| someonemaybe ( @ 2005-08-15 19:34:00 |
British science journal Nature recently published curious findings: only 7% of eminent scientists (averaged over all fields) believed in a god. These are the same people who discovered that the color purple does not exist outside human perception. Despite this, we continue to say purple exists because to do so accords human senses primacy. Our world is defined by the human visual cortex.
Space and time are human constructs develop to enable us to process suprasensual grandeur. Beginning-middle-end are rungs: each level of consciousness is defined by its perceptual technology. The human eye registers less than 1% of the energy that reaches it, and that which is seen is mostly dictated by expectation. Physical purpose is dictated by physical being, but spiritual purpose is evaluated differently (back to that suprasensual grandeur). In relativity: the special and general theory, Einstein defined existence as energy vibrating at varying frequencies. Low frequency vibrations result in visible; high frequency vibrations result in energy impossible to quantify with our senses. The world beyond the world we know is beyond our capacity to understand it, or at least it is while we experience human being.
extracted from the eclipse, a memoir of suicide by antonella gambotto.
Space and time are human constructs develop to enable us to process suprasensual grandeur. Beginning-middle-end are rungs: each level of consciousness is defined by its perceptual technology. The human eye registers less than 1% of the energy that reaches it, and that which is seen is mostly dictated by expectation. Physical purpose is dictated by physical being, but spiritual purpose is evaluated differently (back to that suprasensual grandeur). In relativity: the special and general theory, Einstein defined existence as energy vibrating at varying frequencies. Low frequency vibrations result in visible; high frequency vibrations result in energy impossible to quantify with our senses. The world beyond the world we know is beyond our capacity to understand it, or at least it is while we experience human being.
extracted from the eclipse, a memoir of suicide by antonella gambotto.