Episodes
The standard interpretation of the meaning and purpose of life is that we are mortal creatures who have evolved from bacteria through the mindless, directionless process of Darwinian evolution.  According to Darwin's leading modern-day advocate, Richard Dawkins, we are "survival machines – robot vehicles blindly programmed to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes."  The standard interpretation carries the day and is accepted by almost all orthodox biologists.  But this fact does not...
Published 12/11/17
Visions have a better chance of coming true if they are in fact connected to the outer world; if the make-up of visions have something in common with the make-up of the physical world.  Almost 100 years scientists discovered, through theory and experiment, that the outer, physical world, consists not of things but of waves and energy packets.  These things that we thought made up an independent world in fact don't exist (https://www.scientificamerican.com/media/pdf/197911_0158.pdf), and thus...
Published 10/23/17
Visions have a better chance of coming true if they are in fact connected to the outer world; if the make-up of visions have something in common with the make-up of the physical world.  Almost 100 years scientists discovered, through theory and experiment, that the outer, physical world, consists not of things but of waves and energy packets.  These things that we thought made up an independent world in fact don't exist (https://www.scientificamerican.com/media/pdf/197911_0158.pdf), and thus...
Published 10/23/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.
Published 10/13/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.
Published 10/13/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.
Published 10/11/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.
Published 10/11/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.  
Published 10/09/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.  
Published 10/09/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.
Published 10/09/17
The consequences of quantum theory, even after a century, have still not permeated our consciousness, or the very field that discovered it: physics.  Professor Richard Conn Henry, a guest on my show in 2014, observed in an article that he published in Nature Magazine, entitled, The Mental Universe, that the world we live in consists not of things, only observations.  But what does this mean?  One answer is that we are observing ourselves in the midst of an internally-generated world.
Published 10/09/17
The world needs a vision and for a vision we will need a Mind. As the physicist, Sir James Jeans, said almost a century ago, "today there is a wide measure of agreement, which on the physical side of science approaches almost to unanimity, that the stream of knowledge is heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than a great machine." And then, as Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, said, "mind is the matrix of all reality." ...
Published 10/06/17
The world needs a vision and for a vision we will need a Mind. As the physicist, Sir James Jeans, said almost a century ago, "today there is a wide measure of agreement, which on the physical side of science approaches almost to unanimity, that the stream of knowledge is heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than a great machine." And then, as Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, said, "mind is the matrix of all reality." ...
Published 10/06/17
The world needs a vision and for a vision we will need a Mind. As the physicist, Sir James Jeans, said almost a century ago, "today there is a wide measure of agreement, which on the physical side of science approaches almost to unanimity, that the stream of knowledge is heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than a great machine." And then, as Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, said, "mind is the matrix of all reality." ...
Published 10/04/17
The world needs a vision and for a vision we will need a Mind. As the physicist, Sir James Jeans, said almost a century ago, "today there is a wide measure of agreement, which on the physical side of science approaches almost to unanimity, that the stream of knowledge is heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than a great machine." And then, as Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, said, "mind is the matrix of all reality." ...
Published 10/04/17
The world needs a vision and for a vision we will need a Mind. As the physicist, Sir James Jeans, said almost a century ago, "today there is a wide measure of agreement, which on the physical side of science approaches almost to unanimity, that the stream of knowledge is heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than a great machine." And then, as Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, said, "mind is the matrix of all reality." ...
Published 10/03/17
The world needs a vision and for a vision we will need a Mind. As the physicist, Sir James Jeans, said almost a century ago, "today there is a wide measure of agreement, which on the physical side of science approaches almost to unanimity, that the stream of knowledge is heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than a great machine." And then, as Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, said, "mind is the matrix of all reality." ...
Published 10/03/17
Negativity stand in the way of fulfilling the vision of the mind.  Ignore it and write your own story
Published 09/29/17
Negativity stand in the way of fulfilling the vision of the mind.  Ignore it and write your own story
Published 09/29/17
Too many people are perishing:  there are 10 wars in progress;3 billion live in poverty; 800 million are starving; 100 million are homeless.  With no unifying vision, the people tend to look out for themselves, not for others.
Published 09/28/17
Too many people are perishing:  there are 10 wars in progress;3 billion live in poverty; 800 million are starving; 100 million are homeless.  With no unifying vision, the people tend to look out for themselves, not for others.
Published 09/28/17
"When there is no vision, the people perish"  (Proverbs 29:18). We need a unifying vision for humankind, badly.
Published 09/27/17
"When there is no vision, the people perish"  (Proverbs 29:18). We need a unifying vision for humankind, badly.
Published 09/27/17
Holograms have always bedazzled the mind.  First invented in 1947 (http://www.holography.ru/histeng.htm), holograms are man-made mirages, formed by mirrors and lasers, that mimic the appearance of physical reality.  In the late 20th century, cosmologists began using the holographic model as a metaphor to explain the universe.  Under this view, the fundamental stuff of the cosmos is not matter but information; information that somehow expresses itself in the form of the physical world....
Published 06/19/17
Holograms have always bedazzled the mind.  First invented in 1947 (http://www.holography.ru/histeng.htm), holograms are man-made mirages, formed by mirrors and lasers, that mimic the appearance of physical reality.  In the late 20th century, cosmologists began using the holographic model as a metaphor to explain the universe.  Under this view, the fundamental stuff of the cosmos is not matter but information; information that somehow expresses itself in the form of the physical world....
Published 06/19/17