T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1465.1 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Thu May 09 1991 15:04 | 3 |
| Marcos, are these ideas in any way similar or related to those of
Rupert Sheldrake (whose work is described in note 245.9), who suggests
that reality is constantly inventing and defining itself?
|
1465.3 | thanks | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Thu May 09 1991 16:37 | 5 |
| Thanks Marcos. I certainly intend to get hold of this book. Now if I
could locate some spare time to fill with it ...
But seriously, my little girls take up most of my spare time, and I
have no regrets about that!
|
1465.5 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Fri May 10 1991 11:30 | 13 |
| Fascinating! Thanks for entering that. It reminds me of some notions
I've seen in Islamic literature ... Mohammed's "night journey", where,
one night, he was awakened from his bed, met with God, had numerous
countless conversations with God and angels, traveled for thousands of
years, etc etc, and returned to his bed still warm and an overturned
pitcher still pouring water ... and numerous sufi stories telling of a
person who experiences years of adventures, then "awakens" to find
himself back in his kitchen/bedroom/parlor, with only a moment having
passed ... sort of makes one wonder: what if I were, right now, to
reawaken to some point in my life, say, 15 years ago? Everything which
had happened in the interim would seem like a dream. What would I do
differently? Would I have married the same person, taken the same job,
etc.
|
1465.6 | A Night in Elf Hill | ATSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri May 10 1991 11:38 | 8 |
| The flip side of this time compression is found in many stories of
mortals making journeys into the realms of fairy-folk. They return
after a single night, or some other short period, and find that years
or centuries have passed in their absence. Often, the time of the
mortal world soon catches up with them and they crumble into dust or
are stricken with old age soon after returning.
Earl Wajenberg
|
1465.8 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long strange trip it's been... | Fri May 10 1991 14:18 | 15 |
|
Yea but you guys are proceeding on the assumption that time is some
sort of linear road that exists as a solid object that can be traversed
back and forth.. the road unchanging.
I don't think thats the way it is. I think we actually create reality
so that if you went back 15 years... *at that moment* reality would
change... your life would be different... everything would be
different.
So time would really reflect an infinite collection of possibilities and
you could move back and forth between them by the choices you make.
mary
|
1465.9 | | SWAM2::BRADLEY_RI | Holoid in a Holonomic Universe | Wed May 22 1991 17:58 | 17 |
| I've read Bentov's wonderful book--have a copy at work. I used it years
ago (1978) as part of my research into building a Workshop
(Experiencing Your Experience a.k.a. "e.y.e."), in which I developed a
number of experiences which illustrated some of the speculations found
in this work. (Eg. "Our bodies mirror the universe, down to the working
of each cell.") I have been particularly fascinated with the
Holographic metaphors for the structure of the universe, and developed
some experiences which give some understanding of this point of view.
Other sources I recommend are: George Leonard's "Silent Pulse", Nick
Herbert's "Quantum Reality", and F. David Peat's, "Synchronicity: the
Bridge Between Mind and Matter".
Bentov's work is fun and contains enough material for a life-time of
research and speculation. And, as you suggest, many reputable
scientists vouch for portions of his work.
Richard B
|
1465.10 | Having problems locating the book ... | COMICS::BELL | Chaos warrior : on the winning side | Thu May 23 1991 05:14 | 8 |
|
Marcos/Richard/anyone,
Could you please post the ISBN code of "Stalking the Wild Pendulum" ?
Thanks,
Frank
|
1465.12 | | SWAM2::BRADLEY_RI | Holoid in a Holonomic Universe | Fri May 24 1991 15:22 | 4 |
| STALKING THE WILD PENDULUM: ISBN 0-553-12396-3
A Bantum Book/ Published by arrangement with E.P. Dutton/ March 1979
Richard B
|
1465.13 | Thanks Richard ! | COMICS::BELL | Chaos warrior : on the winning side | Tue May 28 1991 05:31 | 0 |
1465.14 | Bentov's Death Experience | BOSOX::FARNHAM | | Wed Jul 17 1991 16:16 | 9 |
| Bentov would have written more and better books, but . . . . .
his clock stopped soon after "Stalking" came out.
He died along with many others in the first of a series of DC-10
crashes, when the engine mounting bolts were failing.
Just after takeoff from O'Hare in Chicago, an engine fell off, his plane
turned over and crashed. Some say it was caused by forces that did not
want Bentov to write more.
|
1465.15 | People love conspiracies. | USDEV1::MGAUTHIER | | Tue May 26 1992 16:56 | 10 |
| Hi,
Bear in mind that people LOVE conspiracies. Maybe the government
wanted him dead, and was willing to kill the other people on board to
do it, and maybe it's just irrisistable to think he was onto some wild
and wonderful truth that "they" don't want us to know about--everything
would be wonderful if only the bad guys would stop us from having what is
rightfully ours. Possible, but not probable.
Mike
|
1465.16 | seems there'd be an easier way... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Tue May 26 1992 17:01 | 4 |
| And maybe he just got onto another DC10 with bad engine bolts -- they
were prevalent at that time, no?
Mary
|
1465.17 | Probable. | USDEV1::MGAUTHIER | | Wed May 27 1992 12:16 | 5 |
| Re: -1--Mary,
Most likely.
Mike
|