Do you remember having an ant farm or watching one develop and evolve as a little kid? You can start one from just a few, then over the course of a few months they grow exponentially. They have their leader, the queen, along with servants, they have families and separated groups, they seem to even have social areas where they meet up with each other (probably to talk about their next building project).
They are just like us in a sense. We start with a few, then evolve to a huge society with many differences. One big difference is they don't seem to kill each other. They also all work together to expand their society. I don't know for sure, but I doubt any of the ants do things that slow down their growth and evolutionary paths. They are always expanding and helping each other out, even though there's separation amongst them.
Try relating that to us? Imagine seeing these ants in a bar hanging out and getting in a argument. How crazy does that sound? They're all just ants. Doesn't it seem like they should know this and always get along with each other no matter what the circumstances are? They do get along, but we don't. We could learn so much from ants. These tiny little critters have God-like qualities in them, much more than we do. We can create at will with the right mental attitude, but arguably they can to.
Why then when we go out and socialize do we get judge each other? We are much more complicated beings, yes, but if that means we have to fight, steal, kill, and judge, I might rather be an ant. How much more harmonious they are! Just picture a scene where ants are on opposite sides of the ant farm. Now imagine those two identical looking ants (to us that is, they recognize their own differences) planning against each other to take over the other's territory. Do you think this ever happens with them? I don't. They don't go to war, we do. They have figured out how to live peacefully together, we haven't. Which species would you say is more God-like? The answer is easy to me...
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
How We're ALL Connected
Now that you know the Big Band occurred, let me try to explain how we're ALL connected because of it. If you can imagine the entire universe as a tiny ball of energy the size of your pinkie fingernail, it's easy to say that ALL of that compressed energy is connected. It was probably rounded like our planet Earth. One side of that ball could easily communicate with the other side of that ball instantaneously. It might have seemed far away at the time, but to us, one side of our fingernail is basically touching its opposite side.
So, 13.7 billion years ago we can easily see how that energy was connected. Now just imagine that connected energy bursting and expanding rapidly into where we are today. If ALL was connected back then, and we were created out of that same energy, we would still be connected today.
On December 1st @ 9pm CST, Michio Kaku is going to be hosting a show on the Science Channel called "Sci-Fi: Physics of the Impossible." This episode will display teleportation on TV for the first time ever. Our scientists have been performing teleportation experiments successfully in labs for about 7 years now. However, it's one of those things you have to see to believe. They will be taking an object, atoms, in one concealed box and moving it to another box some distance away without physically moving it thru this physical space-time continuum.
Kaku explains the process well, much better than myself I'm sure. Basically, if ALL was connected and has just expanded, then ALL should be able to communicate instantaneously and simultaneously no matter how far away in the visible universe. Think of a balloon. It starts small. Then you blow it up and seems to have distant sides. But once deflated, that size could be reduced immensely to bring everything back together again.
In theory, something here on Earth should be able to perform a single action or thought and affect something 93 billion light years away on the other side of the universe. The universe is still rounded like our planet Earth, and scientists are pretty certain it is 93 billion light years in diameter. Of course there are lots of dimensions and other possibilities, most of which we might not even be able to comprehend. Space-time is just one small misleading but very important part of this seemingly vast but tiny universe. One thing is for sure though, WE ARE ALL CONNECTED.
So, 13.7 billion years ago we can easily see how that energy was connected. Now just imagine that connected energy bursting and expanding rapidly into where we are today. If ALL was connected back then, and we were created out of that same energy, we would still be connected today.
On December 1st @ 9pm CST, Michio Kaku is going to be hosting a show on the Science Channel called "Sci-Fi: Physics of the Impossible." This episode will display teleportation on TV for the first time ever. Our scientists have been performing teleportation experiments successfully in labs for about 7 years now. However, it's one of those things you have to see to believe. They will be taking an object, atoms, in one concealed box and moving it to another box some distance away without physically moving it thru this physical space-time continuum.
Kaku explains the process well, much better than myself I'm sure. Basically, if ALL was connected and has just expanded, then ALL should be able to communicate instantaneously and simultaneously no matter how far away in the visible universe. Think of a balloon. It starts small. Then you blow it up and seems to have distant sides. But once deflated, that size could be reduced immensely to bring everything back together again.
In theory, something here on Earth should be able to perform a single action or thought and affect something 93 billion light years away on the other side of the universe. The universe is still rounded like our planet Earth, and scientists are pretty certain it is 93 billion light years in diameter. Of course there are lots of dimensions and other possibilities, most of which we might not even be able to comprehend. Space-time is just one small misleading but very important part of this seemingly vast but tiny universe. One thing is for sure though, WE ARE ALL CONNECTED.
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