The 101 Dalmatians Principle: You Are Connected to Everything and - TopicsExpress



          

The 101 Dalmatians Principle: You Are Connected to Everything and Everyone Else in the Universe The Premise In this experiment, you’ll prove that you are interconnected with everyone and everything through an “invisible” field of intelligence and energy. In quantum-speak, this lattice of connections is called nonlocality. And even though it’s one of the signature concepts of quantum mechanics, nonlocality, along with its cousin entanglement, has incited much head-scratching over the last 300 years, starting with Sir Isaac Newton, who considered what he called “action at a distance” ludicrous (despite the fact that his own theory of gravity had proposed just such a phenomenon). To be brief, non locality is when two particles behave synchronously with no intermediary. But it doesn’t make logical sense, right? If you want to move, say, an abandoned shoe in the middle of the floor, you have to touch the shoe or touch a broom that touches the shoe or instruct your fi ve-year-old, the one who left it there, to pick it up, via vibrations through the air to his ear. Things can only affect things that are in the immediate vicinity. There has to be a sequence, a chain of events. We believe that we can only alter things we can touch. But that’s not the case. We’ve now got a demonstrably more accurate model that proves that one object, without being anywhere near a second object, can influence the second object. Unfortunately, most of us still persist in hanging on to the old “chain-of-events” worldview, even though physicists have demonstrated time and time again that once an atom has been in the proximity of another atom, it will be influenced (or entangled) by that atom no matter how far away it travels. Even Einstein couldn’t bring himself to fully embrace this counter intuitive concept. An even weirder conundrum is that once the atoms have interacted, they’re entangled forever. We have even proved that nonlocality and entanglement work on bigger things—like humans. In 1978, Dr. Jacobo Grinberg-Zylberbaum of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (later replicated by London neuropsychiatrist Peter Fenwick) hooked two test subjects to electroencephalographs in isolated rooms. The brainwave pattern produced by a series of strobe lights in oneof the subject’s eyes appeared identically on the other test subject’s EEG even though he was nowhere near the same flashes. Though nonlocality doesn’t make sense to our Newtonian brains, we can still use it to our advantage. Like your computer that is hooked up via the Internet to an infinite amount of information, you—by virtue of being a human being—are hooked up to everyone else in the world. Sometimes, when I want to communicate to someone in another part of the world, I whisper my message to the giant oak tree in my front yard. Needless to say, trees, like the dogs in 101 Dalmatians, are interconnected, and the oak can easily send messages to a palm tree in a friend’s yard in California through the concept of nonlocality. - "E-Squared" by Pam Grout.
Posted on: Thu, 22 Aug 2013 04:30:13 +0000

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