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Robert the Bruce
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/NUTSHELL.html
Robert the Bruce
http://www.theodynamics.com/newtheories/node.html

Node to Node to Node

Most folks are familiar with the Planetary Nodes and their connecting pathways - Ley lines. Nodes are energy centers or convergent zones and each is linked to others of like magnitude. They have a sequential quality and link through what physicists call reaction paths. Bioenergyinformation can only travel between corresponding counterparts. The drawing depicts the earth and its nodes along with the body’s grid. Also shown are the unseen nodes surrounding the bio-body and all space. Thought can only be transmitted across transmission lines to like nodes whether in the bio-mind or the Vyo-mind. Notice the higher pitched nodes are not in the loop of the two earthlings. Outside the range of voice or smoke signals (radio, television, etc.), bio-minds cannot contact each other but because the earth-brain simulcasts to unseen nodes in parity while carrying on in-house business, the user is provided with remote vyoviewing and vyocommunication.



Synapses in the bio-brain can be thought of as the most distant nodes. They follow the sequential principle across neurons which form specialized circuits. Except for an occasional bleed-over or misfire, one synapse cannot affect another that is outside of its sequential chain. Acuducts are nodes which supply energy to the peripheral body through pathways known as meridians. Other energy nodes, chakras, also maintain the human bio-body and the pathways which circulate the energy to the bio-body’s vital organs are called nadis. There is a universal frequency for each chakra. When unblocked, each chakra vibrates in resonance or in tune with its counterpart frequency. <O:P></O:P>

Less known are nodes in the human holographic matrix where knowledge is permanently imprinted and it can be uplinked from the earth-brain by sequential reaction paths and down linked to the mid earth-brain in the same fashion. The uplink carrier is probably a medium of ether or firmament and transmissions are limited to reaction paths to like frequency nodes. The down-link from the vyo-nodes is through the medium of water, bio-cells communicate in much the same fashion as the vyo-cells but the bio-system is easier to comprehend.

There is an unseen medium that is a carrier of information in space but it is just as real as a wire or water. Except for lightening and satellite down-links, entrainment and reaction pathways outside of the bio-body and the bio-body’s vision are non-topics in most of today’s science.<O:P> </O:P>

The next great step for earthlings is to comprehend the nodes of the unseen intellectual universe. Information in that field is bound by the same universal law of energy transfer (entrainment) as exhibited in lightening. The trick is to reach parity with these transmission lines to transfer data from the Vast Active Living Intelligent System (VALIS) to the Vyo-Mind and finally to the bio-mind in the earth-brain -- and back.<O:P> </O:P>

There are trillions and trillions of nodes, B-cells can be thought of as nodes and each has its own local signature. Vyo-node frequencies are universal, bio-life is sustained in space by vyo-nodes which makes space travel possible - terranauts must carry earth-life support for B-cells but the vyo-body is at home in those frequencies. <O:P></O:P>

It is the break down of these transmission lines Barbara Thiering reported in her book, Jesus & the Riddle of the Dead Sea Scrolls, that in Jesus’ day those who subverted the Cosmic Circuit were “dead to the Spirit”, the awakening was the reestablishment of the circuit. This is how she explains Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead, he was dead to the Spirit and Jesus reawakened that cord in him.<O:P> </O:P>

It would behoove earthlings to relate to higher vibratory nodes, that is, practice love and kindness. Since the bio-brain simulcasts its intent to the vyo-mind and that is what we transition to with the demise of the bio, it is senseless to resonant to lower realms. George Meeks explains in After we Die, What Then, “Now [after dying] you understand that you are the same after you leave the [bio]body as before. ...that there are spheres of life where you will belong - and nothing can keep you out of your sphere.” Vyofeedback™ can assist in opening and raising circuits to a higher sphere.

As mentioned, everything in the universe follows reaction paths which are linked by nodes. If we were to understand this phenomenon, life would not be so mysterious nor could there be false belief systems. Lightning is the best example of reaction paths. When conditions are right the strike goes regardless. It travels from node to node until it reaches a final destination; no more reciprocating nodes.



Homo Sapiens and soon to be Homo Noeticus are the result of resonating nodes. We see in the Tree of Life (below) how reaction paths became culdesacs and given species end while those in resonance connect to a higher link.



Even the reverberating circuits of the brain follows the rule. Stimuli follows from node to node in order of resonating strength. In the cocktail party phenomenon, the user can listen to the select speaker because all of the noise nodes are made to dead-end.<O:P> </O:P> Communication across dimensions is only possible because of these alignments.




Continuing on with nodes and their related reaction paths or corresponding counterparts, we see the Undifferentiated Divine Light slowing into myriads of rays, spectrums, and interlocking transmission lines. This is the same methodology utilized in planet and star building. Once built, Undifferentiated First Force continues to flo-thru these bodies. The intelligent conscious band splits off high up on the ladder. The bioenergy band is refracted by passing through one of these stars (sun); slows, and splits off to chakras and nadis, acuducts and meridians, and the otherkind; animals and plants. Etherickind exists somewhere in this chain but in higher realms.
It is obvious how the conscious band (Divine Light) finds its way to the Optical Logic Gate (pineal) and how it then interacts with the solar light (3D) circuit. Here we see the earth-brain corrupting the pure circuit into mostly false constructs. It is entirely possible to construct only true thought forms but because of social inertia, unanalyzed social forces, fraudulent belief systems, and ignorance, humans have subverted most of their goodness.

In our time, one of the most dangerous subterfuges is the idea that we choose to come here for the mental cruelty that is prevalent in order “to learn something.” If that be so, then we should not be shocked when we have killings, rapes, and wars. After all, that is what we came here for. The dangerous aspect of this is the self-fulfilling prophecy; teach humans they are sinful and unclean and they will not disappoint your teachings. <O:P></O:P>

So long as earthlings excuse their life effacing actions as “God caused”, these debilitating acts will continue. It should be apparent from the drawing that the mid earth-brain is directly connected to the Ultimate Mind, we begin with pure energy. We were given perhaps the finest instrument in the universe which provides us the freedom to create but, because of our unknowing, we often use it to corrupt. It is just possible that this brain, which is usually wasted, is an instrument of the Creator providing that formless energy with a thumb. It is likely that when the Circuit is complete, and the direct connection is sensed, there will be no corruption.




Return to the New Set of Theories
Robert the Bruce
Like the sponge cells and the slime mold amoeba, you and I are parts of a vast population whose pooled efforts move some larger creature on its path through life. Like the sponge cells, we cannot live in total separation from the human clump. We are components of a superorganism.

excerpted from Howard Bloom's
The Lucifer Principle
A Scientific Expedition Into The Forces of History


Superorganism


It looks like a single being. But it's a society of former individualists...the slime mold.

ver a hundred years ago, Matthius Schleiden, the German botanist, was pondering the recently discovered fact that beings as simple as water fleas and as complex as human beings are made up of individual cells. Each of those cells has all the apparatus necessary to lead a life of its own. It is walled off in its own mini-world by the surrounding hedge of a membrane, carries its own metabolic power plants, and seems quite capable of going about its own business, ruggedly declaring its independence. Yet the individual cells, in pursuing their own goals, cooperate to create an entity much larger than themselves. Schleiden declared that each cell has an individual existence, and that the life of an organism comes from the way in which the cells work together.

In 1858, pathologist Rudolph Virchow took Schleiden's observation a step further. He declared that "the composition of the major organism, the so-called individual, must be likened to a kind of social arrangement or society, in which a number of separate existencies are dependent upon one another, in such a way, however, that each element possesses its own peculiar activity and carries out its own task by its own powers." A creature like you and me, said Virchow, is actually a society of separate cells.

The reasoning also works in reverse--a society acts like an organism. Half a century after Virchow, entomologist William Morton Wheeler was observing the lives of ants. No ant is an island. Wheeler saw the tiny beasts maintaining constant contact, greeting each other as they passed on their walkways, swapping bits of regurgitated food, adopting social roles that ranged from warrior or royal handmaiden to garbage handler and file clerk. (Yes, at the heart of many ant colonies is a room to which all incoming workers bring their discoveries. Seated at the chamber's center is a staff of insect bureaucrats who examine the new find, determine where it is needed in the colony, and send it off to the queen's chamber if it is a prized morsel, to the nursery if it is ordinary nourishment, to the construction crews if it would make good mortar, or to the garbage heap kept just outside the nest.)

Viewed from the human perspective, the activities of the individual ants seemed to matter far less than the behavior of the colony as a whole. In fact, the colony acted as if it were an independent creature, feeding itself, expelling its wastes, defending itself, and looking out for its future. Wheeler was the man who dubbed a group of individuals collectively acting like one beast a superorganism.

The term superorganism slid into obscurity until it was revived by Sloan-Kettering head Lewis Thomas in his influential 1974 book Lives Of A Cell. Superorganisms exist even on the very lowest rungs of the evolutionary ladder. Slime mold are seemingly independent amoeba, microscopic living blobs who race about on the moist surface of a decaying tree or rotting leaf cheerfully oblivious to each other when times are good. They feast gaily for days on bacteria and other delicacies, attending to nothing but their own selfish appetites. But when the food runs out, famine descends upon the slime mold world. Suddenly the formerly flippant amoeba lose their sense of boisterous individualism. They rush toward each other as if in a panic, sticking together for all they're worth.

Gradually, the clump of huddled microbeasts grows to something you can see quite clearly with the naked eye. It looks like a slimy plant. And that plant--a tightly-packed mass of former freedom-lovers--executes an emergency public works project. Like half-time marchers forming a pattern, some of the amoeba line up to form a stalk that pokes itself high into the passing currents of air. Then the creatures at the head cooperate to manufacture spores. And those seeds of life drift off into the breeze.

If the spores land on a heap of rotting grass or slab of decomposing bark, they quickly multiply, filling the slippery refuge with a horde of newly-birthed amoeba. Like their parents, the little things race off to the far corners of their new home in a cheerful hunt for dinner. They never stop to think that they may be part of a community whose corporate life is as critical as their own. They are unaware that someday they, like their parents, will have to cluster with their fellows in a desperate cooperative measure on which the future of their children will depend.



Sponges in the wild.
Another creature enlisted in a superorganism is the citizen of a society called the sponge. To you and me, a sponge is quite clearly a single clump of squeezable stuff. But that singularity is an illusion. Take a living sponge, run it through a sieve into a bucket, and the sponge breaks up into a muddy liquid that clouds the water into which it falls. That cloud is a mob of self-sufficient cells, wrenched from their comfortably settled life between familiar neighbors and set adrift in a chaotic world. Each of those cells has theoretically got everything it takes to handle life on its own. But something inside the newly liberated sponge cell tells it, "You either live in a group or you cannot live at all." The micro-beasts search frantically for their old companions, then labor to reconstruct the social system that bound them together. Within a few hours, the water of your bucket grows clear. And sitting at the bottom is a complete, reconstituted sponge.

Like the sponge cells and the slime mold amoeba, you and I are parts of a vast population whose pooled efforts move some larger creature on its path through life. Like the sponge cells, we cannot live in total separation from the human clump. We are components of a superorganism.

For the next chapter of The Lucifer Principle
--Isolation: The Ultimate Poison--click here.


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THE LUCIFER PRINCIPLE
A Scientific Expedition Into the Forces of History


available from Amazon.com


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For


"A fascinating new evolutionary theory which could deeply change our view of life, and a new worldview which could radically change our interpretation of social structures." -Florian Roetzer

see
Howard Bloom's latest book

GLOBAL BRAIN
The Evolution of Mass Mind from the Big Bang to the 21st Century




for more on science, art, and history, visit
howardbloom.net
Robert the Bruce
Parallel Universes
Not just a staple of science fiction, other universes are a direct implication of cosmological observations
By Max Tegmark





1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 next »



Image: ALFRED T. KAMAJIAN


Overview / Multiverses
One of the many implications of recent cosmological observations is that the concept of parallel universes is no mere metaphor. Space appears to be infinite in size. If so, then somewhere out there, everything that is possible becomes real, no matter how improbable it is. Beyond the range of our telescopes are other regions of space that are identical to ours. Those regions are a type of parallel universe. Scientists can even calculate how distant these universes are, on average.
And that is fairly solid physics. When cosmologists consider theories that are less well established, they conclude that other universes can have entirely different properties and laws of physics. The presence of those universes would explain various strange aspects of our own. It could even answer fundamental questions about the nature of time and the comprehensibility of the physical world.

Is there a copy of you reading this article? A person who is not you but who lives on a planet called Earth, with misty mountains, fertile fields and sprawling cities, in a solar system with eight other planets? The life of this person has been identical to yours in every respect. But perhaps he or she now decides to put down this article without finishing it, while you read on.
The idea of such an alter ego seems strange and implausible, but it looks as if we will just have to live with it, because it is supported by astronomical observations. The simplest and most popular cosmological model today predicts that you have a twin in a galaxy about 10 to the 1028 meters from here. This distance is so large that it is beyond astronomical, but that does not make your doppelgänger any less real. The estimate is derived from elementary probability and does not even assume speculative modern physics, merely that space is infinite (or at least sufficiently large) in size and almost uniformly filled with matter, as observations indicate. In infinite space, even the most unlikely events must take place somewhere. There are infinitely many other inhabited planets, including not just one but infinitely many that have people with the same appearance, name and memories as you, who play out every possible permutation of your life choices.


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You will probably never see your other selves. The farthest you can observe is the distance that light has been able to travel during the 14 billion years since the big bang expansion began. The most distant visible objects are now about 4 X 1026 meters away--a distance that defines our observable universe, also called our Hubble volume, our horizon volume or simply our universe. Likewise, the universes of your other selves are spheres of the same size centered on their planets. They are the most straightforward example of parallel universes. Each universe is merely a small part of a larger "multiverse."
By this very definition of "universe," one might expect the notion of a multiverse to be forever in the domain of metaphysics. Yet the borderline between physics and metaphysics is defined by whether a theory is experimentally testable, not by whether it is weird or involves unobservable entities. The frontiers of physics have gradually expanded to incorporate ever more abstract (and once metaphysical) concepts such as a round Earth, invisible electromagnetic fields, time slowdown at high speeds, quantum superpositions, curved space, and black holes. Over the past several years the concept of a multiverse has joined this list. It is grounded in well-tested theories such as relativity and quantum mechanics, and it fulfills both of the basic criteria of an empirical science: it makes predictions, and it can be falsified. Scientists have discussed as many as four distinct types of parallel universes. The key question is not whether the multiverse exists but rather how many levels it has.


Image: ALFRED T. KAMAJIAN


LEVEL I MULTIVERSE
Click for full-size image
THE SIMPLEST TYPE of parallel universe is simply a region of space that is too far away for us to have seen yet. The farthest that we can observe is currently about 4X1026

meters, or 42 billion light-years--the distance that light has been able to travel since the big bang began. (The distance is greater than 14 billion light-years because cosmic expansion has lengthened distances.) Each of the Level I parallel universes is basically the same as ours. All the differences stem from variations in the initial arrangement of matter.

Sidebar: How Far Away is a Duplicate Universe?
Level I: Beyond Our Cosmic Horizon
The parallel universes of your alter egos constitute the Level I multiverse. It is the least controversial type. We all accept the existence of things that we cannot see but could see if we moved to a different vantage point or merely waited, like people watching for ships to come over the horizon. Objects beyond the cosmic horizon have a similar status. The observable universe grows by a light-year every year as light from farther away has time to reach us. An infinity lies out there, waiting to be seen. You will probably die long before your alter egos come into view, but in principle, and if cosmic expansion cooperates, your descendants could observe them through a sufficiently powerful telescope.

If anything, the Level I multiverse sounds trivially obvious. How could space not be infinite? Is there a sign somewhere saying "Space Ends Here--Mind the Gap"? If so, what lies beyond it? In fact, Einstein's theory of gravity calls this intuition into question. Space could be finite if it has a convex curvature or an unusual topology (that is, interconnectedness). A spherical, doughnut-shaped or pretzel-shaped universe would have a limited volume and no edges. The cosmic microwave background radiation allows sensitive tests of such scenarios [see "Is Space Finite?" by Jean-Pierre Luminet, Glenn D. Starkman and Jeffrey R. Weeks; Scientific American, April 1999]. So far, however, the evidence is against them. Infinite models fit the data, and strong limits have been placed on the alternatives.



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Robert the Bruce
SCIENCE "Data-Base" LIBRARY




Quantum Mechanic Websites


THE PARTICLE ADVENTURE - The Fundamentals of Matter and Forces
Realm Of The Quantum (Highly Recommended)
The Official String Theory Website
Particle Data Group
A History of Quantum Mechanics
ChainPhoton.org
Basics of Quantum Mechanics (1)
Basics of Quantum Mechanics (2)
Science Reference Room - Quantum Mechanics (Highly Recommended)
Quantum Mechanics - The Entire Directory
Quantum Theory & Metaphysics
Learning the Basics of Quantum Mechanics Visually
Quantum Mechanics for Dummies
The Discovery of the Electron Spin
The Physical Origin of Electron Spin
Electron Spin Resonance (ESR)
Electron Spin Echo
Principles of Electron Spin Resonance(ESR)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Science Websites of Interest


The Quantum Mechanical Brain and Creativity (Highly Recommended)
ATOMIC STRUCTURE - Elementary ohmy.gif)
Making%20Matter:%20Index
<a%20href=" http: edie.cprost.sfu.ca ~rhlogan chrono.html?>Development of Our Understanding of the Atom-A Chronology
The Structure of the Atom
Atomic Structure (and much more)
Atomic Structure and Spectra (Also, The "Zeeman Effect"....hmmm...smile)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Science News
The Science Behind Bats & Balls
The Symphony of Superstrings




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©2001 Realm Quantum. All Rights Reserved.
Robert the Bruce
http://www.cheniere.org/
rhymer
Max Tegmark says above, and I quote:

"In infinite space, even the most unlikely events must take place somewhere."

Does anybody know where I can see the proof for this statement?

I see this as no more than a religious type of statement which can neither be proved or disproved and, therefore, likely to waste a lot of human energy.
rhymer
One of the most unlikely things that will happen in the future is:

that the one million most unlikely things to happen [excluding the most unlikely thing to happen] will happen simultaneously at some time in the future and be repeated half hourly thereafter for 13 years.
Robert the Bruce
Dear Rhymer


You might look into Max Tegmark and his degrees and other work...

Unless of course you listen to people who teach physics to kids.
Robert the Bruce
Here is his analysis of the cosmic background Rick and Dan were talking about - you might note he is from that sill 'alternative' institution called the University of Pennsylvania and that he works as a homebody now that he has kids. Silly fellow actyually seems not to care about destroying the world - has a very open mind too.

He has his own website that can led you past the paradigm 'know-nothing' scientists that Kaku talks about as well.
rhymer
Hello RTB,

I did not mean to be disrespectful to said gentleman.
He has a far greater capability with and understanding of possible reality theories than I.

I was merely pointing out that whilst theories are interesting we do not have to believe them [until proven] and as a bye I also respect teachers who teach proven facts to those who want to learn them.

I listen to anyone and suffer my own understanding of what has been said, clearly or vaguely depending on my capability per subject.
I do not accept what 'experts' say just because they have said it!

You are quite happy to make judgements on people you respond with here, let alone elsewhere and waste no time telling them what you think about them, whether good or bad. Please accept that we are all entitled to do the same.
Robert the Bruce
Dear Rhymer


The difference is I give the people time to prove themself - and I deal in facts vis a vis what they say as much as possible. IN the case of theory and proof - there is not any real absolute proof of anything and that is what Max has proven (LOL) with many scientific studies.

For example Bucky Fuller appeared on a TV show hosted by a top Ivy League Professor and illustrated all the things he was teaching were only partially true at best. He did it by throwing a ball at an airplane propeller while stationary and when moving to show it is only our perceptions which cause us to believe what we say is solid is in fact solid. The Professor was laughed off his own show.

And those who say something is not replicable (eg. peer reviewers who set out to disprove rather than actually conduct fair experiments) are plentiful enough in this world so you are wise to think for yourself and question everything. The specific quote of Max that you made actually proves there is nothing impossible and Bucky Fuller was one who demonstrated this in many ways throughout his life. He said it this way 'Whenever I am complacent or think I know something; I bite my tongue.'
Robert the Bruce
BTW - I would like to thank any who have bought my book recently - it improved over 250,000 in ranking on both B & N and Amazon in the last few days. Maybe this is due to two reviewers who are just talking to friends or a fan who has put some art to something of mine she quoted (I do not know). If there are any here who have read it - and I have no reason to say there are - I thank you and hope you will tell others about it.
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