| 22.1 |
Awareness and mass
|
|
| |
In the previous twenty or so chapters, we
have investigated an enormous amount of detail in terms of the structure and
relationships between everything in the Universe.
|
|
| |
That we have been able to present a logol
argument for the linking of all energis and fortis as well as matter is
profoundly important. |
|
| |
In a world, where knowledge is the
regarded as the ultimate quest, the knowledge we have outlined so far is surely
more than enough for one book. Certainly, if you have read the previous
chapters you would have experienced the waves of enlightenment by now. Waves of
complete bliss as questions of life become clearer and synergetic. |
|
| 22.1.1
|
The loneliness of knowing all. The
loneliness of being all aware
|
|
| |
It remains the ultimate prize of most
religions and mystic cults that to be all aware is to reach the end of the
road. This is commonly described as reaching a state of enlightenment. |
|
| |
Yet is knowing everything there is to know, being
supremely aware enough in itself? To reach the point of pure awareness that the
mystics have sought for so long. To know what it is like to be God. Is this
where it makes sense? |
|
| |
The answer we suggest is no. For to know everything is
nothing, if one cannot live. Or simply as was once said "what does it profit a
man if he gains the whole world, yet loses his soul?"
|
|
| |
For example, if you have read all the previous
chapters of this book, you may well have reached a strange feeling of waves of
enlightenment, yet at the same time experiences of profound isolation of the
world around you. How could this be so?
|
|
| |
In this chapter, we explain the last major scientific
insight for this book- that pure awareness has no mass. In this chapter we seek
to understand why the most powerful essence is the universe is when pure
awareness is in motion- the power of an idea.
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
| |
Copyright © 2009 UCADIA. All rights reserved.
|