The Universe exists in holographic form. This means that any point
in time or space contains within it, within this matrix, the
potentiality of the entire Universe or Multiverse. The potential of
the existence of any idea at any point within this structure has an
equal chance of manifestation based on momentum.
In 1980 University of Connecticut psychologist Dr. Kenneth Ring
proposed that near-death experiences could be explained by the
holographic model. Ring, who is president of the International
Association for Near-Death Studies, believes such experiences, as well
as death itself, are really nothing more than the shifting of a
person's consciousness from one level of the hologram of reality to
another.
In 1985 Dr. Stanislav Grof, chief of psychiatric
research at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center and an assistant
professor of psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, published a book in which he concluded that existing
neurophysiological models of the brain are inadequate and only a
holographic model can explain such things as archetypal experiences,
encounters with the collective unconscious, and other unusual
phenomena experienced during altered states of
consciousness.
At the 1987 annual meeting of the Association for the Study
of Dreams held in Washington, D.C., physicist Fred Alan Wolf delivered
a talk in which he asserted that the holographic model explains lucid
dreams (unusually vivid dreams in which the dreamer realizes he or she
is awake). Wolf believes such dreams are actually visits to parallel
realities, and the holographic model will ultimately allow us to
develop a "physics of consciousness" which will enable us to begin to
explore more fully these other-dimensional levels of
existence.
In his 1987 book entitled Synchronicity, The Bridge Between
Matter and Mind, Dr. F. David Peat, a physicist at Queen's University
in Canada, asserted that synchronicities (coincidences that are so
unusual and so psychologically meaningful they don't seem to be the
result of chance alone) can be explained by the holographic model.
Peat believes such coincidences are actually "flaws in the fabric of
reality." They reveal that our thought processes are much more
intimately connected to the physical world than has been hitherto
suspected.
The holographic model has also received some dramatic experimental
support. In the field of neurophysiology numerous studies have
corroborated Pribram's various predictions about the holographic
nature of memory and perception. Similarly, in 1982 a landmark
experiment performed by a research team led by physicist Alain Aspect
at the Institute of Theoretical and Applied Optics, in Paris,
demonstrated that the web of subatomic particles that compose our
physical universe-the very fabric of reality itself-possesses what
appears to be an undeniable "holographic" property. "The Holographic
Universe, Michael Talbot, 1992
Our languages reflect this ancient knowledge through the formations
of words. Re-cognize means to re-think. We do not "really" think of
anything new, it is simply a re-cognition of an idea point within this
holographic matrix.
When we re-member something, we are accessing an idea that was
always been a part of ourselves and is being reconnected as a "member"
of the collective idea that it belongs to-us. There may be new ways to
re-member ideas, events, or situations, and therefore re-create them.
But they are still united with this member in the now.
Time and space are the illusions of three dimensional reality. Real
while you are in it, but an illusion just the same. All "members"
exist in the now simply at different points within the holographic
matrix that correspond to "past" and "future."
Edmond H. Wollmann P.M.A.F.A.
© 2009 Altair Publications, SAN 299-5603
Astrological Consulting http://www.astroconsulting.com/
Artworks http://www.astroconsulting.com/personal/
The SUN http://www.edmondwollmann.com/
URL fixed.