brilliant software developer but was pretty much ignored until I had left the area behind, the same with computers once I had reached a level where I was hitting the barriers of academic qualifications I ended up stuck managing the people and telling them what and how to do things..
So as a society I think we have pretty much lost all the Greeks gave us and more because we don’t have time to listen to the *people*.
Wow that was deep for a Saturday morning.. Best have a coffee and calm down.. *mutter mutter*
2. Lemmy | February 8th, 2014 at 10:03 pm
Similar reason why I am now a gas engineer instead of working in a sound studio or developing some sort of tech in a lab somewhere, although I had one or two opportunities, I was too young and naive to recognise their importance. I now have dwindling concentration skills, no sleep and little cash to help organise things that would fast track an improvement, so my current strategy is just to carry on, things always seem to be the same day in, day out, until when you look back and everything is different. Still convinced a move is what is needed to kick start my motivation.
3. Chain | February 15th, 2014 at 5:07 pm
Well when I was younger (ha) I always wanted two things – To own my own home and it be nice a big with room for my *stuff* and be famous for writing something cool (game/software).
How daft was that??.. I mean someone famous today is a forgotten person tomorrow, look back at history and it is taught based upon impact and political motivation. No way anything I’m ever going to achieve is going to break the mold or improve peoples lives.. So I shall live and die and three years after I’m gone no one will remember me or what I did..
Instead I now just enjoy my life as best I can I shun a lot of contact because the pain of losing people or being let down hurts too much and well I’m pretty happy with the state of things.. I have a great wife some daft hounds and now a bunch of chickens.. Hmm so what have I to complain about?
Anyway moving… Would you be happy leaving your friends and family behind? I know you have a much closure family that I could have ever had so perhaps your just trying to find an excuse? Fella you have had a very exciting life so far have some great kids and some wacky friends (and I’m not talking about me here).. The impression you have on others is as much about you as the things you *do*..
Chill have a Cider (pear is nice) and listen to some heavy metal in a dark room for 30 minutes.. there.. better?
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