ALINA HOLOGRAPHIC WORLD

An opening to new dimensions OCCURS IN ALINA'S CONSCIOUSNESS and creative intelligence is nothing more than the random product of an evolution that began in a primordial ocean of matter. This view simplifies the enormous complexity of human beings into mere material objects, little more than highly developed animals or thinking biological machines.



Our borders are defined by the surface of our skin, and consciousness is nothing more than a simple secretion of that thinking organ known as the brain. Everything we think, feel and know depends on the information we receive through our senses. According to the logic of this materialistic model, consciousness, intelligence, ethics, art, religion, and science itself are mere by-products of the material processes that take place inside the human brain.



The belief that consciousness and all its creations originate in the brain is, of course, not entirely arbitrary but is based on many clinical and experimental observations that suggest a close relationship between consciousness and certain neurophysiological or pathological conditions. .



Infections, traumas, poisoning, tumors and bruises are closely related to profound changes in consciousness. In the case of a brain tumor, for example, the deterioration of certain functions -loss of speech, motor control, etc.- is so specific that it allows us to diagnose the region that has been injured with great precision.



.But although these observations demonstrate, without any kind of doubt, that our mental functions are linked to brain biological processes, they do not constitute, however, a conclusive demonstration that consciousness originates from or is a by-product of the brain.



That is why the conclusions of Western science do not seem to be based so much on scientific data as on a metaphysical belief and that it is possible to find other alternative interpretations of the same data. Let's illustrate this with a simple example:



According to traditional science, organic matter and life originated in the primordial soup of the primeval ocean as a result of the random interaction between atoms and molecules.



Similarly, he also maintains that chance and "natural selection" are solely responsible for the cellular organization of organic matter and its evolution into complex multicellular organisms endowed with a central nervous system.



It is these kinds of explanations that have fueled the fundamental metaphysical belief of the Western worldview: that consciousness is a by-product of material processes occurring in the brain.



But as modern science has discovered the deep links between creative intelligence and all levels of reality, this simplistic picture of the universe has become increasingly untenable.



The probability that human consciousness and the complex universe that surrounds us arose from the random interaction of inert matter has been compared to that of a hurricane blowing over a scrap heap and accidentally creating a supersonic vehicle.



Newtonian science is responsible for having offered us a very limited vision of human beings and their true potentialities. For some two hundred years it has been concerned with dictating the criteria of what is an acceptable experience and what is an unacceptable experience of reality.



From his point of view, a "normal" person is one who is capable of exactly reproducing the external objective world described by Newtonian science.



As modern physics became concerned with the study of the very small and the very large—in the subatomic realm of the microcosm and in the astrophysical realm of the macrocosm—it did not take long to realize that some of the fundamental Newtonian principles were limited or wrong. .



In the mid-twentieth century, physics discovered that atoms - defined by Newtonian physics as the elementary, indestructible building blocks of the material world - were made up of smaller and more elementary particles, protons, neutrons and electrons, and this very line of research has ended up leading to the identification of hundreds of subatomic particles.



Subatomic particles had strange properties that defied Newtonian principles. In some experiments they behaved as if they were corpuscular entities, while in others, on the contrary, they seemed to exhibit condicular properties, a fact that soon became known as the 'wave-particle paradox'.



Thus, the old definition of matter was replaced, at the subatomic level, by that of statistical probability, by the "tendency to exist," a night



that, in recent times, has ended up dissipating behind what modern physicists call the "dynamic vacuum."



Thus, the exploration of the microcosm revealed that the universe of everyday life, apparently composed of solid and discrete objects, is actually a complex web of events and relationships. From this new perspective, consciousness is not limited to passively reflecting the objective material world but plays an active role in creating reality itself.



Investigations by scientists in the field of astrophysics have also led us to equally revealing discoveries. According to Einstein's theory of relativity, for example, space is not three-dimensional and time is not linear.



From this point of view, space and time are not separate entities but are integrated into a four-dimensional continuum known as "spacetime." What we once perceived as boundaries between objects and distinctions between matter and empty space have ended up being replaced by something new.



Thus, instead of talking about discrete objects and empty spaces between them, today the universe is considered to be a continuous field of variable density. According to modern physics, matter is interchangeable with energy, and consciousness - which is not limited to the activities that take place inside our skulls and is part of the very fabric of the universe.



As the British astronomer James Jeans said some sixty years ago, the universe of modern physics is more like a great thought than a gigantic super machine.



The current universe does not resemble a conglomerate of Newtonian objects so much as an extraordinarily complex system of vibratory phenomena that presents properties and possibilities unimaginable to Newtonian science, highlighting, among all of them, holography.



Holography is a photographic process that uses a laser beam of coherent light (of the same wavelength) to build three-dimensional images in space.



A hologram, which we could compare to the slide that allows us to project the image, is the recording of an interference pattern between two halves of a laser beam.



After the laser beam is scattered by a partially silvered mirror, a part of it (called the reference beam) is directed towards the hologram emulsion and the other half (called the object beam) is reflected back onto the film from the object. photographed.



The curious thing is that the information coming from the two rays, essential to reproduce a three-dimensional image, remains "folded" and distributed throughout the hologram, and that we can divide the hologram into as many parts as we want and discover that, when illuminating any of the fragments, each of them "unfolds" a three-dimensional image of the whole.



The discovery of holography has become a fundamental element of the scientific view of the world.



The world that we perceive through the senses and the nervous system, with or without the help of scientific instruments, only represents a small fragment of reality.



What we perceive constitutes the "unfolded" or "explained" order, a partial aspect of a larger matrix called the "implicate" or "folded" order.



In other words, what we perceive as reality is similar to the projection of a holographic image from a higher matrix.



According to David Bohm, holographic theory illustrates the idea that energy, light, and matter are composed of interference patterns that carry information about all other waves of light, energy, and matter with which they have directly or indirectly entered. in contact.



Thus, each fragment of energy or matter constitutes a microcosm that encloses the whole. We should therefore no longer consider life in terms of inanimate matter.



Matter and life - like matter and consciousness - are abstractions of the holomovement, that is, abstractions of an undivided whole from which nothing can be separated.



Bohm reminds us that even the very process of abstraction by which we create the illusion of separateness from the whole is itself an expression of the holomovement.



Nature is full of geniuses, full of divinity. Not a single snowflake escapes his hand.



There are many interesting parallels between David Bohm's view of physics and Karl Pribram's view of neurophysiology. After several decades of research and experimentation, this world-renowned neuroscience has come to the conclusion that certain puzzling paradoxes related to brain function can only be explained by resorting to holographic principles.



Pribram's revolutionary brain model and Bohm's holomotion theory have profound implications for



the new understanding of human consciousness that we are just beginning to translate to the personal level.



Consciousness and the human psyche are expressions and reflections of a cosmic intelligence that permeates the entire universe and all of existence. We are not only highly evolved animals with biological computers housed inside our skulls, but we are also limitless fields of consciousness that transcend time, space, matter, and linear causation.



What is consciousness? The question can unleash all kinds of definitions and philosophical and even religious discussions. Scientifically, consciousness is the ability to integrate information across time, space, attributes, and ideas. This information is processed in different regions of the brain and put together to form a "conscious" perception.



And where is? A scientist has found the place where we have consciousness, and it looks more like an "energy" than a biological place in the body. Dr. Johnjoe McFadden, a renowned British researcher who for 20 years has tried to explain where consciousness is found in the human body, published his latest findings in the journal Neuroscience of Consciousness.



McFadden points out that consciousness resides in the global electromagnetic field of the brain and can be found and measured through electroencephalograms and magnetoencephalographs. According to his hypothesis, which he has called the conscious electromagnetic information field (CEMI) theory, "matter and energy are equally physical; But instead of being made up of material, the cermi field theory proposes that our thoughts are made up of energy from the brain's electromagnetic field." This probability then poses "a scientific dualism based on the physical difference between matter and energy, rather than a metaphysical distinction between matter and spirit."



In his research, the also professor of Molecular Genetics at the University of Surrey, proposes the scientific bases of free will and how it can affect human conscious decisions, in addition to advancing how his theory may have implications in the design of an "artificial consciousness". which would be the next step of artificial intelligence.



"Of course, there are many unanswered questions, such as the degree and extent of synchrony necessary to encode conscious thoughts, the influence of drugs or anesthetics on the cemi field, or whether como fields are causally active in the brain of animals. ", admits McFadden, but assures that his theory "provides a new paradigm in which consciousness is rooted in an entirely physical, measurable and artificially malleable physical structure and is amenable to experimental tests". And he ends by writing that "consciousness is what algorithms that exist simultaneously in the space of the brain's electromagnetic field feel like."



One of the most important open questions in science is how our consciousness is established.
The Alien Queen's Escape
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