T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1540.1 | Afterthought | CGVAX2::PAINTER | moon, wind, waves, sand | Fri Sep 20 1991 13:08 | 6 |
|
I'd like to add 'feelings' as well, to the topic.
Do thoughts and feelings influence reality?
Cindy
|
1540.2 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Fri Sep 20 1991 13:26 | 8 |
| I think that in order for this discussion to get anywhere, as Earl
pointed out somewhere in topic 1392, it would be useful to find a
qualitative distinction between things like "I can choose vanilla or
chocolate" and "I can choose to have objects to fall upward". In both
cases, thought affects reality, but something about the first one isn't
interesting -- it's trivial. It's the second possibility which would be
interesting to investigate. Is this sort of influence possible? If so,
how? If not, what's the difference between it and the first?
|
1540.3 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 13:55 | 14 |
| Note 1540.2
ENABLE::glantz
I disagree with you, Mike. It isn't the first or the second that
is really interesting... it's the third.. the one you haven't
mentioned. The two choices you mention are 1. a normal, everyday
choice similar to those we all make throughout the course of our
existence, and 2. a violation of the Strange Attractors... something
that goes against the physical laws of reality in your own personal
space. What about 3... something that doesn't violate the physical
laws of reality but also something that you, as an individual, isn't
SUPPOSED to be able to do?
Cindy... you are right to include emotion.
|
1540.4 | | MICROW::GLANTZ | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:05 | 5 |
| > What about 3... something that doesn't violate the physical
> laws of reality but also something that you, as an individual, isn't
> SUPPOSED to be able to do?
I can't think of one. Could you give an example?
|
1540.5 | Never trust anyone over three. | CSLALL::FARNHAM | | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:25 | 3 |
| Category 3: I think that you should choose chocolate!
That is, I will control your normal behavior.
|
1540.6 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:26 | 11 |
| :-) ... just for the sake of illustration now :-)
... blowing up someone's car.. or rather working through reality to
arrange for someone else to blow it up.. a random act of vandalism..
totally unrelated to you, but whose result is your intent.. an
incident that could happen on the other side of the world from you..
Another example ...redirecting the course of a human event of some
sort...
|
1540.7 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:30 | 15 |
| Note 1540.5
CSLALL::FARNHAM
> Category 3: I think that you should choose chocolate!
> That is, I will control your normal behavior.
Yes... "it would be best for all concerned if you choose chocolate" .. for
reasons that are far-reaching over time and effect the whole..
You got it.
But there are others... when the Earth acts in concert with your
consciousness and (recent events aside) they are among the causes
of the crop symbols... not all of them to be sure... some are hoaxes
but others are not.
|
1540.8 | I mean, with those narrow roads ... | 5848::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:33 | 13 |
| Re .6 (Mary):
>... blowing up someone's car.. or rather working through reality to
>arrange for someone else to blow it up..
But Mary -- in an enlarged car, Jamie might not be able to see over the
top of the dashboard.
Just how big do you propose blowing it up to?
:-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1540.9 | Step right up, set yourself up to negative ego... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:38 | 26 |
| re: .0 (Condy-roo)
I would add that emotions and beliefs are the major components
of reality. Remember Lazaris' equation?
(Beliefs + Feelings) X Imagination = Reality
[Read as "beliefs plus feelings, all multipliied by imagination, equals
reality."]
re: .6 (Mary)
Those examples are prime examples of manipulation, not inflence
nor thought redirection. Better yet are the ones that are not subject
to goofiness such as experimentation and testing...those which we feel
in our hearts...those which we know and understand have had an
effect, not only in ourself, but globally. As Todd's entry earlier
stated at the topic "act locally, think globally." As I have altered
my views of atomic warfare and global war, I have watched as the
Germanies have come together, I have watched as the Soviet Red Threat
has been largely disarmed, I have watched as another potential for
war (Iraq) has "miraculously" been averted or avoided...I don't need
or desire to have anyone, however jerk they may be, to come up to
me and tell me that *I* had nothing to do with that. Why would I set
myself up for that? Forget testing...just continue trusting.
Frederick
|
1540.10 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 14:45 | 3 |
| Good one, Steve. :-)
Maybe you're right, Frederick...
|
1540.11 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Fri Sep 20 1991 15:00 | 9 |
| In that other note, I mentioned Einstein as an example of someone
whose thinking altered reality. I was thinking primarily of the
development of nuclear weapons based on his theories. Before
Einstein, there was no way for humanity to destroy the planet,
now that reality exists. Isn't that true of all "inventors"?
They think of something that hasn't been thought of before and,
ultimately, provide the seeds for new ways of living, new realities.
Sue
|
1540.12 | Dream a little dream for me...[Californian dreaming...] | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Fri Sep 20 1991 15:08 | 11 |
| re: .11 (Sue)
You could even take it a step farther. All the major
inventions or ideas we've implemented have come at the "hands"
not of those who thought about them, per se, but those who
*dreamed* about them first. That is, before a thought was
thought, a dream was dreamt. That dream, then, became a thought,
which then provided a new reality.
Frederick
|
1540.13 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 15:35 | 1 |
| yes :-)
|
1540.14 | Trivial nits | 5848::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift | Fri Sep 20 1991 15:57 | 42 |
| Re .11 b(Sue):
>In that other note, I mentioned Einstein as an example of someone
>whose thinking altered reality. I was thinking primarily of the
>development of nuclear weapons based on his theories. Before
>Einstein, there was no way for humanity to destroy the planet,
>now that reality exists.
Actually, that was/is a misconception. In terms of warfare, humanity had
ways to destroy the planet without nuclear weapons, well beforehand. The
poison gases of World War I were one such (and interestingly, though
everyone was prepared for gas attack in World War II, it was almost newver
used in battle).
But that's not "altering reality." The reality of nuclear power existed from
the formation of the heavy elements; their application was something else.
You can change alternatives without altering reality.
> ............................. Isn't that true of all "inventors"?
>They think of something that hasn't been thought of before and,
>ultimately, provide the seeds for new ways of living, new realities.
A light may be beginning to dawn. Maybe we're not all using "reality" in
the same way.
An invention -- a technology -- can extend the scope of a person's control
of things without necessarily changing any of the underlying structure of,
say, matter. Before humanity learned how to start fires, the early peoples
were unable to keep warm in cold climates (much less cook food) at will;
developing a fire-taming technology changed that -- and people's options
(and opportunities). However, this did not change "reality"; although it
provided means for social change, as did agriculture.
Whether humanity knew how to use fire or not, though, had no bearing on the
mechanism of oxidation.
If we equate "new ways of living" with "new realities," though, then
"reality" is subjective. Completely so. And subjectivity -- individual
or collective -- is mutable through rhetoric: thus, using the term in that
manner, thought can alter "reality."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1540.15 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 16:34 | 22 |
| 5848::KALLIS
>Actually, that was/is a misconception. In terms of warfare, humanity had
>ways to destroy the planet without nuclear weapons, well beforehand. The
>poison gases of World War I were one such (and interestingly, though
>everyone was prepared for gas attack in World War II, it was almost newver
>used in battle).
Just a nit, Steve ... but poison gas might have the capability to
destroy humanity but I don't see how it could destroy the planet.
>You can change alternatives without altering reality.
Well... thats really what you're doing though, isn't it? Seems like
semantics almost.
>A light may be beginning to dawn. Maybe we're not all using "reality" in
>the same way.
Yea... I agree.. everyone doesn't equate scientific principles with
existing reality.
|
1540.16 | Some 'thoughts' (;^) | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic and vibrant | Fri Sep 20 1991 17:16 | 49 |
|
I believe that within the universal (natural?) laws, and using the
building blocks (toys) that we have at hand, that thought
influences/shapes reality.
This can be taken many, many different ways (with many, many
opportunities for some really deep ratholes (;^), so I'll enter a
story that you can all pick apart.
Last Christmas as I was driving from New Hampshire to Chicago, my car
suddenly died (timing belt - I've told this here before). Anyway, the
thoughts I was experiencing at that very moment were *extremely*
negative and I was exhausted on top of it all. I remember exactly what
I was thinking about too.
Now, the timing belt was *supposed* to break within the mileage
allowance that it did. However, had it broken at any other place along
the route, I would not have ended up spending Christmas at Kripalu -
instead I would have simply waited until Monday and continued on my
journey after having the car fixed by a local dealer.
Quite a few people said, "Oh, that's too bad you couldn't spend
Christmas with your family." Had it been another time, I guess I would
have been really disappointed too. However deep down my *real* thought
was, "I really don't want to go to Chicago. I really want to be at
Kripalu." Having acknowledged this thought, I then knew that I'd
shaped my reality. No laws were broken, and nothing paranormal
happened. But what an interesting 'coincidence'...
In cases like these, there is nothing to 'prove'. It's more of a
personal observation on one's own thoughts and becoming more conscious
of the kind of thoughts we think and hold. There have been countless
other events like this in my life, so many so that there is no doubt in
my mind that my thoughts shape my reality.
So now that I'm more conscious of my thoughts and the overall process,
it is up to me to take responsibility for sending out the thoughts to
shape the world that I'd really like to live in.
While at Kripalu last week, Yogi Desai dedicated one morning lecture to
Will and Surrender. The 'Will' is the part where we dream the dream,
think the thought (consciously). The 'Surrender' is the part where we
allow the universe to do its thing to shape itself around our 'Will'.
To slip into Christianity for a moment, the prostitute was going to be
stoned, however Christ thought and acted in love toward her instead.
Out of that love, she changed. He didn't change her.
Cindy
|
1540.17 | Minutae | 5848::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift | Fri Sep 20 1991 17:23 | 39 |
| Re .15 (Mary):
>Just a nit, Steve ... but poison gas might have the capability to
>destroy humanity but I don't see how it could destroy the planet.
Depends upon the type and amount of gas released. The capability existed,
at least as far as life was concerned.
>>You can change alternatives without altering reality.
>
> Well... thats really what you're doing though, isn't it? Seems like
> semantics almost.
This depends upon your philosophical perspective. Such perspective ranges
from the mystic "time/space is an illusion" to the deterministic "everything
is fixed in time/space from beginning to end" (predestinastion at all levels).
Somewhere betweeen these two positions is the one of nondeterminism -- i.e.,
"free will" without the religiomystic connotations required. If you base
your definition of "reality" in the purely mystic, reality perforce _must_
be subjective; if you base "reality" on a pure determinism, then one cannot
influence, much less create/alter reality. This is less a matter of semantics
than of fundamental philosophy. It's like echoing Jamie and saying, "I
altered reality because I stepped out of the way of an oncoming truck."
>>A light may be beginning to dawn. Maybe we're not all using "reality" in
>>the same way.
>
>Yea... I agree.. everyone doesn't equate scientific principles with
>existing reality.
I believe is was a contemporary writer (maybe a poet) who penned:
A man said to the universe, "Sir, I exist."
And the universe replied, "I don't believe that gives me any sense of
obligation."
The quote's close enough.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1540.18 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Fri Sep 20 1991 17:32 | 1 |
| :-) ...good one, Steve... I like it.
|
1540.19 | | MICROW::GLANTZ | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Fri Sep 20 1991 17:45 | 9 |
| Re Cindy (.16), I agree with your analysis. My personal opinion is
that in a case such as the one you described, your will did influence
the physical world, and not in the trivial sense of choosing
chocolate. It falls into the category of "not explained by current
physical models, but not in contradiction with them, either". It
cannot, of course, be proved. Nor can it be disproved. It has the
status of axiom in our system of reasoning. One can choose either to
believe your analysis or not, and either way can result in a
consistent model of reality. I happen to choose to believe it.
|
1540.20 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Mon Sep 23 1991 04:16 | 34 |
| Re .9
>Those examples are prime examples of manipulation, not inflence
>nor thought redirection. Better yet are the ones that are not subject
>to goofiness such as experimentation and testing...those which we feel
>in our hearts...those which we know and understand have had an
>effect, not only in ourself, but globally.
If it has an effect globally it is by definition subject to the
goofiness of experimentation and testing.
Frederick why do you so fear experimentation and testing? Is it because
it keeps exposing all your theories to be false?
Re .11
> In that other note, I mentioned Einstein as an example of someone
>whose thinking altered reality. I was thinking primarily of the
>development of nuclear weapons based on his theories. Before
>Einstein, there was no way for humanity to destroy the planet,
>now that reality exists. Isn't that true of all "inventors"?
>They think of something that hasn't been thought of before and,
>ultimately, provide the seeds for new ways of living, new realities.
Right let us suppose that Einstien had just thought up the theory of
relativity and done nothing else, just the thought process, no action.
Then nothing in reality would have changed.
However once he made the physical actions of communication this
information to others, and they in turn used this information to make
physical objects then reality can be changed, but not by though alone.
Jamie.
|
1540.21 | Influencing probability ? | PRMS00::TSTARK | Shadow dream logic | Mon Sep 23 1991 09:49 | 43 |
| One of the theories of how cognitive-affective processes
(the individual's perspective of their own mental activity) affect
externally verifiable events is through the influence of
the probability of events. This model is related to some
forms of 'magic.' However, their use of unverifiable concepts like The
Unmanifest and such make the base assumptions as unpalatable for
scientific consideration as, say, Creationism, and with a much weaker
lobby to boot.
For example, any event that is normally possible, but highly
unlikely, might be made more likely, so as to occur, or to occur
more frequently than would be a statistical norm, in this theory. It is
fairly easy I think to apply this for example to certain tests of
extrasensory perception, which are usually statistically based, e.g. one
person 'guessing' the shape read by another with better-than-random
accuracy.
This is extended by some people to include events at the molecular
level which would be 'highly unlikely,' such as my favorite example
of a sugar cube that had dissolved in water reassembling into
a cube, or into some other shape. And by way of extension, this notion
is sometimes also applied to telekinesis or materialization in general.
The basis of the argument seems to be that some of our physical laws,
such as those of thermodynamics, are 'usual cases,' and not
'neccessary cases,' as would seem to apply to gravity.
The distinction becomes more interesting when we read the work
of, among others, Nobel Prize Winner Ilya Prigogine (Order_out_of_Chaos),
and see that the thermodynamic arrow of time does in fact reverse under
certain conditions, causing systemic reorganization and decreased
entropy (far from equillibrium).
The link that has yet to be made by those supporting the possibility
of this kind of mind/matter influence is not so much that
thermodynamically 'unlikely' events do not occur, which they apparently
do but that we can influence them by an act of will in a specific
manner.
Ambiguities in submolecular theory make for lots of interesting
speculation in this regard, but I think the connection is still
very weak.
todd
|
1540.22 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Mon Sep 23 1991 11:18 | 13 |
| Very nice analysis, Todd! My favorite "bone" has been the notion that
spirit influences the material dimension at the level of quantum
choices (e.g., which slit the electron passed through), and that the
"Rube Goldberg" effect shows that individual quantum-level events can
ultimately have large observable effects.
Perhaps the more unlikely an event, the more "will power" it takes to
make it happen (because the greater number of quantum events must be
influenced). Certain mystical philosophers have said that this used to
be much more common, but that today, fewer people are trained in this
science, from which I surmise that there aren't enough "adepts" to
perform these feats as often. Not to mention that these phenomena are
not produced solely to satisfy curious skeptics.
|
1540.23 | *YOU* can experiment to "your heart's content." | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Mon Sep 23 1991 13:51 | 16 |
| re: .20 (Jamie)
I don't "fear" experimentation, per se. It's just that I
don't have a need for the kind of testing you seek. I *know* I
create my own reality. Setting up this kind of test, therefore,
means that I do not trust my ability to generate intended desires,
it means that I do not *really* believe that I create my own reality,
it means that I only say so but will succumb to some other "greater
good." Further, to me it also means that I can recognize that it is
a game of my own negative ego...casting doubt on my own confidences.
No, Jamie, I'm not worried about your falsehoods.
Frederick
|
1540.24 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Mon Sep 23 1991 17:29 | 28 |
| Glad you entered this topic, Cindy. Doesn't "mainstream" (whatever that
means) humanity call all this stuff coincidence? Never believed in it
myself. Serendipity yes, coincidence no.
Small example. Here at DECDirect warehouse, I work in receiving,
inspection, prepack, sort of. One of my duties is to determine if
packaging is damaged to the point of rejection/rebox/tape up. We
receive most material in browncraft boxes, but some come in in designer
packaging and some in white boxes. Today a package came in in a white
box and was torn. Because it was a oneshot deal, we contacted the
customer and told him the problem. He agreed to accept the torn box and
we agreed to tape it up and make it presentable for him.
Now we have white tape for tape guns but rarely use it. (Less then
every 6 months) All day I have been thinking. "I have to tape that box
up. I have to dig out the white tape, load it on the gun and fix the
box." At 3 I went over to get the tape and do the job. Well, lo and
behold the gun was already loaded with white tape. Sems someone needed
some for another job. I told this woman that i had influenced her
thinking to do this for me and she said that maybe it was so, because
she was going to put off the white tape job until tomorrow as she had
other things to do, but "something" told her to load up and do it
today.
Long winded as I am, I think this is a case.
PJ
|
1540.25 | | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Mon Sep 23 1991 18:12 | 6 |
|
PJ,
Good going! (;^)
Cindy
|
1540.26 | To some degree | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Watch your peace & cues | Mon Sep 23 1991 22:18 | 3 |
| All perception is projection.
Richard
|
1540.27 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Tue Sep 24 1991 03:46 | 37 |
| Re .23
> *YOU* can experiment to "your heart's content."
A minor nit, I can't. My heart has been gone these last three years.
> I don't "fear" experimentation, per se. It's just that I
> don't have a need for the kind of testing you seek. I *know* I
> create my own reality. Setting up this kind of test, therefore,
> means that I do not trust my ability to generate intended desires,
> it means that I do not *really* believe that I create my own reality,
> it means that I only say so but will succumb to some other "greater
> good." Further, to me it also means that I can recognize that it is
> a game of my own negative ego...casting doubt on my own confidences.
No Frederick, you set up your own fantasy. As this had no effect on
reality any testing done on it would fail. Thus you dare not let any
testing be done, as it would prove beyond all doubt that your fantasy
existed only in your mind. To this end you cover your fear of testing
with what to you, appears to be logical reasoning, but to the rest of
us looks like a complicated attempt to avoid facing the facts.
I am also interested in the way that you see self criticism of your
thoughts as a negative function. I always find checking out my ideas
and deliberately looking for, and correcting, errors a normal and useful
part of my thinking process. You however seem to fear that you might
notice something wrong yourself and so you avoid looking to preclude
this possibility.
> No, Jamie, I'm not worried about your falsehoods.
No Frederick I wouldn't bother about my falsehoods if I were you. But
you really should be worried when I'm telling the truth and you are
blinding yourself to it.
Jamie.
|
1540.28 | Have you lot swallowed a dictionary or what? | PLAYER::BROWNL | Teapot Sunday | Tue Sep 24 1991 06:29 | 68 |
| All this talk about "reality" seems to be a load of airy-fairy nonsense
to me; a lot of talk and jargon about something really simple.
There is only one reality.
We (individually and collectively) understand only parts of it, and
that part grows as we learn and develop, both as individuals and as a
"people". For example, earlier we were all talking about gravity.
Gravity existed before Newton named and explained it. Primitive man
knew that something set down stayed there, and something dropped fell
until it hit something; he didn't know why or how, something still
fuzzy today, but it did and that was enough. Newton's thought did not
change the reality of gravity one jot.
However, there are other subsets of reality, personal ones, but they
lie under, and are part of, the parent "one reality". For example,
Person A has a car and knows that if he doesn't put petrol in it it
will stop one day and go no further. For Person B, who has no car, this
is not an active or important part of "his" reality, but it is
nevertheless part of it. No amount of thought by Person A is going to
change the fact that his car will stop, for it is a physical, known and
inescapable reality. Anyone who claims otherwise is clearly in
difficulties.
However, there are other things that are also part of reality, but much
more difficult to prove, and those who hold a contrary view, much
harder to expose. First though, back to gravity again. There are those
who claim to be able to levitate things. This doesn't change the fact
that gravity as a reality exists, rather that they claim to have the
ability to counteract that inescapable physical force by the power of
the mind. This would be easy to prove or disprove, but no-one has ever
done it. Lots of people claim the have seen it, and indeed believe they
have seen it. But no sceptic has been allowed to inspect such a feat in
sufficient detail to become a believer. I believe such claims to be
false, and against the rules of reality, and those who believe such
claims to hold beliefs outside reality. Their belief does not change
that reality. Gravity I see around me every day, and I have no need to
understand it; it levitation were likewise, I would feel the same. It
isn't, so it needs to be proven possible. Since levitation differs from
the norm, the burden of proof is on the claimant. Blind acceptance is
naive.
Much, much harder to challange are those who claim such things as
mind-control, especially at a distance. Fredirick is a prime example.
He believes that he can, by mere thought, influence world events. He
has claimed, for instance that he personally influenced the outcome of
the recent (unresolved) Iraq crisis re: weapons verification etc. Not
only is he incapable of proving this to either himself or anyone else,
the sheer magnitude of the task is such that it will forever be
unprovable. The best we can hope for is that he can predict events and
influence them so consistently that we come to accept what he's saying,
simply because we have no choice but to accept the veracity of it. To
claim in retrospect to have fixed something is easy, to predict it, and
then to see it happen is something else. The inescapable conclusion is
that it's a delusion, and I'd be very interested to hear how Fredorick
believes that this delusion differs from those suffering from say,
schizophrenia.
Now, by this time, there will be those out there that will argue that
there is a difference between physical reality, ie: petrol and cars,
and "foobar" reality, ie: levitation, and will point to notes like the
previous ones concerning cars breaking down, and white tape as
evidence. Well, all I can say, is that if either of those people were
able to consistently affect their lives in this way, at will, then fair
enough. If they can't then it's simply coincidence. Whatever it is, it
doesn't change reality one iota.
Laurie.
|
1540.29 | presumptions!!! | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Tue Sep 24 1991 09:53 | 12 |
| Jamie (.27)
>> To this end you cover your fear of testing
with what to you, appears to be logical reasoning, but to the rest of
us looks like a complicated attempt to avoid facing the facts.
Please do not speak for 'the rest of us'. To you this may appear to
be so, but do not take the liberty of speaking for everyone.
Geesh, who voted you as voice of the participants of this file.
Ro
|
1540.30 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Tue Sep 24 1991 10:20 | 4 |
| Perhaps Ro you would like to give us your view on why he is so
reluctant to face the facts?
Jamie.
|
1540.31 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Tue Sep 24 1991 10:31 | 4 |
| Maybe he feels that you are not what you pretend to be. Maybe he
senses that your intentions are not honorable nor above board. Maybe
he resents your attitude and manner of seeking out information through
manipulation.
|
1540.32 | This conference is for comedians, only! Membership no required | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Tue Sep 24 1991 10:59 | 39 |
| Hah, hah, hah!! This is all very good for my sense of humor
today! No kidding! Now I'm schizophrenic (well, almost! ;-) !)
OKay! You, win, Laurie...or is it Jamie---you two look alike.
YOU both *MUST* be right! There is only one reality...the one
you (well, since you're both the same, "you" will be singular
in this application) tell us about. We're just stumbling humans
who are a little off their rockers deluding ourselves. You,
Laurie and Jamie, are "the establishment," grounded in truth,
honor and the love of God (oh, and decency, too, no doubt.)
Well, I do declare! (or something like that.)
Listen, as long as you hold your rigid views, there is nothing
that will ever impede your progress. Just hold on...baby, hold on
and hold on tight! Don't ever let go! Stay right where you are...
reality is so predictable...but while you're at it you might want
to start reading "doomsayer" predictions and prognostications...you
might want to start stockpiling oxygen tanks, foods, ammunition and
all the other survival gear you'll need to make it through the next
40 or 50 years (if you somehow manage to make it that long.) Don't
forget to have a team of doctors and lawyers with you (that are on
"your" side of *reality*, of course) and maybe one or two good
religious books---for a little bit of faith, whenever you are in
a clutch or some other scary place. Then sit back, hold on, and
watch your one, true reality crumble around you.
Hey! No big deal, dude and dudette! (DO-dah, do-dah!!)
If all else has failed, and you live to an unpleasant old age,
and then you escape into heaven or some other osteperous place,
you can ask whoever is in charge there to be nice to you and let
you have some peace and quiet for a change. No problema!
I'm all for it! Go for it! God-speed! Fare-thee-well!
Hasta la vista, baby! Close the door on your way out! Don't
forget to turn out the lights! Have a nice vacation! See you
later, gators! Au 'voir! Chiao! Arrivederci, baby! Sayonara!
Bon voyage! Have a nice trip! Have a nice day! Take care!
Don't eat yellow snow! Don't take any wooden nickels! Have fun!
Take the past with you! Yeah, that's the ticket!
Frederick
|
1540.33 | Re. a few back | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Tue Sep 24 1991 11:00 | 10 |
|
Laurie,
I welcome your participating here, and you bring up some very valid
points, however if you could cut down on your condescending approach
somewhat, I would find it easier to enter into a dialogue with you on
the points you brought up so that we might both come to a higher level
of understanding.
Cindy
|
1540.34 | Re.32 | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Tue Sep 24 1991 11:13 | 7 |
|
Same goes for you, Frederick.
As the person who began this particular note topic in complete
sincerity, can we please get back to the original intent?
Cindy
|
1540.35 | 8^) | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Tue Sep 24 1991 14:31 | 35 |
| Oh Jamie, you rascal!! .30 8^) 8^)
<< Perhaps Ro you would like to give us your view on why he is so
reluctant to face the facts?<<
How can I do that when I don't believe he is reluctant 'to face the
facts'!!! I guess it is just that his facts, your facts, my facts are
all based on our own perspectives!!!
I have known Frederick for quite awhile through this conference and
also having met him in person several times. In fact, he was a recent
guest in my home for several days. He is a loving, kind, charming, and
gentle person. Do I agree with his views, do I take on his beliefs as
my own? Naw, in fact we very often disagree. But you know what!?!?
I honor and respect his beliefs (as I hope he does mine). We are on
quite different paths, Frederick and I, but I believe they will
eventually lead us to the same place - home to God/Goddess/All-There-Is.
Mine is a path based on what I believe to be a Christian (Cosmic
Christ) perspective, while Frederick follows Lazaris. Both paths have
some things in common - taking responsibility, acting with
impeccability, and one's spirituality being the focus of one's life.
Because I think highly of Frederick and have enjoyed what he has
written here, I have attended several Lazaris workshops and worked with
his tapes. There is much value there and I have gotten something out
of them. However, I'm called to another way.
Um, does that answer your question, Jamie? I'm sure if I met you in
person, I would see the Light shining in your heart as well...I just
have a hard time through this medium.
Ro
|
1540.36 | Only the "Spoken Word" effects reality... | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Tue Sep 24 1991 17:18 | 25 |
| Re: Basenote
Do thoughts (and feelings) influence reality?
NO. Unless those thoughts are spoken, unless those feelings are
expressed and made known to others they do not effect "external of
one's self" reality. God, for instance, is said to have *said* "Let
there be light", but the thought of light came to his mind first.
Until he "spoke and things stoodfast" nothing that is made was made.
Divine Utterance, Words of Power, the Spoken Word effects reality,
through sound vibrations. A thought does not emit vibrations...Jesus,
said "NO man taking to thought can increase his stature (effect
reality?).
On Feelings...feelings provide the power and force behind the spoken
word. Together, words and feelings make utterance powerful.
Confidence is a feeling and gives a word spoken "authoritative" power.
That's what Jesus is referring to when he teaches that if we don't
waver in faith or doubt, we can speak to the mountain that it should be
moved into the sea and it shall be moved...that's "authoritative"
power! But who has the confidence and faith that can move mountains?
Playtoe
|
1540.37 | Another perspective... | TPSYS::BOWERS | | Tue Sep 24 1991 17:36 | 26 |
| The only thing I can think when I read the basenote question is how
thoughts (and feelings) influence reality from a negative-thinking
versus positive-thinking perspective...and from that perspective I
definitely do believe that thoughts/feelings influence reality.
What I mean is...if you think negative, act negative and expect
negative out of life, that is what you will get...and the same for
positive thinking. Before people get up in arms, I'd like to qualify
that by saying that this is not a totally black and white observation.
I realize that positive thinkers sometimes have negative things happen,
and that negative thinkers sometimes have positive things happen.
But, I believe that overall (having been on both sides of the
negative/positive fence at one time or another) thoughts do affect
reality. Part of it is also in the way we perceive things I think.
If you have a positive attitude and something really rotten happens,
you are more apt to deal with it (and turn it into a positive
experience) than someone with an already negative outlook.
Has anyone else had any experience with what I'm talking about?? For
me at least, this realization has had a tremendous impact on every
aspect of my life.
Just another perspective,
Nancy
|
1540.38 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Tue Sep 24 1991 17:46 | 18 |
| > Jesus said "NO man taking to thought can increase his stature"
What Jesus meant by this was that no amount of reasoning or indulgence
in thoughts (which are simply patterns of neural activity in the
material brain) can result in the higher form of awareness which is
direct contact with God.
Jesus also said that turning inward in silence to be in His presence
was the way to miracles. And He also said that one should invoke His
name, speak it out loud, to remind oneself of His promise to protect us
from all danger and evil. Jesus tells us that silence, speech, action,
and calm are all forms of behavior by which we may know Him and be in
His presence, be in contact with the Real, and realize the potential of
the Will.
I'm afraid that it's possible to support absolutely any philosophical,
political, or religious position by quoting scripture (and history
certainly bears evidence, here).
|
1540.39 | They are just realists | HOO78C::BOARDS | You fer coffee? | Tue Sep 24 1991 17:54 | 18 |
| <<< Note 1540.35 by ATSE::FLAHERTY "That's enough for me..." >>>
-< 8^) >-
> Um, does that answer your question, Jamie? I'm sure if I met you in
> person, I would see the Light shining in your heart as well...I just
> have a hard time through this medium.
Yes ! You would ! Both Jamie and Laurie are complete and utter treasures in
real life.
(from one who knows)
Wendy
:-)
|
1540.40 | another | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Tue Sep 24 1991 17:55 | 26 |
|
Re.37
Hi Nancy,
Yes, I have. I also feel that positive thinkers are more consciously
perceiving reality than are negative thinkers, who have far less
control over their thoughts than positive thinkers.
To go one step further, both kinds of thinkers shape reality. Positive
thinkers are more consciously creating than are negative thinkers, but
*both* shape reality just the same.
However, most of us waver between these two end points, since we aren't
fully conscious or fully unconscious beings. I know myself beyond a
shadow of a doubt that my thoughts shape my reality, because I have
spent a lot of time in self-observation of my own thoughts and their
relationship to the external world.
It is up to each person to *prove* it to their own selves. Don't take
somebody elses word for it - observe your own thoughts for a while.
Ponder the question, "Could my thoughts actually be shaping my
reality?", and see what conclusion you come to. I've come to mine
already.
Cindy
|
1540.41 | try 'art' | SALSA::MOELLER | Prozac made me do it | Tue Sep 24 1991 18:22 | 19 |
| As a composer, I have to say YES, my thoughts influence reality; not
just mine, but others. I'm bathed in music every moment (including
sleep, I often dream of playing or hearing music) of my day. When I
have time, I go in my studio, and if I'm lucky, I can approximate a
tiny bit of the shower of music I heard in my head. Some of that makes
it to tape. Over time I get enough material of a kind to put on an
album. The album sells moderately well, for an independent release.
The green energy that generates goes back into equipment for the studio
for the next album or into more stock of the current one(s). Also I've
gotten wonderful feedback from those people whose reality was altered,
temporarily or permanently, by my music. And that helps the process
too.
And for those that say "that's cheating; we mean 'thoughts directly
influencing external reality', I would respond that it was my thoughts
that caused me to believe that the music I hear could be made flesh, so
to speak.. so THOSE thoughts changed my life as well
best. karl
|
1540.42 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Tue Sep 24 1991 20:01 | 38 |
| re 38
Of course you're entitled to your opinion, however, I do disagree.
Please define "stature".
>What Jesus meant by this was that no amount of reasoning or indulgence
>in thoughts (which are simply patterns of neural activity in the
>material brain) can result in the higher form of awareness which is
>direct contact with God.
I disagree. What is "prayer"?
>I'm afraid that it's possible to support absolutely any philosophical,
>political, or religious position by quoting scripture (and history
>certainly bears evidence, here).
When one gets use to bending scriptures to suit their personal needs
indeed it becomes quite easy and possible to support ANY position.
However, barring all religious allusions. I ask you to show were one's
thoughts or feelings, should they be concealed, effect reality.
Perhaps, we should define "reality" as well. I think of it as things
which can be sensed (ie taste, touch, see, smell, heard). If it cannot
be sensed it is not "real/reality". If you do not speak the word, or
express emotion, who could acknowledge them?
I submit that, in order to effect reality one must create a force able
to move things of reality (ie atoms and molecules), and SOUND/Words of
Power is that force associated with thought.
The gentleman who claims "his thoughts effect reality because he is an
artist"...well I submit that it is infact his "art" the effects others
reality, it is that which can be seen. Unless the artist puts his
thought into some "sensible" format (ie. sculpture, painting, writing,
poetry, etc.) his thoughts will not effect anyone's reality.
Playtoe
|
1540.43 | | SWAM2::BRADLEY_RI | Holoid in a Holonomic Universe | Tue Sep 24 1991 21:34 | 14 |
| Thoughts ARE an aspect of reality, that is, they are experiences we all
have that are products of chemical, physiological, and quantum level
events. "Reality" also "creates" thought. Our native (genetically
transmitted) capabilities generate thoughts upon presentation of a wide
variety of stimuli: e.g., oncoming bus, danger to one's child, etc.
Furthermore, our attitudes (positive, hopeful, generative vs. negative,
foreboding, destructive) pre-determine the thought patterns one is
capable of. In fact, if you'll look at the notes in this series,
you'll see ample evidence of these (usually unconsciously held)
paradigms. They are difficult to see and to know, in oneself, but very
visible to others.
Richard B
|
1540.44 | What better place than in Dejavu! | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Tue Sep 24 1991 22:19 | 58 |
| RE: 43
Hi Richard!
I see what you are saying. Perhaps, the topic question fails to
indicate "directly" or "indirectly", thoughts, as an influencer of
reality. Our thoughts, feelings and attitudes, may compel us to act
and/or speak, but unless we do, thoughts, feelings and attitudes mean
nothing in a real world.
Perhaps, it is relevent to point out that "WILL" has no power. We may
"will" to do something, but unless we act, perhaps compelled by a
little emotion, our "WILL" becomes merely our imagination and dreams.
> Furthermore, our attitudes (positive, hopeful, generative vs. negative,
> foreboding, destructive) pre-determine the thought patterns one is
> capable of.
I like that idea. Our attitudes do have a way of predisposing us to
certain patterns of thought...but I'd question if "capable of" is
properly used here. Because, oftentimes it's our self realization of
our attitude (i.e. why am I so angry/upset/sad/depressed/etc) that
causes us to change our patterns of thought. I think "attitudes" are
an intrinsic part of thought, but reality is separate from thoughts and
attitudes/feelings.
We must put forth effort to effect our reality, and that entails more
than taking to thought and copping attitudes. That's what I believe
Jesus meant by saying "No man can take to thought and add one cubit to
his stature." It is also written, "Where there is a willing mind let
there also be a performance out of that will", and also "faith without
works is dead". The term "stature" is related to "status". What man
do you know that has added to his "level achieved" just by "taking to
thought"? Don't you know if it was that easy, we'd all be doing it!
Thought and feelings, IMO, do not effect reality *directly*, but they
do compel us to speak and act, and it is that speech and action which
effects reality. Also, factored by the intensity of emotion and
ability to articulate ourselves, which perhaps accounts for the
different "levels achieved" by individuals, though they think and
believe and feel the same way.
> In fact, if you'll look at the notes in this series,
> you'll see ample evidence of these (usually unconsciously held)
> paradigms. They are difficult to see and to know, in oneself, but very
> visible to others.
Yes, difficult for those who do no self reflection, but not impossible
for self to perceive. It is no mystery that some have not evolved to
the stature of the man "Christ." We all perhaps have our peak and
should somehow of higher evolution come unto us, could look upon us and
say we need deeper self reflection, to evolve more...it was beautifully
stated once by a man, "God is infinitely greater than man, therefore
our path to God is an infinite path, if you think you GOT IT, you have
infact lost it, because God's path is an infinite path."
Playtoe, In the Spirit of Truth
|
1540.45 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Wed Sep 25 1991 05:10 | 91 |
|
Re .32
> Now I'm schizophrenic (well, almost! ;-) !)
I believe the question was, how do you tell the difference between your
"personal" reality and the delusions of a schizophrenic. I trust that
there are some.
>(well, since you're both the same, "you" will be singular in this
>application)
No we are not. Laurie is small fat and ugly, I am taller, slimmer and
marginally better looking.
>You, Laurie and Jamie, are "the establishment," grounded in truth,
>honor and the love of God (oh, and decency, too, no doubt.) Well, I do
>declare! (or something like that.)
I speak only for myself. I am not for the establishment, I despise
organised religion as a parasitic entity leaching on the poor and weak.
And it you ever suggested to anyone who has ever met me that I was for
decency they would roar with laughter or ask if you were both talking
about the same person. However I am most interested in truth and I do
think that I have some honour.
>Listen, as long as you hold your rigid views, there is nothing
>that will ever impede your progress. Just hold on...baby, hold on
>and hold on tight! Don't ever let go! Stay right where you are...
>reality is so predictable...but while you're at it you might want
>to start reading "doomsayer" predictions and prognostications...you
>might want to start stockpiling oxygen tanks, foods, ammunition and
>all the other survival gear you'll need to make it through the next
>40 or 50 years (if you somehow manage to make it that long.) Don't
>forget to have a team of doctors and lawyers with you (that are on
>"your" side of *reality*, of course) and maybe one or two good
>religious books---for a little bit of faith, whenever you are in
>a clutch or some other scary place. Then sit back, hold on, and
>watch your one, true reality crumble around you.
It would appear that you have had some form of diarrhoea of the
keyboard. You make me sound like some gun freak with raving survival
overtones. I suggest that you contact some of type these people,
WORLDFORUM is as good a place as any. There you will find that I am
diametrically the opposite of your description.
>Hey! No big deal, dude and dudette!
^^^^^^^
I am a gay male and I strongly object to being referred to by any form
of female label.
>If all else has failed, and you live to an unpleasant old age,
Highly unlikely in my case.
Re .35
How can I do that when I don't believe he is reluctant 'to face the
facts'!!! I guess it is just that his facts, your facts, my facts are
all based on our own perspectives!!!
He demonstrates a reluctance for any form of testing of his theories.
Could you possibly explain that then?
[Massive deletion to save disk space etc]
>Um, does that answer your question, Jamie?
In no way does it even address the question, never mind answer it.
I'm sure if I met you in person, I would see the Light shining in your
heart as well...I just have a hard time through this medium.
I doubt it. The formalin in which my heart floats tends to dim the
light.
Re .41
>As a composer, I have to say YES, my thoughts influence reality; not
>just mine, but others.
Well I can write, not just this stuff, and I suppose that my thoughts
in some way changes reality. However neither of us changes reality by
thought alone. We must both take our abstract creations and give them
a physical form in reality. Then and only then does reality begin to
change. If you never let the music leave you mind then reality would
not be changed, and no doubt this would be a loss for those who like
your music.
Jamie.
|
1540.46 | The first law of thought energy. | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | At her shrine, music ever devine | Wed Sep 25 1991 06:32 | 31 |
| Here is an attempt at defining the basic laws of Thought-energy ;-)
1. To demonstrate visible effects of "thought" energy, the mind of the
thinker must be free of any doubt that it is possible to, say, move a
glass across a table.
By implication, if you attempt to measure the effects, you are doubting
the the possibility and therefore are not in the pure frame of mind
required to move the glass.
Any attempts to measure is an indication of lack of faith and therefore
you or anyone involved will fail to measure the effects. If you are
moving the glass to prove that it is possible, you will also fail...you
are doubting. This is also why a 'privately' observed effect will fail
in public demonstration repeatedly.
This is why a skeptical mind would be least likely to appreciate the
elements of thought control as skeptism implies "doubt". Doubt is the
grave-digger of faith.
Yes, I know this sounds very much like creating a fantasy reality
however, the two are very close, they resemble each other but
the one is fantasy and the other, truth.
"Prove to you that this is so?" Sorry! you have just doubted by
mentioning the word "proof"...no effects visible now.
Feasible? <--( you see! doubting again ;-)
-Brian
|
1540.47 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Wed Sep 25 1991 06:52 | 10 |
| Well Brian it sounds more like "Catch-22".
A similar form of no win "logic" was used with witches. You threw them
into the water and if they floated, then they were witches and you then
stoned them to death. However if they were innocent then they sank and
drowned.
Blind faith requires gullibility to a greater degree than I possess.
Jamie.
|
1540.48 | There's enough room for two pints of view | ESSB::BROCKLEBANK | Looking at/for the more subtle things | Wed Sep 25 1991 07:12 | 26 |
|
Just to add another point of view.......probably expressed already..
I feel that most of the arguements here have been due to two different
conceptions of reality. I don't want to use the word semantics, but
rather two different ways of looking at it.
I believe there is just one reality. I will qualify this term by 'that
which is happening objectively'.
However, I also believe that we (as humans) do not perceive this
(objective) reality, we meerely create models of what we call reality,
and then project them onto reality. Thus what we see/think of reality
is a model, a self created/choosen model.
Thus what we think of as 'my reality' is subjective. This type of
(my) reality can and is within my power to alter and create.
Thus 'there is only one reality' and 'I can create reality' are both true.
Except that possibly they should be stated as
'there is only one objective reality' and
'I can create my own reality'.
Hope this makes sense.
Dave
|
1540.49 | Preserving the positive frame of mind? | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | At her shrine, music ever devine | Wed Sep 25 1991 09:38 | 12 |
| re Jamie..
>A similar form of no win "logic" was used with witches. You threw them
>into the water and if they floated, then they were witches and you then
Well...not quite...Throwing them into the water puts them in a "looking
for proof" situation....if this is so, their magic, if they have such,
may fail... Also, it is unlikely that a humanoid has developed a
pureness of mind and purpose to activate his/her positive potential
under such conditions? ;-)
-Brian
|
1540.50 | And.... | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | At her shrine, music ever devine | Wed Sep 25 1991 10:17 | 10 |
| I guess Jamie, I'm not explaining myself too clearly...
What I'm trying to say; "I have seen how under hypnosis, when the
logical/measuring/doubting mind is turned off, the person is capable of
almost super-human feats." This *is* demonstrable, all it takes is a
competant hypnotist and a good subject. This leads me to believe that
the very logical mind which we so revere, actually masks other
potential.
-Brian ..again
|
1540.51 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Wed Sep 25 1991 10:41 | 15 |
| But are they capable of doing anything that is normally truly
impossible? Or can they just do things that their conscious or sub
conscious would normally rather not try as it might cause some sort of
overload. By this I refer to the ability to lift heavier things when
hypnotized or otherwise stimulated.
For example I nearly sipped between a ferry and the quay when my
motorbike went into a front wheel skid. Stimulated by fear I lifted the
front wheel well clear of the ramp. On later testing I found that this
was impossible for me to do. In this case I think that the various
hormones that were released into my blood caused me to gain the extra
strength.
Jamie.
|
1540.52 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:02 | 15 |
| Another small example. I take the bus home and walk the last 2 miles.
On some weeks, I have to, like all of us, pay bills. I usually run out
of money by Sunday. I always save enough for bus fair. (Maximum: $10)
These "broke" weeks may happen 3-4 times a year. On these weeks,
without my having to mention it to anyone, offers of rides come to me.
Usually right to my door. Always someone different. This week, it was
from someone who doesn't even work in my building. They just called out
of the blue and said that if I was going their way at a certain time,
they'd be glad to give me a ride. On weeks when I have money enough to
survive, people who know me will see me at the bus stop and just wave.
Once in a while someone will stop, but mostly not. Again on broke
weeks, rides will just come to me. I think about getting one, but I
have never verbalized it.
PJ
|
1540.53 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:15 | 4 |
| In that case spend your money and don't bother about keeping any for
the bus as every time you need one you will get a ride.
Jamie.
|
1540.54 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:21 | 11 |
| I have done that, but not purposely. Just poor planning on my part.
Jamie, I have never been one to "tempt fate". Reality, at least mine,
would see that as making a demand on it. One can't do that. Then it
wouldn't work. It's called working with and for reality, At least by
me. If you demand something, and deliberately depending on fate to
bring me ride would have the opposite effect. Reality would wait for
the worst possible weather day and then make me walk the 5 miles home.
I think the common expression is called Don't tempt fate.
PJ
|
1540.55 | Faith and logic | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | At her shrine, music ever devine | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:29 | 9 |
| > But are they capable of doing anything that is normally truly
> impossible.
This I do not know as my "source" is reluctant to indulge in humans as
guinea pigs. The point, I guess is that there may be more potential
than is immediately obvious and the logical/doubting mind may be a
hinderance. In your case, fear/desperation overcame the logical mind?
-Brian
|
1540.56 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:40 | 17 |
| This discussion reminds me of a story.
But first, a proverb attributed to Mohammed the Prophet: "Trust in God,
but tie your camel".
The story (somewhat paraphrased):
A man who hoped to learn how to survive by placing his trust totally in
God one day observed that a legless fox managed to survive on the
scraps left behind by a lion who lived nearby. So the man thought that
if he prayed diligently and waited, God would provide for him in some
manner, as He provided for the fox. The man prayed and waited for many
days, and became hungrier and hungrier. He began to despair, and his
faith began to weaken. Suddenly, a voice spoke to him: "Why do you act
like a lame fox? Why don't you instead act like a lion, and take
action, so that others who are less fortunate may also benefit from
your efforts?"
|
1540.57 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:41 | 24 |
| Your mind controls your body through several nervous systems. Your
sensory nerves give you the five senses, but touch and pain do not
share the same nerve. You make your body move by using your motor
nerves. There is also the autonomic nervous system that is not under
the direct control of you. It controls all the bits that are supposed
to run without you taking any part of in it.
For example the rate at which your heart pumps is under the control of
the autonomic system. If you get a fright a signal is removed from the
vegal nerve causing your heart to speed up. With practice you can
convince you autonomic system to make changes to your heart rate, and
other things like your blood pressure.
A hypnotist convinces his subject of things that are not actually true.
Should he convince his subject that he is afraid, the heart rate will
rise, if he continues and convinces him that the danger has passed, the
rate will drop.
My contention is, your brain can control your body, and through the
interface of your body alter reality. However without using your body
your brain cannot change reality one jot.
Jamie.
|
1540.58 | Fields for thought-action research | FORTY2::THOMPSON | | Wed Sep 25 1991 11:51 | 42 |
| Here are two topics at the interface of the `rational-materialistic' and
`suprarational-psychic' viewpoints which would merit informative input from
persons of all shades of `belief':
1. THE `SHELDRAKE' EXPERIMENT
I have not been keeping up with Sheldrake's activities, but when I last met him
he was assembling data (supposedly with all scientific safeguards) to verify
preliminary evidence that words actually used in one language and part of the
world were easier to learn than similar nonsense words when put to people in
other parts of the world who could not know which was which. I think Turkish
and Hebrew were among the languages involved. The real and nonsense words were
obviously checked for equivalence in various ways so that hidden effects from
the inclusion of archaic roots or awkward spellings did not enter the picture.
The point being explored was that when a word, thought or memory exists in one
human mind, in any one part of the world, this facilitates its appearance in
other minds elsewhere. Not a big claim, seemingly, but potentially veriable by
experiment, and worth checking.
Does anyone know of the outcome?
2. HOMEOPATHY
Here we have a factor within the international health care `industry' that is
much too big to be `swept under the carpet'. And yet, homeopaths and orthodox
scientists agree that the remedies cannot be acting by molecular processes.
What does all this mean?
Is it possible that, in a way that the practioners themselves do not claim to
explain, they are tapping into the domain of mind-psychic-energy-matter action?
Alternatively, is there is a mass delusion which can facilitate healing at very
little risk or cost? If so, don't we need more of it, in *appropriate* cases?
Or is there simply no valid statistical support for homeopathy, but it is
coming to be accepted because we are witnessing the beginnings of a worldwide
anti-technological backlash in the direction perhaps of less abuse of the
planet but certainly more `superstition'? What do you reckon?
Yours, Chris.
|
1540.59 | OK... | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Wed Sep 25 1991 12:13 | 11 |
|
Re.57
Jamie,
>However without using your body, your thoughts cannot change reality
>one jot.
Then for you, this is true, at least at the conscious level.
Cindy
|
1540.60 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Wed Sep 25 1991 12:55 | 17 |
| Cindy, exactly. I was reading a story once, where to people, one a very
powerful adept, and one a person trying to decide between majic and
science, were exploring various facets of majic to help the person make
his decision. fiction, but a classic plotline. In their travels, they
met a debunker of majic and supernatural phenomena. this person
proceeded to tell them how in decades of research and investigation, he
had yet to come across one example of real majic. ie. Manipulating
reality through just thought, ritual, or chants and spells.
The two companions (teacher and student) discussed this. The student
after listening said, "Then majic doesn't exist." The teacher said,
"No, majic doesn't exist..... For him, that is. He refuses to see and
consequently will never know majic. That is his truth and it is as
valid as any other."
PJ
|
1540.61 | A light dawns. | PLAYER::BROWNL | Loz, this stuff tastes like water! | Wed Sep 25 1991 13:13 | 9 |
| I'm beginning to understand this...
Anyone can claim whatever they like, and we should all believe them,
because for them, it's true. And just because they can't prove it,
and/or need not prove it, doesn't make it untrue. Nor does the fact
that no-one else apart from the individual believes it make any
difference.
Laurie.
|
1540.62 | Re.60 - yes | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Wed Sep 25 1991 13:14 | 6 |
|
>That is his truth, and it is as valid as any other.
Wonderfully said, PJ.
Cindy
|
1540.63 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Wed Sep 25 1991 13:18 | 3 |
| re .61
exactly :-)
|
1540.64 | Re.61 - Yes, it is a beginning... | CGVAX2::PAINTER | energetic | Wed Sep 25 1991 13:36 | 43 |
|
Close, Laurie.
We should *accept* them, and believe that from their perspective they
are doing the best they can to explain what happens to them in their
experience.
I cannot prove anything to you. I could take up disks full of space
explaining all of the times that my thoughts directly manifested in
shapting, creating, whatever, reality. The problem is though, that
there is no way I can ever make you privy to my thoughts, thus no way
to 'prove' my position sufficiently to you in a way that it would
become real for you. I presented to you one story that happened to me
last Christmas. From your eexternal perspective, you chalked it up to
cooincidence. Your perspective is as equally valid as mine. For how
could you have known my thoughts at the time?
One more story - I was standing in the Kripalu (Yoga Center) checkout
line with *lots* of merchandise. I looked at a poster on the wall that
was around $6.00 and although I wanted it, I couldn't justify spending
a cent more that day. The cashier, upon ringing up the merchandise
exclaimed, "That's the biggest sale we've had in a long time!" Then
she looked around and said, "Let us give you something - would you like
that poster?" (;^) With all the hundreds of items in the store, she
chose the one thing that I really wanted. And on and on. So, does
this prove anything to you? Probably not. Nor would I expect that it
would.
I *live* my reality. I know that my thoughts shape it. The kind of
proof you are looking for is at the level of a parlor game (my
opinion), and I'm not going to use my ability in that way. Instead I
will hold you surrounded with light and love in my thoughts, for this I
believe is a far more productive use of my thoughts in this harsh world
we live in today.
There is the story of a person who studied for half a lifetime to be
able to walk on water. A friend came along and the person said, "Here,
let me show you what I can do!" and proceeded to walk on water. The
friend said, "You spent all those years learning to do that, when all
you had to do was spend a few coins to take the boat across!" Then the
friend got in the boat and crossed.
Cindy
|
1540.65 | Some references of interest, perhaps. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Wed Sep 25 1991 15:08 | 23 |
| re: .44 (::DOTHARD_ST "PLAYTOE")
I found the words you used in that reply very interesting...
if you take some of the words out of your reply and rearrange them
them *might* look something like the following words:
"The physical plane ("reality") is composed of choices and
decisions which are *propelled* by our thinking and feeling and
are *compelled* by attitudes and beliefs into manifestation onto
the loom of intention (will) and desire (imagination.)"
I first wrote that in this conference in May, 1987, in note
358.26. This quotation came from Lazaris. A little later, in note
358.28, there is a discussion describing what the sub-conscious
mind holds--(demonstrating that reality can and does therefore
manifest from the sub-conscious) and in 358.29 there is a
description of feminine and masculine energies (which tie in
together to balance the situation as you described it in 1540.44.)
(Again, this was information I presented that I received from
Lazaris.)
Frederick
|
1540.66 | I've heard of it, but I don't believe it without sound | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Sep 25 1991 16:17 | 11 |
| re: 46
Well, I won't discount that, because I've heard of it and do believe in
levitation and moving things with the mind...but does constitute
"influence of reality". Furthermore, I need to know if "say" means
"say out loud" creating sound vibrations in the air. Or, does saying
a word within the mind only said to move mountains. I don't believe in
the latter. NO man just by taking to thought can move any physical
thing. Unless he speaks the word of power he will not effect reality.
Playtoe
|
1540.67 | So it's not you in control | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Sep 25 1991 16:37 | 11 |
| re54
> Jamie, I have never been one to "tempt fate". Reality, at least mine,
Ah HAAAA! So it's "FATE" and not your "MIND" in control, influencing
reality. Could it be that God in looking out for you, heard you
heart's sincere desire and sent someone to help you...but on days when
you would tempt the powers, you also fail to be 100% sincere in your
heart in requesting help...God knows the heart!
|
1540.68 | Be nice...but just don't let em run over you either! | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Sep 25 1991 17:02 | 12 |
| re: 61
Laurie, accordingly to Digital policy, which asks that we respect the
"dignity" of the employee, you are correct. One does not have to prove
anything in here...just have fun!
But Universally, or realistically I'd say we're too concerned with
appearances and images! I mean what is "dignity" if you don't know
truth and appear foolish in everyone's eyes, and out of respect of
dignity of person we sit back say, "Yes...I see...yes...yes"
Playtoe
|
1540.69 | boy, did I blink | DSSDEV::GRIFFIN | Throw the gnome at it | Wed Sep 25 1991 17:44 | 77 |
|
Coming back from being ill all last week, and finally catching up (been
a busy week in this notefile), this may sound like a confused entry.
But I want to adress several issues brought up in this discussion.
The first has to do with the senses:
Jamie stated something that I interpreted as meaning empathy is just
sub-conscious usage of reading body language.
And Playtoe mentioned that if it can't be sensed, it isn't real.
I believe that we have at least one more sense that the 5
conventional ones. I have come to this personal belief from empathic
experiences dating back to preschool (when I didn't even consciously know
of such a concept as empathy). Although these experiences could not
pass rigorous test requirements, they have been frequent enough for me
to verify that my empathic abilities are not a creation of my
imagination. I have known the emotional state of a roomate that is in
another part of the house, that I have not had any visual, physical, or
oral contact with in 24 hours. The emotional state detected did not
match the state they were in when I last saw them. My perceptions
where confirmed when I proceeded (within a minute of the perception) to
the same room as them, and saw from their facial expression, or words,
or other body language, that they were indeed either angry or sad, ...
I do not expect the above to convince anyone that doesn't believe in
empathy that empathy is real. But, for this discussion, I would ask
the non-believers to pretend to accept empathy as a sense that (some?)
people are capable of. I have explained for myself that I am capable
of this perception of others emotions (which is a kind of thought???)
because I am using an "organ" that is designed to do this. Just as
organs and muscles must be exercised to function properly/completely
(e.g. you can allow eyes to become tired, hence they won't function
properly, but with exercise, the vision problem is corrected), this
"organ" needs exercise. If you don't know you have the "organ", you
won't think to use it (just like by taking karate, I became aware of
muscles I didn't know I had). But, if something occurs to force
awareness of this organ, you will use it. Otherwise, it atrophies
(like a leg muscle will atrophy some while in a cast for extended
periods of time). Exercise and (re)training is required in order to
(re)use the "organ". While (re)training, the capabilities of the organ
will be small (using the muscle comparison, you can't bend your knee
fully, nor raise the leg if a weight is on the ankle). To use this
"organ" to perform a large (I equate this with visible to the
conventional senses) feat requires a lot of training and practice (just
like using the hands to be a virtuoso musician), as well as an inborn
natural talent (again the comparison to the musician). From biblical
histories and secular history, I have come to the conclusion that there
have been very few people with the inborn talent that have taken the
great amounts of time necessary to become powerful enough to perform a
large feat - so few, that most people today consider those accounts as
exagerations or myths (given the amount of time between the occurances
and today, even I doubt the full details of the accounts). Personally,
I would love to have the opporunety to spend all of my waking hours
investigating the possibilities of the human mind (and my mind in
particular), but instead, I must (currently) spend my time at tasks
that pay money (in a reliable way).
Another issue I want to address is Jamie's belief that Frederick is
reluctant to have the abilities tested: I have interpreted Fredericks
statements NOT as reluctance but as a conscious decision that he does
not wish to spend the time and energy necessary to provide proof to
others. The doubts in his beliefs expressed by others, who have not
had his experiences, do NOT cause doubt in himself. I obviously do not
agree with you, Jamie, that Frederick has displayed "reluctance" to
testing.
The last issue: perception affecting reality. Somewhere, I forget
where, but do recall that it was a reputable scientific source, I read
about how the act of perceiving quantum behavior DID affect the outcome
of a test. The way is was described seemed to imply that the result of
the test in the physical reality was caused by someone attempting to
perceive it. Could someone more knowledgable on this topic fill in the
gaps for me?
Beth
|
1540.70 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Wed Sep 25 1991 17:48 | 29 |
| PLAYTOE, you play at words here. :-) We all do. One person's fate is
another person's God. Whatever it is. It works. The person I rode with
last night, called to say that she couldn't offer the ride today. We
had talked about it. She has errands that take her to the other side of
town. 20 Minutes later, another person came over and said that he
wasn't going to class tonight and if I wanted a ride, He'd be able to
give me one. He, too, is totally unaware of my monetary situation. This
will probably stop tomorrow, as I pick up some money on the way to work
and won't be in this situation again for a few months.
Maybe it's God. Maybe it's Goddess.(My preference) Maybe it's my
"Guardian Angel". the point is, if I really need it, it happens. It
very much could be my thoughts. rationalizing it, with out resorting to
"incredible coincidence". My thoughts go out to the universe. The
universe or some controlling entity or entities, all powerful or not,
cause what i want to be real. Maybe not. Maybe I'm fooling myself. I
don't think so.
My personal preference is that there is a Creator and this Creator set
it up so that when a being has learned enough to be able to safely do
something, then that ability becomes manifest in that being. After all,
we wouldn't want just anyone to be able to play with a malleable
reality. We'd all be in trouble. Also, those of us just beginning on
the learning path in this cycle wouldn't be able do much or effect
anyone else's reality accept in a general way. This is also a safety
valve of sorts.
PJ
|
1540.71 | Everything is Fuzzy | AZUR::HALDANE | Typos to the Trade | Wed Sep 25 1991 18:41 | 56 |
| re: <<< Note 1540.69 by DSSDEV::GRIFFIN "Throw the gnome at it" >>>
> The last issue: perception affecting reality. Somewhere, I forget
> where, but do recall that it was a reputable scientific source, I read
> about how the act of perceiving quantum behavior DID affect the outcome
> of a test.
I too have heard that observation can affect the results of
experiments.
At the very simplest level, the temperature of the room I am in is
affected (minutely, I agree) by the fact that I have gone into it
to read the thermometer. How the presence of a remote sensor could
influence it I haven't worked out, but I'm sure that in some
instances even remote observation could have some effect. I'd
certainly be out of my depth if I tried to understand how different
types of feedback could influence an outcome.
As far as quantum theory is concerned, I find a lot of this just as
way out as any of the views expressed in this conference. For
example, the many worlds theory. This really is a sort of
"create your own reality" theory, but I heard it mentioned (Monday (?)
night on the BBC WS "Discovery" programme, where they called it the
"many universes" theory) in the context of something I didn't
really follow about a fuzzy universe, and our well-defined
perception of objects that ought, in theory, to be fuzzy too.
What (I think) was said, (very much paraphrased) was that, although
the many universes theory postulates a separate universe for every
possible outcome of every possible event (from particle level
upwards, though I'm not sure they said this on the programme) the
minute you introduce an observer to perceive the actual event you
limit this. (I use the word "minute" loosely!) An observer could
be any consciousness. But I assume that one observer would
perceive only one of the possible outcomes, and therefore be
conscious of only one of the many universes.
(That sounds like perceiving your own reality, rather than creating
it. Unless you can choose, consciously or otherwise, which of all
the possible outcomes you perceive. Like Jamie and Mary S. are at
opposite ends of the possibilities spectrum, and many of the rest
of us are near the middle. However, I find the many worlds theory
a little hard to accept, as do many quantum physicists.)
They said something about such an observer needing to be outside
the universe, and unless it was God... My mind gave up at this
point and I went back to reading the MUFON crop circles report
extracted from this file.
Well, now that I've clarified that... :-)
Perhaps a physicist would like to have a go.
Delia
|
1540.72 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Thu Sep 26 1991 03:26 | 15 |
| Cindy, you really do underrate your and others abilities to read body
language. You stand looking longingly at a poster, the cashier notices
this and, as you have spent a lot of money, decides to reward you with
a gift of one. Your actions of looking at the poster influenced reality
not your casual thoughts. Or is this explanation too simple?
As to the excuse put forwards for Frederick not wishing to waste his
energy in testing. Well Frederick seems to have enough time and energy
to write endless wordy notes in here. That must take up a lot of time
and energy. I cannot see why he should not use some of this energy to
verify his claims. In fact he probably uses more time and energy
thinking up excuses for avoiding such testing than he would use if he
did the tests. Of course it also saves him from being proved wrong.
Jamie.
|
1540.73 | Body language? | FORTY2::CADWALLADER | Rifle butts to crush you down... | Thu Sep 26 1991 09:23 | 47 |
| Jamie,
Only recently after reading other accounts have I remembered several
occasions with close friends, or girlfriends where emotions or messages
were transferred *without* there being any possible explanation of the
phenomenon due to physical body language.
For example, spontaneous speaking of the same phrase, or "speaking out
loud" *exactly the same* words, at *exactly the same instant*. A couple
of cases, for me are especially noteworthy - although I encountered this
many, many times. For example, one time when a friend & I exclaimed a
word at exactly the same time, but the word was not a proper word, it
was a perversion of a word or mis-pronounciation in response to a
previous part of our conversation - i.e. the word was not a real word
so how could we both say *that* word at exactly the same time?
Other instances of similar experiences include one of my girlfriends,
in a couple of cases, had "forseen" small glimpses of things I would
say or situations I would be in. The particular situations or things
I would say were, incidentally, completely un-noteworthy! At other times
we would "share" emotions when separated. One day I suffered an acute
and, unexplainable depressive feeling (there was no logical source of
depression) and I felt puzzled because it seems to just hit me for no
reason. The next time I contacted my girlfriend she told me that she
had been in an incredibly depressed mood, and by deduction I realised
that this was at the same time as I had felt this unfounded wave of
depression. On another occasion I was staying over in her room (in a
hotel where she works) and the situation between us had been fairly
stressful, we were talking of splitting up. Some time after she had
left the room to go to work, I (similarly) suffered pangs of extreme
grief at the situation, and longed to stay with her (rather than split
up). About a minute or so after this started, she entered the room and
came to hug me, saying (strangely) that she just "felt" that I was
somehow "calling" her and she just had to stop work and see if I was
alright. The important thing is the timing. You could say "coincidence"
but I have only related the instances where I can remember the details,
this sort of thing happened so often at one point that some friends
& I joked that we were telepathic! ("Oh yeah, I forgot we were
telepathic :-) ).
These case are cited for no particular reason, save to suggest that
you must have had similar experiences, Jamie, which you could not put
down to being inside the percentage chance of reasonable coincidences?
I will be surprised if not. How do you classify such cases, if they
have happened to you?
- JIM CAD*
|
1540.74 | Infomedicine | PRMS00::TSTARK | Shadow dream logic | Thu Sep 26 1991 09:56 | 23 |
| re: .58, Chris,
> 1. THE `SHELDRAKE' EXPERIMENT
I'm not too familiar with this. Do you have any references ?
> 2. HOMEOPATHY
There is an interesting alternate model of medicine proposed
by a small subset of doctors, called Infomedicine. My
understanding of this is that it is supposed
to incorporate the effects of the health care support system
and information given to the patient with the medical treatment
itself, as all being part of a single system. This would then
provide a better foundation for treatment that dealt with the
patient's total well-being, rather than dealing with them
as a technician deals with a faulty piece of equipment.
I know there is at least one popular published work (Shamhala
publications) about this field, but I don't know how well accepted
it is.
todd
|
1540.75 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Sep 26 1991 10:52 | 11 |
| re: .61
Laurie, you're not quite there yet. Anyone *can* claim whatever they
like. "We all" (I'm not sure who you are referencing by the we) can
believe or disbelieve. Or you can choose to think something is possible,
but not likely. Or whatever.
What is not acceptable is calling people "gullible" or other names
because their beliefs and experiences differ from yours.
Mary
|
1540.76 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:00 | 18 |
| Re .73
After 17 years living with the same person I usually can tell you what
he will say or do in any given moment. Each of us knows exactly how the
other one's mind works. Sometimes we too have had a fight and made a
spontaneous and simultaneous attempt to patch things up.
This is not telepathy. It is just the learning of the thought processes
of the other.
BTW his niece has an annoying habit of finishing everyone's sentence for
them. This she can do because the thinking process is much faster than
speech and she usually knows how the sentence is going to end long
before it happens.
No mystery.
Jamie.
|
1540.77 | body language doesn't always explain events... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:19 | 35 |
| Back when I was 14, my family travelled to Europe. I remember one
interesting incident when we were driving through the Swiss
countryside. We have run out of conversation and were driving in
silence for a least a half hour, just watching the scenery and lost in
our thoughts. Out of the blue, my sister and I started singing
simultaneously, of all things, the commercial for GI-Joe dolls (GI Joe,
GI Joe, fighting man from head to toe). Same key. Same starting
pitch. Same tempo. I'm not sure what body language started that
sequence. It had nothing to do with the conversations that had taken
place earlier.
In my mid-twenties I had a boyfriend who used to always "read my mind."
We only dated a short time (6 months total) but from very early on, he
would answer questions before I had a chance to ask them. We might be
fixing dinner and I would suddenly think of something I had wanted to
ask him. No sooner had the question popped into my mind, and he would
turn to me and answer it. It reached a point where I would laughingly
snarl at him to "quit reading my mind," to which he would always
answer, "well, then, quit broadcasting so loud." Again, the questions
were unrelated to previous conversation and body language.
And then, of course, there was the conductor with whom I sang for 6
1/2 years. We were very close emotionally, although we never spent
private time together due to the nature of our relationship.
Sometimes, though, we had brief exchanges of a nonverbal nature. On
several occasions, he "called to me" while I was leaving. My back was
turned and I was in the middle of the crowd of people leaving, yet when
I would turn, he was there waiting for me. I have outlined some of my
other experiences with him elsewhere in this file. Specifically,
dreams that I always assumed were wish-fulfillment (until the dream in
which we were evacuated from his building, which was on fire, and other
clairvoyant dreams which later events proved to have actually been
happening as I was dreaming them).
Mary
|
1540.78 | IMHO it is more in *some* cases. | FORTY2::CADWALLADER | Rifle butts to crush you down... | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:26 | 24 |
|
Jamie,
I agree, *in most cases*, this is why I gave for example the case
where my friend & I both said an impossible word at the same time.
There was a similar non-explainable example I was going to give,
but it shot out of my mind (typical!) and I still can't remember
it now.
The situations with my girlfriend too, were IMHO *more* than what
you claim, because the transference of feelings occured when we
were separated - when I had no "clues" to go on. I do know what you
mean but I feel there were many cases in my experience outside of
that model.
Do you still say that the above cases (& others if I remember them)
are perfectly normal body-language or familiarisation-born
experiences?
Although I didn't initially want to say this, I began to realise
that I could manipulate my girlfriend's feelings as previously
mentioned too.
- JIM CAD*
|
1540.79 | I've remembered! | FORTY2::CADWALLADER | Rifle butts to crush you down... | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:37 | 34 |
| RE: -2
Mary,
Just read your note - that's *exactly* the sort of thing I mean!
:-)
I've remembered the other "notable" case... there were 3 of us
watching the film "The Entity". This portrays the true story of a
woman who is repeatedly molested and raped by an unseen entity.
Whenever any frightening action occured in the film there was a
load "BAM! BAM! BAM!" dramatic beat...
At one point in the film, we had been silent for a long time and
nothing much had happened... suddenly I "knew" something was
about to happen so I jokingly started mimicking the beat of the
"dramatic bit" music and thumping my foot on the carpet (I was
young at the time - blush #
:-|
# ). Anyway I stopped in complete
surprise as one of my friends did *exactly* the same thing at
*exactly* the same time. We both stopped, stunned & looked at each
other in amazement! It is important to note that this was not an
obvious reaction to the moment of the film ... there was actually
no "action" at that moment and no music beat - I just did it as a
joke, so did my friend just coincidentally think the same joke at
the exact same instant (a quiet instant too) and procede to do the
exact same action in the exact same tempo? I don't think so - the
absurdity of the "coincidence" was why we both were so shocked -
it can't have been body-language either because we were engrossed
in the film. Very strange again.
- JIM CAD*
|
1540.80 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:46 | 30 |
| I'm very good at reading other people, even strangers.
I am willing to acknowledge that most of the time this is probably
due to being very aware of subtle clues - body language, facial
nuances - that other people might ignore. But occasionally I have
picked up emotions in ways that cannot be that easily explained.
For example, I was once sitting in my car at a red light - there
were several cars in front of me and several behind - when I became
"aware" that the person behind me was very angry, frighteningly so.
I mean, I wan't looking at him and he wasn't doing or saying anything,
but I sensed this anger. A few moments later, he butted his car into
the back of mine. He did this twice. I got out to look but there
wasn't any noticeable damage. I went over to his window and said
something inane, "what are you doing?" or some such. He didn't
meet my eyes, continued to stare straight ahead, and
had a small tight smile on his face. He muttered "sorry." I
figured he was totally round the bend, got back in my car, and got
out of his vicinity as soon as possible.
I am not claiming this as an example of thought influencing reality
because I don't think my picking up his thoughts changed anything.
It is just an example of something that is not that easily explained.
I've had experiences like this repeatedly throughout my life. Because
of these, I'm less than enamoured with the status quo in the scientific
community.
Sue
|
1540.81 | | DSSDEV::GRIFFIN | Throw the gnome at it | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:14 | 30 |
| Re: .78
I've felt the possibility of changing anothers emotions (and may have
done it once), but I refrain from it as a talent with too much
potential for abuse. If I ever come across someone whose emotional
state is such that they will do themselves harm, and their mental
barriers are not too strong, I may consider it.
Getting back to my earlier note, and the original topic:
The "organ" I referred to, IMO, is the brain, the functions of which at
the least produce thoughts and feelings. I believe, through my
experiences, that it can also perceive on the psionic/psychic "wave
length", and is capable of manipulating those wave lengths as well,
which enables us to manipulate reality (within scientific bounds) by
brain activety alone (which is not necessarily thought alone).
And, Jamie, given the experiences I described earlier in this topic,
can you suggest what clues I was using if the information (the persons
emotional state) was NOT gained by the brain directly perceiving it?
Remember, I had not had any contact whatsoever with the person for 24
hours, had not idea why she was angry until she told me why, and had no
reason to suspect that the action that angered her would anger her
(having not done it before, nor discussed related topics with her or any
of her friends before). If I had known it would anger her, I would not
have done the act (this is a personality trait, obviously - not
everybody is so considerate :-).
Beth
|
1540.82 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:22 | 11 |
| Beth,
To play devil's advocate, I think it is easy for someone
who hasn't experienced telepathy to dismiss examples of
telepathy between friends and family. Not to say that
they aren't examples of telepathy, but that there are too
many other possible explanations. You might never have done
this one particular thing but you know the person and can
reasonably predict how she might react based on that knowledge.
Sue
|
1540.83 | Reading your mind | UTRTSC::MACKRILL | At her shrine, music ever devine | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:37 | 28 |
| Reading through some of the prior notes made me think of something that
happens on the rare occassions where my wife and I, under stress, will
dissagree strongly.
While her back was turned I went to verbalise a strong reply, thought
twice about saying it and said the sentence in my mind, and did not
utter a single sound. My wife would spin around and say, (a little
annoyed)" What did you just say?" I would say; "Nothing!" It only
happens when there would have been very strong emotion behind the words
I was about to say... but in "Jamiespeak", no hard evidence as yet ;-)
While at school, in a revenge-filled trance, an egg-cup moved to the
edge of the table under my transfixed gaze. A little annoyed, I pushed
it back with my hand (without leaving my "trance") and returned to
visualizing how I was going to get even with the school bully. The
egg-cup moved toward the edge of the table again and I pushed it back
again.
The second time snapped me out of the trance. No matter how I tried, I
could not repeat the effect. I was left with the feeling of; "Did it
really happen or did I imagine it?"
I thought it may have been the air expanding under the cup after
receiving the boiled egg and tried all kinds of experiments, to no
avail. I was rather ashamed that I could think of someone with such
intense hatred.
-Brian
|
1540.84 | a better description of an experience | DSSDEV::GRIFFIN | Throw the gnome at it | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:40 | 22 |
| Sue,
I hadn't known her very long, just a couple of months. We had only just
started to be roommates. I don't feel I had the time to develop enough
knowledge of this person to know that the act would produce that
reaction. And, another time I was aware of her anger was upon waking
one morning - she was not angry at me, but at another, who I didn't
even know had done anything to anger her. But after I got up and
talked to her, she conveyed the cause of her anger. The only
information I perceived was that she was angry - not why, not at whom.
There was no way for me to know that someone 20 miles away had called
her, and that they had an argument (I was on the top floor, she in the
basement, when they had the phone conversation; she was in the basement
or first floor at the time I woke up and perceived the emotion; I
didn't hear anything, smell anything, see anything, didn't even know
the phone had rung, hadn't even gotten out of bed, but upon seeing her
and talking with her, the perception, in my mind, was validated; and,
no, sound did not carry easily from the basement to the top floor - she
could have violently trashed the basement and I would never have heard
anything if I had been awake and listening for it).
Beth
|
1540.85 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:49 | 9 |
| re: 83
For me, too, these things happen more frequently when strong emotion is
involved. In any event, they only happen with people that I know at
least a little. There are some possible exceptions to the latter, but
since I didn't know the people, I couldn't prove the experiences to
myself!
Mary
|
1540.86 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Sep 26 1991 12:52 | 9 |
| Beth,
Yes, I think that description is better because it gets rid
of several other possible explanations. Don't you find it
tiring picking up emotions/thoughts from others? I do. Especially,
because I often wonder if I'm just imagining - but then, 98%
of the time, what I picked up turns out to be true so I can't
just dismiss it.
Sue
|
1540.87 | | SCARGO::CONNELL | Shivers and Tears | Thu Sep 26 1991 13:01 | 27 |
| Ok! Just remembered this one. It happenend in 1982. My son was playing
at a neighbor's house. THis house was around the corner and a block
away from my house. At the time my (then) wife worked 2nd shift. I took
care of the kids in the evening. It was around 5:30 PM. I was trying to
make the decision of whether or not to bring him in then or give him
another 30-60 minutes of play. We didn't regiment play time away from
the house. Just basing it on the daily situation of weather,
convenience to us, mood or other factors. Not time of day. Anyway, I
stood at the back door and thought about whether or not to call him.
After several minutes of thinking, I decided to let him play a little
longer. Approximately 5 minutes later, he came home and said, "What do
you want Daddy. I heard you call me and came right home." I said that I
didn't call him, only thought about it. He said OK and went back. My
daughter was home and she swore that I didn't call him. She was in the
same room at the time I stood at the door. Neither my son nor I could
see the other from where we were at the time.
Now, did I influence his reality? Was it telepathy? Or some combination
of the 2. he did not come home based onn any external influence.
Hunger, weather, need to "potty". He was 5 years old and would have
stayed out until dawn, if we had let him. I have to feel that this was
a true paranormal experience.
Now I'll repeat the Sneaker's That Walked 100 Miles By Themselves story
if anyone wants to hear it. It's in here somewhere.
PJ
|
1540.88 | | VERGA::KALLAS | | Thu Sep 26 1991 13:33 | 28 |
| Things I've known and haven't the foggiest idea why:
that there would be an earthquake the day before it happened-
that one of my children would be in an accident involving a
metal swing the day before it happened- (I "saw" a metal swing hitting
her head. The school nurse called the next day to say that my
daughter had hurt her wrist. I kept asking "is her head ok?" and
the nurse probably thought I was hard of hearing. My daughter later
told me that she'd hurt her wrist putting up her arm to stop the
swing from hitting her head.)
that an unmarried woman I met briefly (and we only talked about
traveling) was trying desparately to get pregnant. I found out
later from an unexpected mutual friend that this was true.
that I knew the first name of a stranger sitting next to me on
a plane (and there were no visible name tags or monograms)
Things like these happen all the time. (Obviously, given the
replies, to quite a few people.) I can't easily prove it
and can't control it. If I could, I'd play the lottery :-)
Sue
But they obviously happen to me and
|
1540.89 | More to come... | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:10 | 39 |
| RE: 65
I'm not sure if I understand, well actually I am sure that I don't
fully understand, your use of the terms "propelled and compelled". But
let me elaborate a little more on my understanding in respect to what
you just said.
> "The physical plane ("reality") is composed of choices and
> decisions which are *propelled* by our thinking and feeling and
> are *compelled* by attitudes and beliefs into manifestation onto
> the loom of intention (will) and desire (imagination.)"
First, the term "reality" has two conatations, one objective and the
other subjective. In other words, one composed of atoms and molecules
and manifests in form that can be sensed (ie Objective Reality). The
other is commonly thought of what we as individuals regurgitate in the
form of our unique perception of Objective Reality (ie Subjective
Reality).
Objective Reality, no doubt, was here before anyone of us, including
Adam and Eve, manifested on the "physical plane"...surely you must
agree. Therefore it is evident that 1) there is an "Objective Reality"
separate and independent of our thought and feelings, or ability to
control. As we, nor Adam and Eve, created themselves, something prior
to them caused them to manifest beyond their will and control. 2) That
Objective Reality is ultimately beyond our control and we merely, at
best, can come to understand it's operations and order and laws and
either abide within them, which gives us a relative sense of mastery
over our lives, or we are mastered by them.
Objective Reality, is Truth (capital T).
Subjective Reality, or Pragmatic view of reality, is truth (small t)
and to the extent that it does not jive with Objective Reality (ie does
not agree with the operations, order and laws intrinsic to Objective
Reality, our truth becomes a lie, a delusion, and the cause of our
personal frustrations and trouble in life.
Playtoe
|
1540.90 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:35 | 38 |
| re 69
Beth, glad your well and back again.
I can relate to your conception of a sixth sense, "empathy".
In the course of my studies I've come to believe that we have 8 senses,
but mentioned only five to avoid any trouble. However, you affirmed my
statement, "What is sensible is only real". Your "sensing" of the
emotional state of your roomate and your verification of the accuracy
of your senses, makes both the emotional state and your empathic sense
a reality!
Of course, one must agree that if you cannot "sense" a thing how can we
possibly acknowledge it as something real.
I actually believe we have 8 senses, as follows:
1) Taste
2) Touch
3) Smell
4) Hear
5) See
6) Understanding (which in this usage denotes a broader meaning than
commonly understood.) Animals have this sense. They sense the
emotional state of their masters all the time. That we could sense
each others emotions is not unique to humanity.
7) Speech (is a sense, as from the tone and inflection of our voice we
sense nervousness, anger, gladness, etc., more definite than the 6th
sense. Also, Bats, who send out sonic noise to guide their flight use
it as a sense more explicitly.
8) Intuition (is the highest level of human senses. It relates to the
trance state that we enter into to (in to it = intuit) to discover
subjective/subconscious realities and truths. Trance states are
actually more common among us than we know, "dreaming (day- or REM)" is
the sense of Intuition at work.)
Playtoe
|
1540.91 | Grey Matter - Ambiguity Intended ;-) | AZUR::HALDANE | Typos to the Trade | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:42 | 27 |
| Do thoughts influence reality?
Are brain waves thoughts?
I read online about three or four years ago a report (could have
been in VNS?) about an experimental aircraft or cockpit (USAF?)
that allowed pilots to control some of the aircraft's functions by
using alpha brain waves. No hands. Just thought.
The report indicated that there was some degree of success.
I've heard elsewhere that there is other evidence of the directable
power of alph waves, but (as usual for me!) I can't produce
references.
I think that there is a strong possibility that the human race once
used these "normal" powers, but forgot how as they developed other
areas of ability that seemed more important to their survival at
the time. Now, such abilities are not considered normal. Perhaps
one day they will be.
I can't help wondering though what would happen if one idividual's
(or group's) alpha waves were in direct conflict with another's.
Psycho-warfare? Spare the body but destroy the soul? Maybe we're
better off with conventional science...
Delia
|
1540.92 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:53 | 33 |
| RE: 70
If looking at things from a different angle or perspective is
considered to be "playing with words", then I guess you're right.
We find many instances in the Bible, where it is said that God placed
it upon the heart of another to help so and so...eg the ass that Jesus
was to ride, the home to which Saul/Paul was to stay at when he was
blinded, etc.
The Gnostics speak of the "Totalities", and "Aeons", where we in modern
times speak of the "body of Christ". We think of just a group of
evolved humans, whereas to the Gnostics it denotes a ONENESS of all
things.
When you "lean to thine own understanding", or have a remedy for the
solution to your life, of course, you tend to follow after it. To the
neglect of what the "Totalities" might be impelling you to do.
But sometimes we are at a lose for a direction or remedy, and seek an
answer, moreso a remedy. We must remember that in the Bible how Jesus
taught about the "Sparrow" and the "lillies of the field", how God
cares for them...God cares for you and I too.
So some may not believe in God and Jesus, and what did Jesus say, "If
you don't believe in me, believe in my WORKS"...in that light, though
we may not believe in God, yet find certain things written in the Bible
to occur in our lives, at least believe in these things. So we don't
say that "God" did this for me...know that *something* out there cares
for you...and perhaps show a little gratitude and say "Thank You,
whoever you may be"...don't fall into perdition.
Playtoe
|
1540.93 | Do you recall whether there were EEG leads ? | PRMS00::TSTARK | Shadow dream logic | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:16 | 29 |
| re: .91,
> I read online about three or four years ago a report (could have
> been in VNS?) about an experimental aircraft or cockpit (USAF?)
> that allowed pilots to control some of the aircraft's functions by
> using alpha brain waves. No hands. Just thought.
I recall two sets of experiments in this area, one with vocal commands
and retina reflection technology, and one with an EEG hookup. In the
first case, the pilot would free up their hands for more important
control functions by being able to aim their weaponry simply by
looking in that direction, and then say 'BANG' to fire the weapon.
I think the second, which was closer to the case in .91, was successful but
somewhat less so. It involved EEG measurement equipment placed on
the subject's head, detecting the noticeable spike that occurs with
certain (trainable) kinds of mental activity. I think it was less
successful for two reasons; the obvious one of the practical difficulties
of measuring such a small voltage spike in the frantic activity
of a cockpit, and the serious problem of the pilot being able
to control their own mental activity with enough discipline to
produce the desired effect when desired, and not at other times.
Did the article referred to in .91 indicate that this was done
'at a distance ?' or from locally applied leads ? Makes a tremendous
difference, obviously. I didn't think they could detect
electroencephalogram patterns without a topical lead (?)
todd
|
1540.94 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:18 | 17 |
| re: 81
> I've felt the possibility of changing anothers emotions (and may have
> done it once), but I refrain from it as a talent with too much
> potential for abuse. If I ever come across someone whose emotional
If you feel you should refrain because you might abuse the talent,
perhaps you might consider studying with Practioners of "Science of the
Mind" (student's of Dr. Ernest Holmes). They speak to that very fear
and teach you perceive and address each individual's inner "perfect"
self. Which says that sometimes people don't realize their inner
perfect self and do things harmful to themselves due to their
ignorance, but you'll be taught to see it in them, and can confidently
do the best thing for them, inspite of themselves...and that's actually
the best thing, as they will justify for you as well.
Playtoe
|
1540.95 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:44 | 9 |
| Re: The replies regarding sensing other's thoughts
In the previous stories about how we sometimes can sense another's
feelings or even know another's thoughts, I submit that thoughts of one
person may influence those of another, but I don't think we'll talking
about the "reality influence" in question here.
Playtoe
|
1540.96 | Subjecting to subjectivity... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Thu Sep 26 1991 15:57 | 18 |
| re: .89 (Plaything)
That quotation was from Lazaris, not from me. Lazaris has
used various definitions for reality...that one was simply one of
them. Is it accurate? It seems to be (to me.)
AS for reality, we do not agree. I do not begin to agree
that things were here before *I* (in some form) was. All time
is simultaneous...all those things exist in the now. If I am
now, they did not precede me. But even buying into a past,
which I am currently creating, I do not believe in the objective
reality you and so many others want to believe in. To me reality
is subjective...and objectivity lies within (as a sub-set of)
subjectivity. Your premise or conclusion drawn around truth and
reality are therefore not something I can agree with.
Frederick
|
1540.97 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 16:04 | 13 |
| Re: 91
In your example an apparatus is used to convert brain waves into a
force able to control reality...no different from the tongue turning
thoughts into speech, or thoughts compelling actions which alter
reality. Whatever, the thought of the pilot was not able to unaidedly
effect the aircraft...less someone on the ground override his commands
and bring him down!
I don't think we realize the full implications of the possibility of
THOUGHTS influencing reality...not just you, but me and everyone else.
Playtoe
|
1540.98 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Thu Sep 26 1991 16:12 | 1 |
| snicker, snicker, snicker :-)
|
1540.99 | | CGVAX2::PAINTER | | Thu Sep 26 1991 16:55 | 2 |
|
<-- (;^)
|
1540.100 | <-----ditto last 2! 8-) | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Thu Sep 26 1991 17:20 | 1 |
| hee!hee!hee!
|
1540.101 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Thu Sep 26 1991 17:26 | 2 |
| One things for sure... things are going to be a lot more fun than they
have been. :-)
|
1540.102 | Observer does not mean "conscious observer" in physics. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Sep 26 1991 17:33 | 33 |
| RE: .71 (Delia)
<<Many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics>>
Actually, the many-worlds (MW) interpretation of quantum mechanics
(QM), unlike most other interpretations of QM, places no special role
at all on anything called the "observer". QM says that at times things
act like all "possible" outcomes are simultaneously true, and that
those alternate outcomes act like they interact with each other (I'm
using the word "act" here so as to avoid any interpretation as to what
is "really" going on). MW says that this is literally true, and that
furthermore, it continues to be so when other interpretations say that
one or another of the possibilities are "selected" in some way (which
involves something refered to as an "observation" in the Copenhagen
Interpretation and its variants). In the MW interpretation, the
different simultaneously true alternatives simply become decoupled so
they no longer interact. The observer basically splits to become
multiple observers, one for each alternative. There is no choice by
the observer applied to the observed, nor vice versa. Nor does the
observer limit what has occured (that would more accurately describe
the Copenhagen Interpretation -- but one *should not* assume that an
"observer" implies consciousness, or a mind or any such thing -- there
are physicists who make that association but they are proposing non-
standard interpretations, and are not in any way "mainstream"). The
observer will observe all the alternatives by becoming multiple
observers. Any particular observer, however, will have only observed
one of each of the preceding alternatives (think about it).
I have yet to see a convincing argument, by the way, that we should be
expected to "see" the universe in a fuzzy way according to MW. Maybe
there is a technical point I have missed.
Topher
|
1540.103 | Re.102 | CGVAX2::PAINTER | | Thu Sep 26 1991 17:57 | 15 |
|
Topher,
Would you consider Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose 'mainstream'
physicists or not?
I'm not really sure how they are looked upon by the physics world in
general.
I just love Penrose's last chapter of "Emperors Of The New Mind" -
"Where lies the physics of the mind?" (Thank, Earl, for the pointer
to the Philosophy conference on this topic.)
Cindy
|
1540.104 | Side bar on "The Entity". | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Sep 26 1991 17:57 | 32 |
| RE: .79 (JIM CAD)
> I've remembered the other "notable" case... there were 3 of us
> watching the film "The Entity". This portrays the true story of a
> woman who is repeatedly molested and raped by an unseen entity.
Just for accuracy -- this movie claims to be "based on a true story."
In other words though it leaves the impression of being a "true story"
it actually claims to no factual content at all. Steve Kallis and I
had an interesting discussion about this film somewhere in this
conference. Its the only film I know of where it would seem that you
are better off seing it in the "edited for TV" version. I saw the
uncut version and found the rape sequences, violent, repetetive,
exploitative and (if it is relevant) non-erotic. Steve saw the cut
version and enjoyed the film much more than I did, since the truly
offensive (and I am anything but a prude) parts had been removed.
I do not know anything about the specific case, but it was rather
interesting to see through the unusual story they were trying to tell,
the vague outlines of a rather different, fairly standard, not
necessarily paranormal case history. For the most part it took a
pretty expert eye (that is, you have to know something about the
typical characteristics of poltergeist cases). It was rather like
reading a palimpsest.
The denoument was, I am quite sure, wholly ficticious. I would almost
certainly have heard about such an experiment (I can, for example, be
pretty sure who the parapsychologist in the story is based on), and
besides, it would have used up virtually the entire "free worlds" budget
for parapsychology for the entire year.
Topher
|
1540.105 | A welldone sidestep | CGVAX2::PAINTER | | Thu Sep 26 1991 18:02 | 14 |
| "The Emperor's New Mind", by Roger Penrose
One passage from the book:
"I take the word 'consciousness' to be essentially synonymous with
'awareness' (although perhaps 'awareness' is just a little more
passive than what I mean by 'consciousness'), whereas 'mind' and
'soul' have further connotations which are a good deal *less*
clearly definable at the present. We shall be having enough
trouble with coming to terms with 'consciousness' as it stands,
so I hope the reader will forgive me if I leave the further
problems of 'mind' and 'soul' essentially alone!"
Cindy
|
1540.106 | Nope. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Sep 26 1991 18:03 | 14 |
| RE: .103 (Cindy)
> Would you consider Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose 'mainstream'
> physicists or not?
I definitely would not. They are both well respected and admired and
in regards to the interpretation of QM among other things, generally
disagreed with.
Penrose is not even considered, by himself or others, a physicist. He
is a mathematician who has made some important contributions to the
mathematics of the theory of quantum mechanics.
Topher
|
1540.107 | | CGVAX2::PAINTER | | Thu Sep 26 1991 18:04 | 8 |
|
Re.106
Topher,
RE: Penrose being a mathematician - yes, thanks for the correction.
Cindy
|
1540.108 | Better late than never...... | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Sep 26 1991 19:01 | 17 |
| Having been traveling and vacationing the last 2 1/2 weeks, I have come
to this topic rather late, but what are psychosomatic
symptoms/illnesses but examples of thought/emotion altering reality,
i.e. the person's health? There is a branch of medicine, Psychosomatics,
that deals exclusively with this phenomenon. My sister has suffered,
albeit in a very minor way, from these types of symptoms all her life.
Re. various previous entries, Playtoe,
I seem to have missed the connection in some of your notes, but, seeing
as you believe in God, then God is real for you. Which of your 5 or the
additional 3 you mentioned allow you to decide God is real? Since we
cannot perceive God with the conventional 5 I assume you see Him as
real using one of the other 3, but which one?
Marilyn
|
1540.109 | Addendum | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Sep 26 1991 19:02 | 1 |
| Sorry , Playtoe, of course I meant which of the senses....
|
1540.110 | I understand you... | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 19:38 | 19 |
| RE: 96
Frederick:
Hey, no problem, but if you think that it is accurate, should you also
be able to explain it and answer for it, according to how you
understand it?
> AS for reality, we do not agree. I do not begin to agree
> that things were here before *I* (in some form) was. All time
^^^^^^^^^^^^
I imagine you are including "thought forms" as well. If so I agree
with you. But is thought and "Objective" or "Subjective" reality?
You may have been, and I too, somewhere in the subjective undifferiated
energy/matter soup bowl, but before you arrive on this scene as "YOU"
proper, a physical body and an earth to sustain you was prepared first.
Playtoe
Playtoe
|
1540.111 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Thu Sep 26 1991 20:54 | 39 |
| re: 108
First, I stated in my first reply "thoughts and feelings do not effect
reality *external* to one's self." Psychosomatic illness arise as
result of nervous tension, lack of oxygen to parts of the body, etc,
all side effects of holding certain problematic thoughts and feelings.
The thoughts and feelings do not cause the illness but they compel the
physical to produce adrenalyn or causes one to hold their breath. We
often hear the phrase "Scared to death", but "fear" has never been the
cause of death, "heart failure" is the cause of death.
> Re. various previous entries, Playtoe,
> I seem to have missed the connection in some of your notes, but, seeing
> as you believe in God, then God is real for you. Which of your 5 or the
> additional 3 you mentioned allow you to decide God is real? Since we
> cannot perceive God with the conventional 5 I assume you see Him as
> real using one of the other 3, but which one?
None of our Senses sense God. By "reason and belief" do we come to
perceive God. For that matter, our Senses only supply the MIND with
raw data, and depending on one's ability to "reasoning" do we conclude
or perceive all that we believe as truth and reality. Senses can
function but if we ignore them and do not reflect on them they
virtually mean nothing.
Consider this, I didn't know this before but... I was in Miami, a few
years ago, and a dog got ran over by a car...and I mean his whole hind
end was crushed to the ground. When I arrived on the scene the dog was
just sitting there looking around. I said to a person standing by,
look at that dog, a human would be unconscious from shock or crying or
screaming or something, why isn't that dog in PAIN. The person said,
the dog doesn't feel pain because PAIN is an emotion transmitted to the
brain and humans translate it as PAIN. But the dog doesn't have the
ability to think PAIN. He yelped in the beginning from the initial
blow from the car, but now he doesn't know PAIN.
Playtoe
|
1540.112 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Fri Sep 27 1991 04:09 | 35 |
| Re .83
>While at school, in a revenge-filled trance, an egg-cup moved to the
>edge of the table under my transfixed gaze. A little annoyed, I pushed
>it back with my hand (without leaving my "trance") and returned to
>visualizing how I was going to get even with the school bully. The
>egg-cup moved toward the edge of the table again and I pushed it back
>again.
Was the base of the egg cup wet? Because if it was an air seal can form
and as the air heats and expands the egg cup could be lifted slightly.
If the table was not dead level it would then slide. I notice it
appeared to go in exactly the same direction both times.
Way back before we had a dishwasher I observed this effect regularly
with wet inverted cups. I would put them down and after a few moments
they would slide.
Re .90
Sense 6 is using the information supplied by one or more of the first
five.
Sense 7 is a bit strange use of the word sense. Our senses are inputing
information from outside. Speech is outputing information to the
outside. Our interpretation of the speech of others is a function of
the brain on the information supplied by hearing. Bats make a squeak
then use their sense of hearing to guide them.
Sense 8 is again an incorrect use of the word sense. Intuition is part
of the processing of the information supplied by the five senses plus
any previous knowledge.
Jamie.
|
1540.113 | splitting hairs... | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | | Fri Sep 27 1991 12:00 | 11 |
| re: last
Actually, according to the dictionary here at my desk (Websters)
intuition is:
"The capacity of knowing without the use of the rational processes."
Which emcompasses data obtained from the five (accepted) senses, but
does not preclude the existence of other means of obtaining data.
Mary
|
1540.114 | Clarification | SWAM1::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:24 | 13 |
|
Re. .111 (Playtoe)
Actually, the first part of my reply was not meant as a comment to you
specifically, but to the base note. I believe psychosomatic illnesses
are thought/emotion affecting the person's health or physical reality.
My comment to you was based on reading your notes in this, as well as
other topics. If only what we can perceive through the senses, then is
God not real?
Marilyn
real?
|
1540.115 | The key is "get wisdom". | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:25 | 54 |
| RE: 112
> Sense 6 is using the information supplied by one or more of the first
> five.
Ok, if that's true, which of the other five would you say supply the
information? For instance, the situation where the roommate was in the
kitchen and sensed his roommates emotional state, who was in the living
room.
Personally, I feel that this ability to sense tension in the air,
other's emotional states, or that there is something bothering someone,
is a separate sense from all others.
> Sense 7 is a bit strange use of the word sense. Our senses are inputing
> information from outside. Speech is outputing information to the
> outside. Our interpretation of the speech of others is a function of
> the brain on the information supplied by hearing. Bats make a squeak
> then use their sense of hearing to guide them.
"Sonic Radar" is the point of mentioning the Bat. But, how about this.
We often times say certain things to others to "check them out", see
where their head is at.
> Sense 8 is again an incorrect use of the word sense. Intuition is part
> of the processing of the information supplied by the five senses plus
> any previous knowledge.
No, that is called "Intelligence". Intuition is defined as "The act or
faculty of knowing *without* the use of rational processes; immediate
cognition." Intuition is the highest human sense and in the realm of
human divinity. When you've processed all the information from the
senses and any previous knowledge and come to a good comprehension of
it, it is intuition that tells you, "Hey, I bet that can be applied to
such and such a thing/situation." No "Sense" or previous knowledge
told you this...some call it an "educated guess".
The source of this information is from the book "The Aquarian Gospel of
Jesus, The Christ". I didn't rationalize it, but reflected upon it to
see and affirm or disaffirm its truth.
Don't let "tradition" block you from exploring these ideas. We often
use two more more senses in conjunction to form an intelligent
conclusion. We taste it, smell it, we look at it, and we reflect on
our past experiences (understanding), we turn a few ideas around in our
minds (speech within our minds) and then we reach a conclusion about
it. Speech within our minds is called "thinking", speech from the
tongue is called "talking", there is also "body language" which is also
a form of speech...
"Wisdom" is the knowledge of "distinction", being able to distinguish
one thing from another is "Wisdom".
Playtoe
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1540.116 | Elaboration | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Fri Sep 27 1991 13:40 | 23 |
| Re: 114
Marilyn,
I knew that wasn't directed to me specifically, but I thought I'd
comment on it...I hope you don't mind.
> Actually, the first part of my reply was not meant as a comment to you
> specifically, but to the base note. I believe psychosomatic illnesses
> are thought/emotion affecting the person's health or physical reality.
But again, the thought/emotion does not "directly" effect the health or
physical reality. Health is due to the harmonious energies in the
body, a radiance, perhaps of positive thought and emotion. Illness, is
DIS-EASE, or tension and stress, disharmonious (ie with your body's
natural harmony) energies...this is according to Plato.
However, I'd like to submit that their is a difference between
"feelings" and "emotions". Feelings are seated in the heart or solar
plexus, and Emotions are a cerebral/mental event. I feel bad, so I
cry; crying is an emotion that results from the feeling of bad.
Playtoe
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1540.117 | Quantum Interpretation Menu: The Short Form | ATSE::WAJENBERG | This area zoned for twilight. | Fri Sep 27 1991 14:06 | 69 |
| Re: quantum stuff
The best discussion of these issues that I know of is "Quantum Reality" by
Nick Herbert. It was on bookstore shelves a couple of years ago and could
probably be ordered through a bookstore. Penrose's "The Emperor's New Mind,"
mentioned earlier, has a clear discussions of this, too.
I know of four principle interpretations of quantum mechanics:
Conservative Copenhagen:
As Topher noted, this is by far the most widely accepted interpretation. It
holds that many subatomic features of a system have no definite value until
they are "observered," but an "observation" can consist of just about any
change at the macroscopic level. Thus, a click of a geiger counter or the
appearance of a spot on a photographic film count as "observations" even if no
living mind ever experiences them. This interpretation was invented by Neils
Bohr of Copenhagen, hence the name. This interpretation is also favored by
Werner Heisenberg and John Wheeler.
The standard criticism of this interpretation is that it divides the world
into a microcosm and a macrocosm in a purely arbitrary manner. Why should a
physical change *so* big count as an observation when another change a tenth
that size does not?
Radical Copenhagen:
This is the interpretation made by some of the people who voice the criticism
of the conservative version. They claim that physical systems remain
partially indeterminate until observed (just like the conservatives) but they
hold that only perception by a conscious being counts as an "observation."
Radical Copenhagenism is supported by John von Neumann and Eugene Wigner.
The standard criticism of this interpretation is that it gives an unnervingly
central place to human, or at least sentient, observers. (Of course, this
smae feature makes it popular with other people.) Another criticism is that
this rule about sentient observers is arbitrary, imposed on the theory by the
interpreters, not derived from quantum mechanics itself.
Hidden Variables or "Neo-Realism":
This is the most "common-sensical" interpretation. It holds that the
subatomic features of a physical object really *are* determinate in character,
but we don't happen to know the details, so our description is necessarily in
terms of probabilities. Its supporters include Albert Einstein, Erwin
Schroedinger, Louis de Broglie, and David Bohm
The standard criticism of this interpretation is that, in order to match
quantum mechanical theory and experimental evidence, the hidden variables have
to operate across space faster than light or (which is the same thing in
relativity theory) backwards and forwards through time. This criticism may
have lost its force, though, since recent work indicates that ALL quantum
interpretations have to have this "non-local" character.
Many Worlds:
According to this one, the subatomic indeterminacies are resolved in every way
possible, each possibility showing up in one of an infinite array of parallel
worlds. Sorry to contradict Topher, but, to the best of my understanding,
these parallel worlds do not interact; the interference of probability waves
takes place at an earlier point in the process. This interpretation was
coined by Hugh Everett in 1957 and recently popularized by Paul Davies. John
Wheeler supported it at one time, I believe.
The major criticism of this theory is that infinities of parallel worlds seem
a high price to pay, a lot of excess baggage. Also, there are mathematical
difficulties with the theory.
Earl Wajenberg
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1540.118 | Depends on what "world" means. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 27 1991 15:32 | 109 |
| RE: .117 (Earl)
I second your recomendation of Quantum Reality -- but with a fairly
minor caveat. Herbert does not make it sufficiently clear that his
catalog of quantum interpretations -- on which Earl's is based -- is
arbitrary based purely on the rhetorical needs of the particular book.
Interpretations are lumped or not, excluded or included, and even
described in ways which would be rather confusing if different, equally
valid, points were trying to be made.
>worlds. Sorry to contradict Topher, but, to the best of my understanding,
>these parallel worlds do not interact; the interference of probability waves
>takes place at an earlier point in the process. This interpretation was
It kind of depends on what you mean by "worlds" -- you'll notice that I
don't use the term. I don't really like the name for the
interpretation at all -- it is a name chosen to maximize the "boggle
factor" and to avoid talking about what the theory is about.
It comes down to the role of the "wave-equation", which is the basic
mathematical description (in the most widely used formalism) of QM.
In the Copenhagen Interpretation (CI), the wave equation is not in
any sense real. It is merely a formal description of the results
on "classical reality" of the interaction between classical reality and
"quantum reality". It represents particles as waves which split and
interact and which only really mean something at the moment when
the interaction between classical reality and quantum reality takes
place -- a moment called "an observation". At the moment of
observation, the wave equation determines the probability that each of
the multiple possible outcomes will actually "be observed". Note that
in CI, although there is clearly a relationship between the macroscopic
world and classical reality, the exact relationship is ill-specified
and need not be identity.
There is another informal, not entirely coherent interpretation which I
call the Folk Interpretation (FI). The people who use this interpration
usually claim to be using the CI, but are not. It is this
interpreation which is "really" the mainstream one. In the FI, the
wave equation *is* real and represents the state (which consists of a
"superpostion of states") of the particle between observations. When
an observation (generally equated to a macroscopic interaction) occurs
the wave equation is "collapsed" and is externally reduced to a single
value (however, the reduction is nondeterministic and not controlled
or even influenced by the system doing the observation).
The Many-Worlds interpretation (MWI) takes the FI, formalizes it, makes
it coherent and eliminates the extraneous baggage of classical/
macroscopic reality. It simply takes the wave equation as real, and
QM as complete. The wave equation evolves as it does (as a formal
description) in the CI and as it does (as real) in the FI. A particle
exists as a superposition of states. However, where the FI imposes an
external reality to arbitrarily collapse the wave equation, the MWI
simply allows it to evolve. What happens is that the wave equation,
if left to itself, predicts that certain interactions -- for the most
part interactions with macroscopic systems -- result in the states
splitting, i.e., no longer interacting with each other. If you want
to define "world" to only refer to the state of the universal wave
equation at which its "parts" are uncoupled, then by definition the
"worlds" do not interact. If you define "world" to mean a possible
trajectory through time in state space, then before the uncoupling
the worlds interact and after the uncoupling they do not.
The cost of eliminating the "excess baggage" of the infinities of
"parallel worlds" (decoupled states in the universal wave equation), is
to posit a magic unobservable mechanism whose only function is to
"collapse" the state-space so that quantum reality is kept safely far
enough away from "us" so as not to give us the willies.
Some additional notes:
Yes, Wheeler was originally a suporter of the MWI. In fact the other
official name for WMI is the Everett-Wheeler interpretation, since
Wheeler did much of the development of the original idea. Wheeler
abandoned the interpretation when it was shown that it had no
observable consequences differring from the CI.
I think that if you follow through carefully on the MWI (despite some
criticisms I've seen) you will find that the "teeth" have been
effectively pulled from non-locality. The decoupling needs only to
propogate at light-speed, which is the same in every reference frame.
As in some other interpretations, MWI replaces non-locality with
what has been called "delayed determinism". The radical CI is also
non-locality safe, but only as long as only one conscious observer is
involved (note that the experiments which purport to show non-locality
effectively fulfill this condition). The CI is not frame-invariant
and violates the postulates of SR. This is not true of the MWI.
As I understand it, the mathematics of MWI is simply the mathematics of
QM. If there are problems they exist equally in all formal
interpretations.
A recent result in MWI concerns the results of introducing
non-linearities into the wave equation. There has been a lot of
interest lately in examining the observational consequences of
modifying the wave-equation, which is strictly linear, so that there
are slight non-linearities. Most of the work has been concerned with
figuring out what limits exist in current experimental results or in
currently plausible experimental results to the size of various kinds
of non-linearities. For the most part the non-linearities have to
be very small. One interesting theoretical development is the effect
this would have on the MWI. Many non-linearities would result in the
possibility of decoupled states being able to influence each other --
in other words, the alternate worlds could signal each other. (Keep
in mind that there is absolutely no evidence that this could occur;
its just a matter of examining slight deviations for what was
previously a basic assumption in QM).
Topher
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1540.119 | | ATSE::WAJENBERG | This area zoned for twilight. | Fri Sep 27 1991 17:49 | 32 |
| Re .118
"...his catalog of quantum interpretations -- on which Earl's is based
-- is arbitrary based purely on the rhetorical needs of the particular
book."
Herbert *does* use a list of eight issues that is purely his own, but my own
list of "hidden variables," "Copenhagen," and "many worlds" is based on catch
phrases I have seen used in many different places. However, it is also true
that you get a different interpretation for each authority, in a subject like
this.
I think we have heard different versions of the Many-Worlds Interpretation
(MWI). In the version I heard, there was a world for each value of an
observable, not for each component in the superposition of the wave function.
About the "teeth being drawn from non-locality": It is the thesis of
Herbert's book that non-local effects have been observed, in the Aspect
experiment, so that, even if quantum mechanics should prove false and
interpreting it become academic, we would still have non-locality to cope
with. Also, if I recall rightly, I think Herbert said that Bell's Theorem
implied that quantum mechanics required non-local effects.
To me, that suggests that the light-speed decoupling is irrelevant; if Herbert
is right, MWI has to live with non-locality as an empirical fact. In fact, if
MWI requires locality, this would be a flaw in it. But Herbert, at least,
felt that the Aspect experiment did not allow us to reject any of the
interpretations.
I like the term "FI," the "Folk Interpretation."
Earl Wajenberg
|
1540.120 | Sensing God | CGVAX2::PAINTER | | Fri Sep 27 1991 18:00 | 12 |
|
Re. a few back
Playtoe,
I believe God can be perceived through the senses. When one feels
one's energy field (which I can), that is perceiving prana, or the Holy
Spirit, or a myriad of other names that this energy is referred to.
It is the energy that permeates all of Creation.
Cindy
|
1540.121 | | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 27 1991 19:02 | 42 |
| RE: .119 (Earl)
I used the lurid phrase about the teeth being drawn from non-locality
rather than saying that the MWI interpretation implies locality because
it does not. Whether or not there are other philosophical problems in
MWI, non-locality does not appear to be problematic within the MWI,
since, as near as I've been able to discover, there is no need for
simultanaety or instantanaeity within the MWI as there is within the CI
and the FI, only that correlated states retain their correlation as
they seperate and are reunited at non-superluminal velocities.
There are some problems with the Aspect experiment, in any case. First
off, even taken at face value it only disproves local realistic causal
interpretations. The broadly defined "non-locality" in the MWI ends
up as a violation of Aristotealian realism (though it may be considered
a realist interpretation in a broader sense of the term). Second there
are apparently a number of loop-holes in the Aspect experiment. The
most serious one I have seen concerns the interpretation of the results
in the presence of noise. It is claimed (and I have not seen a
rebuttal though I've been looking for it) that Aspects corrections
for the non-0-error rate of his detectors is flawed in that it requires
further, unjustified assumptions. Something weird is definitely
happening, but it is not clear just what it is.
>I think we have heard different versions of the Many-Worlds Interpretation
>(MWI). In the version I heard, there was a world for each value of an
>observable, not for each component in the superposition of the wave
>function.
Again, it depends on what you want to label a "world", but as I
understand it, there is not much distinction between those concepts in
MWI following the decoupling of components of the wave function. Of
course you can get situations where the one or more of the decoupled
components include superimposed, interacting components -- but that
corresponds to "partial collapse" in the FI. Remember, the observer is
part of the system in the MWI, an "observation" is simply making a
correlation between the components of one part of the system (the
observer) and another (the observed). If the interaction which results
in that correlation is a non-reversable one, then the components
of both parts of the system become decoupled.
Topher
|
1540.122 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | I despise the use of TLAs! | Mon Sep 30 1991 08:35 | 64 |
| Re .113
>"The capacity of knowing without the use of the rational processes."
Yes Mary, intuition may well be a subconscious thought process however
it is not a sense in such that it supplies the raw information. It is
more of a processing of the raw information and reaching a conclusion.
BTW My dictionary defines intuition as; 1a (knowledge gained by)
immediate apprehension or cognition. b the power of attaining direct
knowledge without evident rational thought and drawing of conclusions
from evidence available. 2 quick and ready insight.
As you see it does not exclude unconscious thought processing.
Re .115
>Ok, if that's true, which of the other five would you say supply the
>information? For instance, the situation where the roommate was in the
>kitchen and sensed his roommates emotional state, who was in the living
>room.
I can regularly tell the emotional state of my roommate when he is in
the kitchen and I am in the lounge. The sense that I use to achieve
this is called hearing.
When I was younger I used to work with blind children. I well remember
the first day that I went to the School for the Blind. I was walking
down the corridor with a totally blind man when suddenly two
youngsters, both totally blind, came running round the corner. I was
worried that they would run into us. My blind guide spontaneously said
to me, "Just keep walking and they will avoid you." And that is exactly
what happened.
After they had passed he said, "I expect that you want to know how they
did it. Well they stamp their feet a bit to hear the echo. We have no
sound absorbing things in the corridor and we are a dead spot thus they
avoid us. Simple isn't it?" I said that it was but I still didn't know
how he knew that I was worried and had told me to just keep walking. He
laughed and said that the rhythm of my walking had become "uncertain"
and putting one and one together he had worked out the answer.
I must admit that working with blind children made me realise exactly
how much you use your five senses and never even think about it.
>"Sonic Radar" is the point of mentioning the Bat. But, how about this.
That is not a sense per se. It is sending out information with a view
to using your hearing to interpret intercept the results. Just as the
children in the example above used sound to make an echo which in turn
they could sense by listening.
>We often times say certain things to others to "check them out", see
>where their head is at.
Asking someone his opinion of some thing is not a sense, it is an action.
>The source of this information is from the book "The Aquarian Gospel of
>Jesus, The Christ". I didn't rationalize it, but reflected upon it to
>see and affirm or disaffirm its truth.
Well it does seem to heavily misuse the word "sense".
Jamie.
|