what are we?

gerald
Posts: 1681
Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 10:34 pm

what are we?

Post by gerald »

The following are some highlights from a just published book by Rupert Sheldrake , " Science Set Free -10 Paths to new Discovery", published 2012

A brief background --- Rupert Shelrake is author or co author of 10 science related books, majored in biochemistry at Cambridge
University, was awarded the Frank Knox fellowship at the graduate school of Harvard, etc.

The general tone or direction of the book is that " science" is generally "materialistic" approaches "reality" with a straight
jacketed mind and is autocratic to the point of suppressing new and conflicting information and ideas. This suppression is accomplished
by using authority, peer pressure and funding denial. This to achieve the approved thinking AND the approved experimental results. Out of
the box topics, studies, and information are suppressed and/or ridiculed by the approved science establishment, and therefore by the general media and public.

The following are a few brief illustrations ---- which lead to interesting posed questions.

Morphogenetic fields,--- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB1OhJBbzkM -- fields that shape living things and impose order
in the larger environment and are not attenuated by distance in space and time, -- page 100.

Crystals that need to learn how to crystallize ---- Is so called inanimate unconscious matter really unconscious? Rupert does not imply that a chair has
thought but that matter at the molecular /atomic/subatomic level may not be truly unconscious. An the example -- page 102--- Xylitol,
a synthetic sweetener first created in 1891 and considered a liquid until 1942 when it first crystallized having a melting point of 61 degrees C.
After another few years, a different crystal form appeared with a melting point of 94 degrees C, and the first crystal form ceased to appear.

Various examples of telepathy --- page 242 ---- a village of "primitives", Bushman in the Kalahari Desert knowing about the success of a hunt and making preparations before the hunters returned with the kill.

What is the human brain? --- A hydrocephalic student gets a first class math degree from Sheffield University has a 126 IQ and brain mass of only 5% ( five per cent ) page 194.
[ Which leads to other questionable ideas, such as the down the rabbit hole ET statement -- that our brain is just a transceiver and our bodies are not us -- a transceiver to/for what? ]

In short a very interesting read.

gerald
Posts: 1681
Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 10:34 pm

Re: what are we?

Post by gerald »

gerald wrote:The following are some highlights from a just published book by Rupert Sheldrake , " Science Set Free -10 Paths to new Discovery", published 2012

A brief background --- Rupert Shelrake is author or co author of 10 science related books, majored in biochemistry at Cambridge
University, was awarded the Frank Knox fellowship at the graduate school of Harvard, etc.

The general tone or direction of the book is that " science" is generally "materialistic" approaches "reality" with a straight
jacketed mind and is autocratic to the point of suppressing new and conflicting information and ideas. This suppression is accomplished
by using authority, peer pressure and funding denial. This to achieve the approved thinking AND the approved experimental results. Out of
the box topics, studies, and information are suppressed and/or ridiculed by the approved science establishment, and therefore by the general media and public.

The following are a few brief illustrations ---- which lead to interesting posed questions.

Morphogenetic fields,--- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB1OhJBbzkM -- fields that shape living things and impose order
in the larger environment and are not attenuated by distance in space and time, -- page 100.

Crystals that need to learn how to crystallize ---- Is so called inanimate unconscious matter really unconscious? Rupert does not imply that a chair has
thought but that matter at the molecular /atomic/subatomic level may not be truly unconscious. An the example -- page 102--- Xylitol,
a synthetic sweetener first created in 1891 and considered a liquid until 1942 when it first crystallized having a melting point of 61 degrees C.
After another few years, a different crystal form appeared with a melting point of 94 degrees C, and the first crystal form ceased to appear.

Various examples of telepathy --- page 242 ---- a village of "primitives", Bushman in the Kalahari Desert knowing about the success of a hunt and making preparations before the hunters returned with the kill.

What is the human brain? --- A hydrocephalic student gets a first class math degree from Sheffield University has a 126 IQ and brain mass of only 5% ( five per cent ) page 194.
[ Which leads to other questionable ideas, such as the down the rabbit hole ET statement -- that our brain is just a transceiver and our bodies are not us -- a transceiver to/for what? ]

In short a very interesting read.
In the above --- 5% of brain mass means, 5% of normal brain mass.

The following is interesting comment from http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-12-2 ... th-penalty

CPL

The french are pretty easy going.

Entire culture built on fine wine, cheese, fantastic breads, afternoon naps and having extra-martial's to have a bit of fun on the side.

Now ask yourself, what it took to piss off an entire population of typically relaxed people to construct a tool to twist the passing for all the elite and the bankers class (they were bricked as well along with high courts and high rank military that were replaced). It was a doctor, a man of healing that invented it.



That's how angry people were. A man of medicine (although the term medicine is more of a abstract in the 1700's). It took a pissed off doctor that lost everything, his family to starvation, his family home, the land he grew his food taken for some frivolous nonsense. Somehow the good doctor could not bring himself to say "C'est la vie" once more and invented a perfect machine to kill.



The blade removes the head so fast that the nervous system doesn't shut down the head. So for three minutes every head on the basket got to hear, see and taste the final minutes of their lives. Men, women and children. Some people took pity on the children and would brain them with a blacksmith's hammer to save them the terror of it.

That's how pissed the good doctor Joseph Gullotine was. He built a machine and wanted them to feel and see everything before their brains died from a lack of oxygen. He built three minutes of terror, then eight minutes of insanity while the brain starved for oxygen starts misfiring synapses. All the meanwhile being aware of what's happening because the lack of signals from the body to shut down the brain to avoid just that.



Personally I don't think we should have statues of founding members of any sovereign nation surrounding a government building. A guilotine should be erectd in front of every court house, parliment, congress, places of political decision making just to remind those given the power what happens when they fuck up badly. It puts things in perspective for those that wish to rule that trust is a very thin thread and broken easily one the line is crossed.

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