PHILOSOPHY
Even the choice of how countries create the borders that separate them, and how we justify when armies cross those borders to march onto the land and into the homes of another nation begins with how we understand ourselves to be.
The answer underlies the foundation of everything we do in our lives It’s precisely because the way we think of ourselves plays such a vital role in our lives, that we owe it to ourselves to answer ‘Who are we?’ as truthfully and honestly as possible. This includes taking into consideration every source of information available, from the leading edge science of today to the wisdom of 5,000(+) years of human experience. This also includes changing the existing story when new discoveries give us the reasons to do so. When you ask ‘Who are we?’, the
short answer is that you’re not what you’ve been told, and more than you’ve ever imagined. The long answer is what follows.
Where science got it wrong Since the birth of modern science three centuries years ago, we’ve been steeped in a story that leaves us feeling that we’re little more than insignificant specks of dust in the universe – biological sidebars in the overall scheme of life. Carl Sagan described this thinking beautifully when he commented on the scientific perspective regarding our place in the cosmos. “We find that we live on an insignificant planet” he said, “of a humdrum star lost in a galaxy tucked away in some forgotten corner of a universe in which there are far more galaxies than people.” It’s this thinking that’s led us to believe that not only are we insignificant when it comes to life in general, but also that we’re separate from the world, one another, and ourselves. Albert Einstein echoed this
perspective clearly when it came to his ideas regarding quantum physics, which suggests that all things are deeply connected. Leaving no doubt in our mind as to what he believed the new quantum ideas meant for science, Einstein said, “If quantum theory is correct, it
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signifies the end of physics as a science.” Einstein’s beliefs wouldn’t allow him to accept the possibility that we live in a deeply connected world. It’s not surprising that Einstein would
hold such a strong belief in a world based in separateness. For he, and other scientists of his era, the idea that everything is separate from everything else was largely accepted as a fact following the famous Michelson Morley experiment of 1887. This paradigm shifting experiment, conducted in the basement of Ohio’s Case Western Reserve University, had confirmed that the field of energy believed to connect all things, the aether field, doesn’t exist.
When you ask ‘Who are we?’, the short answer is that you’re not what you’ve been told.
The same experiment was repeated 100 years later, however, in 1987 under the auspices of the US Air Force, using better sensors and equipment. To the astonishment of the scientific community, the 20th century experiment did, in fact, detect and confirm the subtle field of energy that had been predicted by Michelson and Morley 100 years earlier. While new names, such as the matrix, the divine matrix, the zero point field and simply ‘the field’ have replaced the term aether, the point here is that the energy that connects all things does, in fact, exist. It’s now recognised as the container for the universe, the mirror for our beliefs, and the web of energy that connects all things. (The Divine Matrix, Hay House, 2007) And while the energy field that
connects all things has been documented scientifically, there is still a reluctance, and often resistance, to share this discovery in public classrooms and textbooks. Even though the field is known to exist, and accepted in serious scientific circles, in mainstream thinking nothing has changed. We’re still teaching our young people that we live in a world of separation.
We need a new story With this legacy of separation and insignificance in mind, it’s not surprising that we often feel powerless when it comes to what happens in our bodies, and in our lives. In such a world we’re told that things just ‘happen’ when and how they do. Is it any wonder that we may also feel helpless when we see our world changing so fast that it’s been described as ‘falling apart at the seams’? At first blush, there seems to be no
reason for us to believe any differently. That is, until we take a closer look at the following paradigm-shattering discoveries that overturn 300 years of scientific thinking. They reveal that we’re part of our world, rather than separate from it. And, most importantly, they reveal that we’re empowered co-creators, rather than powerless victims. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, peer-reviewed scientific studies revealed the following facts:
FACT 1: Nature relies upon cooperation and mutual aid, not competition, for survival.
FACT 2: Human DNA shows unmistakable signs of planning, such as the fusion and modification of key chromosomes, that cannot be explained by evolution.
FACT 3: Our emotions directly influence the chemistry released into our body by the heart, as well as the brain – when we choose the emotion, we choose the chemistry. FACT 4: Advanced civilisation is at least twice as old as the 5,000–5,500 years indicated by conventional timelines.
FACT 5: The universe, our world, and our bodies are bathed in a field of energy that makes our connection with one another – entanglement – possible. In light of the discoveries listed above,
and others, key assumptions of the past can no longer be taught as fact.
The new human story Recent revelations regarding human origins are a perfect example of what I
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