Aarde/shifting worldviews
- Will Biology Solve the Universe?—Dr. Robert Lanza, famous for his stem-cell and cloning research, believes his ideas will lead to a unified theory of the universe.
The central mystery of knowledge: that the laws of the world are somehow created to produce the observer.
A particle can go through one hole if you look at it, but if you don't look at it, it can actually go through more than one hole at the same time. [1] Science has no explanation for how the world can be like that. Scientists continue to dismiss the observer as an inconvenience to their theories. This creates a deep misunderstanding of what time and space really are. Time and space do not exist. We can't violate the rules of spatiotemporal logic, but space and time are forms of animal sense perception. Time is not the linear phenomena that we are comfortable with. Rather, our perception of time is a tool we use to understand the world around us. While it works well for the average person, it hampers our understanding of advanced physics.
It's all in the biology. Wired News interview by Aaron Rowe. Plus: Wired Science responds.
Wired, 2007-03-08
http://www.theamericanscholar.org/sp07/newtheory-lanza.html
Space and time, not proteins and neurons, hold the answer to the problem of consciousness. When we consider the nerve impulses entering the brain, we realize that they are not woven together automatically, any more than the information is inside a computer. Our thoughts have an order, not of themselves, but because the mind generates the spatio-temporal relationships involved in every experience. We can never have any experience that does not conform to these relationships, for they are the modes of animal logic that mold sensations into objects. We are living through a profound shift in worldview, from the belief that time and space are entities in the universe to one in which time and space belong to the living.
Dit is niet nieuw, wel dat een erkend en reputabel wetenschaper het zegt. Harry 10:26, 9 March 2007 (CET)