The future changes the past
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Dot On Result Line Ept
The future changes the past
Many think that the past shapes the future. That time only flows in one direction. But something has begun to change since the quantum, in several experiments, has shown that the future influences the past. There is a possibility: that the future change what has already happened. At least this is happening on the subatomic world.
We are all formed by atoms that are influenced by physical forces of the future. Therefore, it is possible in theory, tomorrow change our history. This opens the possibility that the universe itself has a destination, which, as a mysterious magnet to the end of time, is leading this.
Classical physics believed that physical laws could be used to determine the future of the universe. Given enough information, we could know the state would each particle, person or planet. However, quantum mechanics and the uncertainty principle, showed that this was not true. Under the uncertainty principle is not possible to know all the properties of a single particle in the same
time. It is impossible to know where and how fast the particle is moving and the more accurate determination of an issue, there is less precision in measuring the other. On a scale quantum particles can exist in more than one place at one time, until the watch. This overlap is one of the central mysteries of physics.
The uncertainty of the quantum world can be seen in a laboratory, for example, if you have two identical radioactive atoms, one can decay in one minute and the second may take an hour to decay. There is no way to explain the different behaviors of each atom or to predict when observing their decay history. This indeterminism contradicted Einstein's famous dictum: "God does not play dice." But if God does not play dice, where is the information that determines what happens to the particles? Ahara is believed we can not see the information that regulates the behavior of matter because there in the past. Comes from the future.
"Nature is trying to say that there is a difference between two seemingly identical particles with different destinations, but that difference can only be found in the future," says Aharanov, who has made a quantum mechanical theory time symmetric, which explains how information in the future could fill this vacuum indeterministic.
Aharanov possibly believe God plays dice with the universe just to create an uncertainty, a sort of loophole through which to exercise an influence on the present, without ever being caught doing it. "Our goal is to discover if Mother Nature has been doing his own post selections, causing these effects appear unexpected."
The probability of a universe like ours simply by chance is extremely remote. If the final state of the universe is defined and extends from front to back to influence the universe from its inception, this amplifies the possibility of the emergence of life and intelligence in the universe.
Notably, affecting the future, past and present, it creates the possibility that the universe has a destiny, a kind of program events to magnetize its final state. The amazing thing is that the "destination" of the universe could have been established both in the past and future. It is possible that God is a kind of horizon in the future that magnetized the universe to be him, and where past and future are wound like a serpent ouroboros [1].
* Rav Michael Laitman is a master's degree in cybernetics, doctor in philosophy and Kabbalah, a professor of ontology and epistemology. He is founder and president of Bnei Baruch and ARI Institute in Israel. More information www.kabbalah.info; www.kab.tv / spa and www.laitman.es
[1] The ouroboros is an ancient symbol depicting a serpent with its tail in its mouth. Expresses the unity of all things, material and spiritual, which never disappear but change form in an eternal cycle of destruction and new creation, as representing infinity.
.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.- .-.-.-.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment