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What are the Modern Miracles?
Lives of people are often affected by remarkable occurrences that cannot be explained by the precepts of modern science. There is a general sense that most of these phenomena occur within the brain, but seem to be otherwise un-explainable. The most common examples that I cite are:
• Near-Death experiences
• Past lives
• Telepathy
• Remote viewing
• Precognition
• Crop circles
• Astrology
• Orbs, balls of light
• Ghosts, fairies
• Deja-vu
• UFO sightings
• Abductions
• Levitation
The response of our establishment, and particularly the University community has been basically “divide and conquer.” They are easily identified as simple mind phenomena, and dismissed as something that you read about in National Enquirer. “It’s just those NDE people again.” “He sees ghosts, Ha, Ha, Ha.” “Telepathy is just some simple empathy effect of the mind.” What is presently lacking is some overall understanding of what property of the mind, or of the Universe enables these phenomena.
But these phenomena are often quite real to the perceiver, who often feels let down by our scholarly research community.
The Underlying Explanation
The Quantum Hologram (QH) formulation of the predominant description of all nature seems to offer understanding. This formulation has origins in several research threads, but perhaps the most prominent is the theoretical and mathematical consideration of mathematician Walter Shempp and Scientist/ Astronaut (APOLLO 14) Dr. Edgar Mitchell.
The key point is that the Quantum Hologram formulation sensibly explains all of the Modern Miracles.
The description quantum hologram applies because it is profoundly grounded in the concept that a quantum field underlies the entire description of all real, mass embodied objects in the physical Universe, down to the atomic description of matter. And it is described as a hologram because it allows for the description of higher dimensional reality in its physical dimensional properties. We are familiar with the way that a 2-dimensional hologram on a sheet of film illuminated by coherent laser light creates a 3-dimensional image apparent to the eye.
An important property of the quantum description is that it is not confined to the location of the object, and so is said to be non-local. Here, what is described by the word non-local means that when two particles collide, as in a particle accelerator, their recoil particles are conjoined over spaces of many miles, so that measurement of the properties of one particle causes instantaneous definition of the quantum state of the other over the vast distance. In particular, this co-joining occurs at speeds measured to be faster than the speed of light.
This is not a problem for the theory of relativity and the finite speed of light. Recall that the Einstein Special Theory of Relativity states that no particle can travel faster than light, but this does not seem to restrict the quantum description of particles.
Philosophers stone – selected views from the boat http://philosophers-stone.co.uk