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- Newsgroups: alt.magick
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!linus!linus.mitre.org!tucker
- From: tucker@maestro.mitre.org (William Tucker)
- Subject: MINDWALKING Buddhists, oh my!
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.231757.12367@linus.mitre.org>
- Keywords: MINDWALKING Buddhists, oh my!
- Sender: tucker@mitre.org (William Tucker)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: shawm.mitre.org
- Organization: The MITRE Corporation, McLean, VA, USA
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 23:17:57 GMT
- Lines: 142
-
- Howdy Guys, Peggy, Leo and Thyagi too. ;-)
-
- I posted this to sci.philosophy.metaphysics so the comments
- are directed to them, however does this have anything to do with magick?
-
- Well, I'm not a physicist, but I do know some math and have spent
- my entire life around science since my dad worked in chemistry and
- semiconductor R&D and I've got a BS in electronics and computer
- architecture. I'm also deeply interested in philosophy/religion and
- yes mysticism, not by choice originally either. I've said much the same
- as a lot of you when I was younger that a lot of this "we are all one,"
- mystical stuff was trash. I think that rather than refuting science as
- so many that I've read here seem to think that the "New Thought,"
- (remember Galileo before you jump guys) fills out or in science as
- we know it. Contrary to what passes for popular opinion here, I see
- the oneness of the universe stuff as being self evident, and wonder
- how others could think otherwise.
-
-
- Following is an excerpt from David Bohm's "Wholeness and the Implicate
- Order." Now remember guys, he worked with Einstein and radically changed
- quantum mechanics so he's not totally clueless. Not to say he's right either
- but, PUT DOWN THOSE GUNS and just read for a moment:
-
-
-
- " Chapter 7
-
- The enfolding-unfolding universe and conciousness.
-
- Throughout this book the central underlying theme has been the unbroken
- wholeness of the totality of existence as an undivided flowing movement
- without borders.
-
- It seems clear from the discussion in the previous chapter that theimplicate order is particularly suitable for the understanding of such
- unbroken wholeness in the flowing movement, for in the implicate order
- the totality of existence is enfolded within each region of space (and
- time). So, whatever part, element, or aspect we may abstract in thought,
- this still enfolds the whole and is therefore intrinsically related to the
- totality from which has been abstracted. Thus, wholeness permeates all
- that is being discussed from the very outset."
-
- Next he discusses the mechanistic order of the universe and how it has
- been challenged by relativistic physics and quantuum theory.
-
- "...indivisible and unchangeable 'elementary particles', which are the
- 'building blocks' of the entire universe. Originally, these were thougt
- to be atoms, but these were divided into protons, electrons and nuetrons
- ....were in turn found to subject to transormation in to hundreds
- of different kinds of unstable particles...........now even smaller
- particles called quarks and partrons have been postulated to explain
- these transformations. Though they have not yet been isolated, there
- appears to be an unshakable faith among physicists that either such
- particles or some other as yet to be discovered, will eventually make
- possible a complete and coherent explanation of everything.
-
- The theory of relativity was the first significant indication in
- physics of the need to question the mechanistic order. As explained in
- chapter 5, it implied that no coherent concept of an independently existent
- particle is possible, neither one in which it would the particle would be
- an extended body, nor one in which it would be a dimensionless point.
- Thus, the basic assumption underlying the generally accepted form of
- mechanisim in physics has been shown to be untenable...........
-
- ........As seen in chapter 5, the key features of the quantum theory that
- challenge mechanisim are:
-
- 1. Movement is in general discontinuous, it the sense that action is
- constituted of indivisble quanta..
- 2. Entities, such as electrons, can show different properties
- (e.g., particle-like, wave-like or something in between), depending
- on the the environmental context within which they exist and are
- subject to observation.
-
- 3. Two entities, such as electrons, which initially combine to form a
- molecule and then separate, show a peculiar non-local relationship,
- which can best be described as a noncausal connection of elements
- that are far apart.
-
- It should be added of course that the laws of are statistical and do not
- determine individual events uniquely and precisely."
-
-
-
- Pretty standard stuff right? Well jumping ahead, try this one out.
-
-
-
- "We can obtain a helpful intuitive sense of what is meant by the notion of
- projection here, through the consideration of the following device.
-
- (book includes picture of a fish tank with fish and plants, cameras,
- television monitors here)
-
- Let us begin with a rectangular tank full of water, with transparent
- walls. Suppose further that there are two walls at right angles to each
- other. Now let the corresponding television images be made visible on
- screens A and B in another room. What we will see there is a certain
- relationship between the images appearing on the two screens. For example,
- on screen A we may see an image of a fish, and on screen B we will see
- another such image. At any given moment each image will generally look
- different from the other. Nevertheless the differences will be related,
- in the sense that when one image is seen to execute certain movements,
- the other will be seen to execute corresponding movements. Moreover,
- content that is mainly on one screen will pass into the other, and
- vice versa (e.g., when a fish inititally facing camera A turns through
- a right angle, the image that was on A is now to be found on B). Thus at
- all times the image content on the other screen will correlate with and
- reflect that of the other.
-
- Of course, we know that the two images do not refer to independently
- existent though interacting actualities (in which for example, one image
- could be said to 'cause' related changes in the other). Rather they refer
- to a single actuality, which is the common ground of both (and this
- explains the correlation of images without the assumption that they casually
- affect each other). This actuallity is of higher dimensionality than are
- the separate images on the screen; or, to put it differently, the images
- on the screen are two-dimensional projections (or facets) of a three-
- dimensional reality. In some sense this three-dimensional reality holds
- those two-dimensional projections within it. Yet, since these projections
- exist only as abstractions, the three-dimensional reality is neither of
- these, but rather something else, something of a nature beyond both."
-
-
- This was written in 1980. I know some things have changed since then, what
- I'm not sure of. Perhaps some will post and tell me. I personally don't have
- stock in any of Capras' movies, nor am I related to David Bohm. I have no
- axis to grind (physics joke) and could care less who's right. What I'm
- interested in is what is right, or most right. I am interested in Socratic
- Dialogue where knowledge is of more importance than who wins. I personally
- could care less who is right, I didn't create this reality so I don't need
- to prove it, just discover it. I find answers not create them.
-
- Wm T.
-
-
- ps. Amanda Walker wherever you are, I guess science does prove
- that Buddhism is the one true religion. ;-) Actually most of
- the major religions say the same thing and properly read (-
- so does Christianity. Ask ThyAgni!
-
- .standard disclaimer
-