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An embryonic
"physics" of Zen ?
Douglass White (2005) in his
notion of Observation Physics
(which embraces the idea of
interconnectedness between observer and event -
as does Quantum theory and
it's offspring)
quotes Harry Palmer to illustrate his fundamental principle :
"I experience what I believe,
unless I believe I won't,
in which case I don't,
which means I did."
From this Zen-like stance, and much linear logic, he proposes that :
A perfect theory is a belief system that exactly matches experiences.
If every experiment I perform validates my theory,
that only means that I have honestly and precisely
described my current belief system. ![]()
According to Observation Physics I
can choose any theory I like
and make a world that perfectly matches that theory
simply by really believing in that theory.
That gives me a universe of one.
Whether anyone else wants to join me in that world
is another question.
Of course, I can really believe that
many others will join me in that world
and that will become part of the theory.
Acceptance by others of that world
will constitute validation of such a theory.
He further argues that
A photon (light "particle") has no structure other than its wavelength/frequency.
This frequency represents a certain potential,
a level of observer bias or resistance.
The electron/positron pair acts like a wave guide
that makes a photon slow down and wind as a vortex
in and out of a viewpoint. ![]()
Light as a phenomenon can only
exist
at a certain distance from its source.
Below that distance we enter into the primordial soup
of quark chaos and the Big Bang Unified Field.
i.e. You become the light.
When you are something you exist as it.
This is quite different from observing it from a gap of separation.
Like relative motion,
energy is an observer-defined mental phenomenon,
just as mass, space, and time are.
Objects have no energy or mass
until we endow them with such things
by defining them into a system of some sort
that the observer defines subjectively,
depending on his selected point of view.
Relative motion, energy,
mass, space, and time
therefore belong to the field of psychology, not physics.
The material of physics ought
to
deal with
universal principles
that do not change under varying viewpoints and
circumstances.
These alone should be the so-called "Laws" of physics.
TOP
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Enlightenment and Endarkenment must concede each other.
This is the tao of Zen.

bob harbinson
©2007
bob harbinson and Silver Pipe Productions S.A.
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