Website review: Quantum Biocommunication - Thomas H...
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Reviews of this website

kaolelo rated 30 months ago- interesting, although it can tend towards the new agish

- Ontelo rated 30 months ago
- Nice thinking articles.

z80paranoia rated 31 months ago- interesting scientific stuffs

OliviaB rated 31 months ago- 'The Field offers a radically new view of the way our world and our bodies work. The human mind and body are not distinct and separate from their environment, but a packet of pulsating energy constantly interacting with this vast energy sea. The Field creates a picture of an interconnected universe and a new scientific theory which makes sense of 'supernatural `phenomena.'

advena rated 32 months ago- Really interesting site - I'm fascinated by what quantum physics says about human consciousness. This site is full of thought provoking concepts, such as: Can A Holographic Universe Create Reality? ...David Bohm, of the University of London, believes that Aspect's findings would clearly imply that objective reality does not exist, that despite It's apparent solidity the universe is at heart an illusion, a gigantic, splendidly detailed hologram. Unlike normal photographs, every part of a hologram contains all the information possessed by the whole. And: Whatever Matter Is - It's Not Made Of Matter ...Our experience of the world is certainly one of solidness, so we assume that the "thing in itself" must be equally solid. For two thousand years it was believed that atoms were tiny solid balls--a model clearly drawn from everyday experience. Then, as physicists discovered that atoms were composed of more elementary, subatomic particles (electrons, protons, neutrons, and suchlike) the model shifted to one of a central nucleus surrounded by orbiting electrons--again, a model based on experience. An atom may be small, a mere billionth of an inch across, but subatomic particles are a hundred thousand times smaller still. Imagine the nucleus of an atom magnified to the size of a golf ball. The whole atom would then be the size of a football stadium, and the electrons would be like peas flying round the stands. As the early twentieth-century British physicist Sir Arthur Eddington put it, "Matter is mostly ghostly empty space." To be more precise, it is 99.9999999% empty space. With the development of quantum theory, physicists have found that even subatomic particles are far from solid. In fact, they are nothing like matter as we know it. They cannot be pinned down and measured precisely. Much of the time they seem more like waves than particles. They are like fuzzy clouds of potential existence, with no definite location. Whatever matter is, it has little, if any, substance.

MichaelAnissimov rated 32 months ago- *Sigh*. More quantum consciousness BS. The true reasoning is always the same: quantum physics is mysterious, and consciousness is mysterious, so they must both have the same underlying mechanism!

