Friday, June 19, 2015

quantum mechanics should shock you

excerpt:
Niels Bohr, a Danish Physicist who made significant contributions to understanding atomic structure and quantum theory once said: “if quantum mechanics hasn’t profoundly shocked you, you haven’t understood it yet.” 
another excerpt, with link to essay below:
At the turn of the nineteenth century, physicists started to explore the relationship between energy and the structure of matter. In doing so, the belief that a physical, Newtonian material universe that was at the very heart of scientific knowing was dropped, and the realization that matter is nothing but an illusion replaced it. Scientists began to recognize that everything in the Universe is made out of energy.
Quantum physicists discovered that physical atoms are made up of vortices of energy that are constantly spinning and vibrating, each one radiating its own unique energy signature. Therefore, if we really want to observe ourselves and find out what we are, we are really beings of energy and vibration, radiating our own unique energy signature -this is fact and is what quantum physics has shown us time and time again.

the-illusion-of-matter-our-physical-material-world-isnt-really-physical-at-all/
My comments:
Newton was debunked!  His vision of the world as a purely material, mechanistic way was totally off. His contemporary, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who was better known as a poet (Faust!), proved one of Newton's early theories, that established his reputation, to be completely wrong. But the world of science ignored Goethe, created the field of science on Newton's mistaken assumptions.  This article discusses that scientific awareness shifts all the time, as scientists and non-scientists continually discover new understandings. This article does not mention Goethe, who debunked Newton in Newton's lifetime. If all scientific inquiry had proceeded as Goethe suggested, through an energetic, phenomenolgy-observing, directly sensing as a sensing being the phenomenon of the energy field we find ourselves in, everything would be different.

We can't unspill milk, or unbreak eggs. We must move forward. I hope that moving forward will include recognition of Goethe's still brilliant and still relevant scientific indications.

No comments: