sexta-feira, novembro 18, 2005

After Life - Bruce Moen


The graphic on the opening page of this Web site is a representation of a portion of who and what I've come to understand myself and all human beings to be. It comes from a waking vision that took place in 1974 that led me to explore beyond the physical world. I discovered there is another me. That me is something I call my Disk, something Bob Monroe called the I/There. Others might call this the Higher Self, Greater Self or Oversoul. The me inhabiting my physical body is but one small part of the Disk. In my explorations, I’ve seen my Disk or Greater Self. To me, it looks like a large disk with many small, round lights arranged in concentric circles. It’s my understanding each of these lights is a personality of my Greater Self, that has completed its cycle of incarnations. Each carries the knowledge and wisdom gained through their countless incarnations. These "other me’s," if you will, maintain their personal identity as individual parts of my Greater Self. They didn’t lose their personal identities when they became members of my Disk, rather, they added all within themselves to it. Each individual became an integral part of my Greater Self.

I, the one in my physical body, am nonphysically connected to members of the Disk via something that looks, to my perception, like a multi-strand, fiber optic cable. It connects between the shoulder blades and may be the basis of the "silver cord" others have written about. Information passes through this "cord" between myself and my Disk giving Disk members awareness of my activities and me awareness of them, once I learned how.

It’s also my understanding that I was created by my Greater Self as a unique combination of traits of Disk members. My Greater Self used parts of itself to create the unique personality that I am. From one perspective, I see myself as a "Probe, not unlike something NASA would launch to explore the Unknown. In other words, my Greater Self created me from parts of itself and sent me into physical world reality to explore. I also understand that my Greater Self is, itself, a similar Probe, created and "launched" by its creator. I expect my Greater Self will one day return to its creator to become a member of whatever It is. I expect when that happens my Greater Self will not lose its personal identity, but rather join its Greater Self.

For a more detailed explanation, see The Disk Vision's Meaning (A Probe Called Curiosity)

Afterlife Knowledge Home Page

sexta-feira, novembro 11, 2005

Holographic Brain

The New Paradigm
of Mind and Matter

by Forest Crawford (1994)

The quest to understand the UFO-alien phenomenon has occupied the minds of truth-seekers for nearly sixty years. We have come a long way from the World War II view of the "Foo-fighter" to the present of abductions and contacts. However, even with advances in modern technology, we still do not truly comprehend the who, what, when, where, and why of UFO-alien encounters. No matter how hard we measure, photograph or analyze it, the UFO phenomenon just does not fit within our paradigm. I believe it escapes understanding not because people are incapable of comprehending it, but because our paradigm of reality is limited.

Everything we know about what we call reality comes to our minds through our senses. So, before we can understand what reality is, we must examine how we perceive it. Neuro-physiologists theorize that our brains record information in a linear fashion, much like a computer. The sights, sounds, touches, tastes, smells, and feelings go into our memory in order like a chronological filing cabinet. However, every experiment to prove this theory has failed to show such a memory model. Karl Pribram, while working on this problem, noticed that the brain seemed to be recording information in the same manner as a laser hologram.

Holograms

A laser hologram is a unique way of photographing an object. The image is recorded onto special holographic film by laser light. When the film is then illuminated by the same frequency of laser light that recorded the image, a seemingly real three dimensional image of the photographed object is projected. When looking at a piece of holographic film, you do not see an image of the object photographed like normal camera film. What is seen is an intricate pattern of concentric circles that look like rain drops on the surface of a pond. Holographic film records the wave pattern of the image, not the individual points of light like a camera.

Pribram’s theory was that the brain stored everything in a complex pattern formed by the interference of wave energy, not the firing of individual neurons. The only question that remained was what wave-like phenomenon is the brain using to create such internal holograms? As soon as Pribram considered the question, he thought of a possible answer. It was known that the electrical communications that take place between the brain’s nerve cells or neurons do not occur alone.

Neurons possess branches like little trees, and when an electrical message reaches the end of one of these branches it radiates outward as does the ripple in a pond. Because neurons are packed together so densely, these expanding ripples of electricity - also a wave-like phenomenon - are constantly crisscrossing one another. When Pribram remembered this he realized that they were most assuredly creating an almost endless and kaleidoscopic array of interference patterns, and these in turn might be what gives the brain its holographic properties. "The hologram was there all the time in the wave-front nature of brain-cell connectivity," observed Pribram. "We simply hadn’t the wit to realize it."

A hologram is a demonstration of a very special type of mathematics known as "Fourier Transforms." Invented by the eighteenth-century Frenchman Jean B.J. Fourier, these mathematical formulas show how to convert any pattern, no matter how complex, into a language of waves. Fourier’s formulas can also be used to convert wave forms into patterns. A hologram is an image created by the interference of wave energy. The image projected out of that hologram is the pattern of the interference wave-form.

In 1979, researchers Karen and Russell DeValois discovered that the visual cortex of the brain appeared to be functioning like a frequency analyzer and not a digital register. They attached electrodes to subjects in order to read their brain waves and had them look at a simple plaid pattern. When they analyzed the data, they found that the wave forms in the brain matched the Fourier Transform of the plaid pattern. Other researchers went on to discover that the senses of taste, touch, smell and hearing also registered in the brain as a frequency response. This suggests that the brain is functioning and perceiving holographically.

Pribram realized that if the holographic model was taken to its logical conclusions, it opened the door to the possibility that objective reality - the world of coffee cups, mountain vistas, elm trees, and table lamps - might not even exist, or at least might not exist in the way we believe it exists. Was it possible, he wondered, that what the mystics had been saying for centuries was true: Reality was maya - an illusion, and what was out there was really a vast, resonating symphony of wave forms, a "frequency domain" that was transformed into the world as we know it only after it entered our senses?

Pribram, realizing the solution he sought might lie outside his field of expertise, consulted his physicist son. His son recommended that he look into the work of physicist David Bohm. When Pribram did, he found that Bohm had come to the same conclusions about reality. In fact, according to Bohm, the entire universe was a hologram.

The Nature of Reality

Bohm called the base reality, or energy that everything is manifest out of, the "implicate order" or enfolded. He called the level of reality that we function in "the waking state," and that of objects and appearances, the "explicate order" or unfolded. The explicate order is formed from or bubbles up out of the implicate order. "Electrons and all other particles are no more substantive or permanent than the form a geyser of water takes as it gushes out of a fountain. They are sustained by a constant influx from the implicate order, and when a particle appears to be destroyed, it is not lost. It has merely enfolded back into the deeper order from which it sprang. A piece of holographic film and the image it generates are also an example of an implicate and explicate order. The film is an implicate order because the image encoded in its interference patterns is a hidden totality enfolded throughout the whole. The hologram projected from the film is an explicate order because it represents the unfolded and perceptible version of the image." The universe is an infinite motion hologram flowing in and out of itself, changing its form and images constantly. Bohm calls it a "holomovement."

Most mind-boggling of all are Bohm’s fully-developed ideas about wholeness. Because everything in the cosmos is made out of the seamless holographic fabric of the implicate order, he believes it is as meaningless to view the universe as composed of "parts," as it is to view the different geysers in a fountain as separate from the water out of which they flow. "An electron is not an elementary particle. It is just a name given to a certain aspect of the holomovement. Dividing reality up into parts and then naming those parts is always arbitrary, a product of convention, because subatomic particles and everything else in the universe are no more separate from one another than different patterns in an ornate carpet."

This is a profound suggestion. In his general theory of relativity, Einstein astounded the world when he said that space and time are not separate entities, but are smoothly linked and part of a larger whole he called the space-time continuum. Bohm takes this idea a giant step further stating, "Everything in the universe is part of a continuum. Despite the apparent separateness of things at the explicate level, everything is a seamless extension of everything else, and ultimately even the implicate and explicate orders blend into each other."

"Take a moment to consider this. Look at your hand. Now look at the light streaming from the lamp beside you. And at the dog resting at your feet. You are not merely made of the same things, you are the same thing. One thing, unbroken. One enormous something that has extended its uncountable arms and appendages into all the apparent objects, atoms, restless oceans, and twinkling stars in the cosmos."

Bohm cautions that this does not mean the universe is a giant undifferentiated mass. Things can be part of an undivided whole and still possess unique qualities. To illustrate what he means, he points to the little eddies and whirlpools that often form in a river. At a glance, such eddies appear to be separate things and possess many individual characteristics such as size, rate, direction of rotation, et cetera. However, careful scrutiny reveals that it is impossible to determine where any given whirlpool ends and the river begins. Thus, Bohm is not suggesting that the differences between things is meaningless. He merely wants us to constantly be aware that dividing various aspects of the holomovement into things is always an abstraction; a way of making those aspects stand out in our perception by our way of thinking. In an attempt to correct this, instead of calling different aspects of the holomovement "things," he prefers to call them "relatively independent subtotalities."

Bohm believes that our almost universal tendency to fragment the world and ignore the dynamic interconnectedness of all things is responsible for many of our problems, not only in science, but in our lives and our society as well.

Consciousness

We have been talking about the "stuff" of the universe and our perception of it, but what about consciousness? Where does mind and spirit enter the equation?

Physicists have recently discovered that on deep subatomic levels, the thoughts of the scientists and technicians influence the particles. The atom has also been broken into small enough pieces where the particles will not split any further. They just turn into energy. But what is the basic energy that all matter is made of? What if this energy is consciousness - frozen "thought," perhaps?

In fact, Bohm believes that consciousness is a more subtle form of matter, and the basis for any relationship between the two lies not in our own level of reality, but deep in the implicate order. Consciousness is present in various degrees of enfoldment and unfoldment in all matter.

Summary

Let us summarize what this new understanding of reality shows us:

· Our brains are frequency transceivers and interpret reality in the form of wave patterns like a holograph.

· Quantum physics is demonstrating that the universe is structured and functions like a giant hologram.

· Everything is connected.

· Everything in the universe has within it the pattern or information of all the universe. For example, if a piece of holographic film is broken into smaller pieces, each fragment contains the entire image of the whole in lower resolution.

· Everything in the universe is made of the same thing: energy.

· Physical reality is the image projected out of the interference pattern of this energy.

· Our thoughts influence physical and nonphysical reality whether we are aware of it or not.

· Perhaps the energy that makes up all things is thought or consciousness.

Think constructive caring thoughts about yourself, other people, and the planet. God only knows what damage our fears have done already. Even with this brief explanation of reality and our perception of it, it should be clear that humanity has been dismally asleep for most of history.

About Michael Talbot

Michael Talbot, author of The Holographic Universe, began having memories of what we would term today as "past lives." When he was five-years-old, his home began experiencing poltergeist activity. Mysterious entities would visit him in the night and he saw glowing balls of light floating through his house. Mr. Talbot had several UFO sightings including one in which he and a friend experienced several hours of missing time. According to his good friend Carol Dreyer, who helped him with some of his research, Michael had consulted with both Whitley Strieber and Budd Hopkins before his death in an attempt to learn more about his apparent abduction.

Although Michael Talbot did not discover the Holographic Model of the Universe, he is credited with being the person who introduced the concept to the general public. Some of the quotes and information for this article were taken from Michael Talbot’s The Holographic Universe. Michael Talbot also wrote Beyond the Quantum, Mysticism, and The New Physics. Michael Talbot died of leukemia in 1992, at the young age of 39.

The Holographic Universe is available in paperback and is published by HarperPerennial, a division of HarperCollins.

About Forest Crawford

Mr. Crawford has worked as a hypnotherapist and is the Director of Illinois MUFON. He has been investigating the UFO-alien phenomenon for twenty years. Mr. Crawford has written a manuscript titled, The Names of The Sky.

Forest Crawford believes we are entering an age of expanding our time-plus-three-dimensional reality to a more intuitive realm where synchronicity and psychic perceptions are a part of our normal reality.

Other books relating to this subject that are highly recommended are: Hyperspace: A Scientific Odyssey Through Parallel Universes, Time Warps, and the 10th Dimension by Michio Kaku, (see Greenleaf Publications on the Internet) and Passport to the Cosmos by John E. Mack, M.D. (see PEER’s Web site at http://www.peer-mack.org). PEER is a project of the Center for Psychology and Social Change, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.