Nomos
May 06, 2004, 08:14 AM
I am a total dunce in neuroscience, but I've always been fascinated by all matters of the human conscience and how it evolves with certain aids. I have long tried to apply relativity to explain the power of human thought and its recursive nature. I am awakening to so many political realities that have been hidden from American society for so long. Before I end up on too much of a tangent, let me just say that the Department of Homeland Security sounds an awful lot like Robespierre's Committee of Public Safety that ran the Reign of Terror in France in 1793. Specifically, though, I've thought a lot about precognizant dreaming, and why such a phenomenon can exist. I feel that our subconscious must be able to perceive future expenditures of energy by our mind in times of great stress or dynamic change. So much energy is created by stress; we know this by how it accelerates the aging of the human body so rapidly. Our neurotransmitters, made up of spacetime matter, have to interpret lightspeed impulses, right? Where do those supposedly incompatible worlds collide? Do the atoms that make up the cells of our neurotransmitters experience an acceleration toward lightspeed? If so, does this create the spacetime contraction that Einstein promised that any object approaching lightspeed would? I've never found anyone to discuss this with me, as most people would be quick to dismiss me as insane. Does anyone have any wisdom to share on this subject?
Nomos
May 06, 2004, 08:21 AM
To clarify, the 'perception' of future energies is what I believe takes the shape of a precognizant dream, where the imprint of these energies is sent on a wave across the -time axis of the 4th dimension because of some 'ripple' that is sent by high-energy neurotransmitter activity. I would like to know, also, if anyone has had a clear dream of the past, involving a deceased love one, for example, or if that only manifests as a function of our conscious memory.