Living Energy Blog

Archive for October, 2009

Dateline Interview-Dan Brown: The Lost Symbol

Friday, October 16th, 2009

This from the Institute of Noetic Sciences

“Dan Brown and his book The Lost Symbol will be the focus of a special “Dateline” exclusive tomorrow, Friday, Oct. 16, at 9:00pm. NBC News’s Matt Lauer will interview Brown about the symbolism in his book, the beliefs of the Freemasons, and “noetic science.” IONS President Marilyn Mandala Schlitz and the work of the Institute will be featured in the hour-long report. Here is the promotional video.”

http://insidedateline.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2009/10/07/2092154.aspx

A great link to more information about Marilyn Schlitz of IONS who is the real life model for the heroine in The Lost Symbol:

Last Monday’s show on NPR’s “All Things Considered” was “a huge hit,” receiving more than 500,000 page views! It was the largest response that an NPR program has ever received. The next most popular story that day had 27,000 hits. The program feed was also featured on Yahoo!’s front page.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113676181&ps=cprs

BTW, IONS is an incredible organization doing fantastic work and being an amazing source of cutting edge information on consciousness, the universe, reality, human potential and spirituality. It is well worth your time to take a peak at it.

 http://www.globalshiftnoetic.org/index.php?pid=581&srcid=581

Science, power of mind and universal energy

Friday, October 16th, 2009

A great article about how our mind interfaces with the energy of the universe.

The Biocentric Universe Theory: Life Creates Time, Space, and the Cosmos Itself

Stem-cell guru Robert Lanza presents a radical new view of the universe and everything in it.

by Robert Lanza and Bob Berman

Figuring out the nature of the real world has obsessed scientists and philosophers for millennia. Three hundred years ago, the Irish empiricist George Berkeley contributed a particularly prescient observation: The only thing we can perceive are our perceptions. In other words, consciousness is the matrix upon which the cosmos is apprehended. Color, sound, temperature, and the like exist only as perceptions in our head, not as absolute essences. In the broadest sense, we cannot be sure of an outside universe at all.

For centuries, scientists regarded Berkeley’s argument as a philosophical sideshow and continued to build physical models based on the assumption of a separate universe “out there” into which we have each individually arrived. These models presume the existence of one essential reality that prevails with us or without us. Yet since the 1920s, quantum physics experiments have routinely shown the opposite: Results do depend on whether anyone is observing. This is perhaps most vividly illustrated by the famous two-slit experiment. When someone watches a subatomic particle or a bit of light pass through the slits, the particle behaves like a bullet, passing through one hole or the other. But if no one observes the particle, it exhibits the behavior of a wave that can inhabit all possibilities—including somehow passing through both holes at the same time.

Some of the greatest physicists have described these results as so confounding they are impossible to comprehend fully, beyond the reach of metaphor, visualization, and language itself. But there is another interpretation that makes them sensible. Instead of assuming a reality that predates life and even creates it, we propose a biocentric picture of reality. From this point of view, life—particularly consciousness—creates the universe, and the universe could not exist without us.

MESSING WITH THE LIGHT
Quantum mechanics is the physicist’s most accurate model for describing the world of the atom. But it also makes some of the most persuasive arguments that conscious perception is integral to the workings of the universe. Quantum theory tells us that an unobserved small object (for instance, an electron or a photon—a particle of light) exists only in a blurry, unpredictable state, with no well-defined location or motion until the moment it is observed. This is Werner Heisenberg’s famous uncertainty principle. Physicists describe the phantom, not-yet-manifest condition as a wave function, a mathematical expression used to find the probability that a particle will appear in any given place. When a property of an electron suddenly switches from possibility to reality, some physicists say its wave function has collapsed.

What accomplishes this collapse? Messing with it. Hitting it with a bit of light in order to take its picture. Just looking at it does the job. Experiments suggest that mere knowledge in the experimenter’s mind is sufficient to collapse a wave function and convert possibility to reality. When particles are created as a pair—for instance, two electrons in a single atom that move or spin together—physicists call them entangled. Due to their intimate connection, entangled particles share a wave function. When we measure one particle and thus collapse its wave function, the other particle’s wave function instantaneously collapses too. If one photon is observed to have a vertical polarization (its waves all moving in one plane), the act of observation causes the other to instantly go from being an indefinite probability wave to an actual photon with the opposite, horizontal polarity—even if the two photons have since moved far from each other.

To read the whole article click on the link below

http://discovermagazine.com/2009/may/01-the-biocentric-universe-life-creates-time-space-cosmos

Gregg Braden onThe Science of Miracles

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

A little science to go with the previous post! Enjoy!

Power of beliefs, words and perspective

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

A nice commentary on the power of our minds and hearts to choose what to create!

Where are your thoughts, feelings and beliefs now?

Remember that they are clues as to the energy you are carrying and broadcasting to the world that help create the people, places and things that enter your life.

Where would your thoughts and feelings to be in the creation of this day?

Gift yourself with a moment to settle down inside the feelings you DO want, let the rest go and simply commit this moment…choose what you will feed your innermost being, feel it ripple out around you.  

We have a choice in every moment. Choose well and string your most magnificent moments together until they become a flow of peace, joy and abundance deep within you!

Work smarter, not harder!

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Recent studies in neuroscience are supporting chilling out, day dreaming and a don’t worry, be happy attitude in order to be more productive and creative…something regular meditators experience as a by product of their practice along with health benefits and a less stressful life!

A Wandering Mind Heads Straight Toward Insight

Researchers Map the Anatomy of the Brain’s Breakthrough Moments and Reveal the Payoff

NY Times

“In fact, our brain may be most actively engaged when our mind is wandering and we’ve actually lost track of our thoughts, a new brain-scanning study suggests. “Solving a problem with insight is fundamentally different from solving a problem analytically,” Dr. Kounios says. “There really are different brain mechanisms involved.”

By most measures, we spend about a third of our time daydreaming, yet our brain is unusually active during these seemingly idle moments. Left to its own devices, our brain activates several areas associated with complex problem solving, which researchers had previously assumed were dormant during daydreams. Moreover, it appears to be the only time these areas work in unison.

“People assumed that when your mind wandered it was empty,” says cognitive neuroscientist Kalina Christoff at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, who reported the findings last month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. As measured by brain activity, however, “mind wandering is a much more active state than we ever imagined, much more active than during reasoning with a complex problem.”

She suspects that the flypaper of an unfocused mind may trap new ideas and unexpected associations more effectively than methodical reasoning. That may create the mental framework for new ideas. “You can see regions of these networks becoming active just prior to people arriving at an insight,” she says.

In a series of experiments over the past five years, Dr. Kounios and his collaborator Mark Jung-Beeman at Northwestern University used brain scanners and EEG sensors to study insights taking form below the surface of self-awareness. They recorded the neural activity of volunteers wrestling with word puzzles and scanned their brains as they sought solutions.

Some volunteers found answers by methodically working through the possibilities. Some were stumped. For others, even though the solution seemed to come out of nowhere, they had no doubt it was correct.

In those cases, the EEG recordings revealed a distinctive flash of gamma waves emanating from the brain’s right hemisphere, which is involved in handling associations and assembling elements of a problem. The brain broadcast that signal one-third of a second before a volunteer experienced their conscious moment of insight — an eternity at the speed of thought.

The scientists may have recorded the first snapshots of a Eureka moment. “It almost certainly reflects the popping into awareness of a solution,” says Dr. Kounios.

In addition, they found that tell-tale burst of gamma waves was almost always preceded by a change in alpha brain-wave intensity in the visual cortex, which controls what we see. They took it as evidence that the brain was dampening the neurons there similar to the way we consciously close our eyes to concentrate.

“You want to quiet the noise in your head to solidify that fragile germ of an idea,” says Dr. Jung-Beeman at Northwestern.”

To read the entire article:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124535297048828601.html

Correction on Lynn McTaggert/Dan Brown

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Apparently there was an error on LM’s blog or a misunderstanding about when the interview mentioned in the previous post was to air—I just checked deeper into this after finding that the interview was not on tonight—It will be on Oct. 15, 2009!

Dan Brown, “The Lost Symbol” and Lynn McTaggert

Friday, October 9th, 2009

From Lynne McTaggert’s blog…

Dear Readers,
 
I’ve been in New York, speaking at the Open Center and then from tonight (Friday) at Omega in Rhinebeck.  As I’m talking this evening, I’ll miss the NBC broadcast – airing at 9pm EST – which features me and Dan Brown talking about the science behind his book The Lost Symbol.  Still, you can watch for me!
 
I seem to have spent all my time over the past three weeks talking on TV and to the press about Katherine Solomon, the fictional character in Dan Brown’s book The Lost Symbol, and her very similar interests to mine:  that group intention magnifies the effect of intention.  I’m just so pleased that these empowering ideas are finally getting into the mainstream, so thank you Dan, and thank you all for keeping the faith.

Swine Flu

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Lots of folks very fearful and confused about the Swine Flu/vaccine—this video may help!

Real Healthcare Reform

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Science is now discovering the power of the mind and the primacy of energy in influencing our health as well as  the experience/reality of our lives. The next step is to learn how to engage personal and universal energies to our benefit.

How are you using this information to assist you in your life?