Ever
since humankind have developed the ability to place their lives in context to a
bigger whole, an internal drive and longing to explore and inquire has given
rise to a number of universal and unanswered questions.
The
development of religious and philosophical structures and systems led to an
examination of the internal world and the mind. As the research evolved, more
refined levels and frequencies, belonging to higher faculties were discovered,
though often lying dormant. A variety of pranayama techniques were developed
with the sole propose of defining what was to become known as consciousness.
In the meantime, scientists came to the conclusion that the world is comprised
of 108 elements, each element being made of atoms, each with a different
attribute attached to it. Further research proved that the atoms were not the
underlying basis of everything; that there existed another building material,
which they named electron. With more refined devices they discovered that the
electron had two properties: it is both moving and not moving and it acts like
a particle and like a wave. This gave rise to a new definition —‘the quantum’,
which means dual.
After
years of more research, they discovered that on a very subtle level the
electron is nothing more than an infinitesimal formless energy particle and
that it is this particular energy, which can transform itself into an electron
and subsequently into matter.
While
the first group of people progressed in researching the external world, the
second group, through focusing their attention inwards, had refined their
techniques to such an extent, that they discovered a subtle, all encompassing,
frequency known as the Universal Pulse of Consciousness, which is
omnipresent throughout the whole universe and infinitely present in all there
is.
Thus
in time, Western science may well come to the same conclusion that the
underlying building material is not an infinitesimal energy particle but the
pure, ever expanding universal pulse of consciousness.
Abstract
of 'Inside Meditation - in search of the unchanging nature within' by a.
filmer-lorch
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© 2011-2014 Alexander Filmer-Lorch – all rights reserved