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The Holographic Universe Explanation
Some recent research and discoveries give very much credence to
the reality of a holographic universe. A holographic universe
explains nearly all paranormal and mystical experiences. Near Death
Experiences can be explained by a holographic universe, in that
death is a shifting of a person's consciousness from one level of
the hologram of reality to another. Current neurophysiological
models of the brain are inadequate and only a holographic model can
explain such things as archetypal experiences, encounters with the
collective unconscious, and other unusual phenomena experienced
during altered states of consciousness. A holographic model for the
universe explains lucid dreams, in which such dreams are visits to
parallel realities. Synchronicities can be explained by the
holographic model. Our thought processes are much more intimated
connected to the physical world than has been previously thought.
Telepathy, precognition, mystical feelings of oneness with the
universe, and even psychokinesis can be explained through the
holographic model. All of this information gives credence to the
explanation that death experiences have a holographic nature
attached to them, wherein physical manifestation of energy
transforms into a more subtle energy form within a holographic
quantum reality.
Source: Peace
and Loveism - Wiki
Indeed, it quickly became apparent to the ever growing number of
scientists who came to embrace the holographic model that it helped
explain virtually all paranormal and mystical experiences, and in
the last half-dozen years or so it has continued to galvanize
researchers and shed light on an increasing number of previously
inexplicable phenomena. For example:
- In 1980 University of Connecticut psychologist Dr. Kenneth
Ring proposed that near-death experiences could be explained by
the holographic model. Ring, who is president of the
International Association for Near-Death Studies, believes such
experiences, as well as death itself, are really nothing more
than the shifting of a person's consciousness from one level of
the hologram of reality to another.
- In 1985 Dr. Stanislav Grof, chief of psychiatric research at
the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center and an assistant
professor of psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine, published a book in which he concluded that
existing neurophysiological models of the brain are inadequate
and only a holographic model can explain such things as
archetypal experiences, encounters with the collective
unconscious, and other unusual phenomena experienced during
altered states of consciousness.
- At the 1987 annual meeting of the Association for the Study
of Dreams held in Washington, D.C., physicist Fred Alan Wolf
delivered a talk in which he asserted that the holographic model
explains lucid dreams (unusually vivid dreams in which the
dreamer realizes he or she is awake). Wolf believes such dreams
are actually visits to parallel realities, and the holographic
model will ultimately allow us to develop a "physics of
consciousness" which will enable us to begin to explore more
fully these other-dimensional levels of existence.
- In his 1987 book entitled Synchronicity: The Bridge Between
Matter and Mind, Dr. F. David Peat, a physicist at Queen's
University in Canada, asserted that synchronicities
(coincidences that are so unusual and so psychologically
meaningful they don't seem to be the result of chance alone) can
be explained by the holographic model. Peat believes such
coincidences are actually "flaws in the fabric of reality." They
reveal that our thought processes are much more intimately
connected to the physical world than has been hitherto
suspected.
Source: The
Holographic Universe by Michael Talbot
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