What The Bleep Do We Know

en
00:00:02 [ Clicks ]
00:00:10 [ Blows ]
00:00:14 [ Low Rumbling ]
00:00:16 [ Low Rumbling ]
00:00:16 [ Crackling, Rumbling ]
00:00:18 [ Low Rumbling Continues ]
00:00:24 [ Crackling, Rumbling ]
00:00:39 [ Chattering, Faint ]
00:00:44 [ Man ] What's going on,
00:00:48 [ Explosion ]
00:00:52 - Where do we come from?
00:00:55 - Immense quantum mechanical isotopes.
00:00:58 Quantum mechanics allows--
00:01:05 [ Woman ]
00:01:07 - Brain is capable of millions--
00:01:10 - Cascade of biochemical--
00:01:12 Molecules--
00:01:14 The brain does not know
00:01:17 what it sees in its environment
00:01:20 We are running
00:01:23 Whatever way we observe
00:01:27 [ Woman ] So how can you continue
00:01:32 if the self that is determining it
00:01:37 [ Popping ]
00:02:09 [ Brakes Squealing ]
00:02:35 [ Woman ] Are all realities
00:02:45 Is there a possibility...
00:02:47 that all potentials
00:02:57 Have you ever seen yourself through the eyes
00:03:14 and looked at yourself through the eyes
00:03:23 [ Man ]
00:03:26 Where do we come from,
00:03:29 and where are we going?
00:03:32 Why are we here? Well,
00:03:37 What is reality?
00:03:40 What I thought was unreal,
00:03:43 seems in some ways to be more real
00:03:48 which seems now more
00:03:51 You can't explain it, um...
00:03:53 and anybody who gets
00:03:56 anybody who spends too much time
00:03:58 is likely to get lost forever
00:04:03 I think the more you look
00:04:06 the more mysterious
00:04:09 Quantum physics...
00:04:12 very succinctly speaking...
00:04:16 is a physics of possibilities.
00:04:20 These are questions--
00:04:22 These are addressing questions, um,
00:04:27 of-of whether there's a difference
00:04:30 and the way it really is.
00:04:33 Have you ever thought about
00:04:36 I think some of the things
00:04:40 is a sign that the culture
00:04:43 and not appreciating
00:04:47 Every age, every generation
00:04:49 That the world is flat,
00:04:53 There are hundreds
00:04:55 things we take for granted,
00:04:58 Of course, in the vast majority of cases,
00:05:02 So presumably,
00:05:05 much about what we take for granted
00:05:10 But we're locked into these precepts
00:05:14 That's a paradigm.
00:05:17 Modern materialism...
00:05:19 strips people of the need
00:05:23 and often enough,
00:05:27 But I think if you take quantum mechanics
00:05:30 it puts the responsibility
00:05:33 And it doesn't give answers
00:05:39 and comforting.
00:05:41 It says, yes, the world is
00:05:46 Mechanism is not the answer, but I'm not
00:05:52 because you're old enough
00:05:58 Is everyone a mystery?
00:06:01 Is everyone an enigma?
00:06:04 They most certainly are.
00:06:07 Asking yourself these deeper questions
00:06:12 It brings in
00:06:15 It makes life more joyful.
00:06:18 The real trick to life
00:06:23 but be in the mystery.
00:06:31 [ Beeping, Chittering ]
00:06:42 [ Man Narrating ] Why do we keep
00:06:46 Why do we keep having
00:06:50 Why do we keep getting
00:06:52 over and over again?
00:06:55 In this infinite sea of potentials
00:06:59 how come we keep re-creating
00:07:04 Isn't it amazing that we have options
00:07:08 but we're unaware of them?
00:07:11 Is it possible that we're so conditioned
00:07:16 so conditioned to the way
00:07:19 that we buy the idea that
00:07:25 We've been conditioned
00:07:27 that the external world is more real
00:07:30 This new model of science
00:07:33 It says what's happening within us
00:07:38 There's a physical reality
00:07:41 and yet... it only--
00:07:45 If you wanna put it this way,
00:07:48 when it bumps up against
00:07:53 That other piece may be us, and of course,
00:07:57 but it doesn't
00:07:59 You know, it could be just
00:08:04 and interacts with
00:08:07 and sure enough, it provokes it
00:08:14 There were philosophers in the past
00:08:17 ''and I hurt my toe, that's real.
00:08:19 ''I feel that. It feels real.
00:08:21 And that means
00:08:24 But it's still an experience, and it's still
00:08:29 Scientific experiments have shown
00:08:34 hook their brains up to certain PET scans
00:08:38 and ask them to look at
00:08:42 and they watch,
00:08:46 And then they've asked them
00:08:48 and now imagine
00:08:51 And when they imagine
00:08:54 it produced the same areas
00:08:58 as if they were actually
00:09:00 So it caused scientists to
00:09:03 So who sees then? Does the brain see?
00:09:08 And what is reality? Is reality
00:09:13 or is reality what
00:09:16 And the truth is is that the brain
00:09:20 between what it sees in its environment
00:09:23 because the same specific
00:09:27 So then it asks the question.:
00:09:37 [ Woman ] We're bombarded
00:09:42 and it's coming into our body,
00:09:44 coming in through our sense organs,
00:09:47 - and at each step
00:09:51 And finally, what is bubbling up
00:09:54 the one that's
00:09:57 [ Man ] The brain processes
00:10:01 but we're only aware
00:10:04 But our awareness of those 2,000 bits
00:10:08 arejust about the environment,
00:10:19 [ Rattles ]
00:10:27 [ Man ] We're living in a world where
00:10:31 the classical tip of an immense
00:10:37 - Hey, wow! You got a lot of shots to develop?
00:10:42 Oh, bummer.
00:10:47 [ Door Opens, Closes ]
00:11:04 [ Man ] If the brain is processing
00:11:08 and our awareness
00:11:10 - [ Hits Ground ]
00:11:14 It's receiving that information,
00:11:23 The eyes are like the lens.
00:11:25 But the tape that's really
00:11:29 It's called the visual cortex.
00:11:31 It's like this camera
00:11:34 Did you know that the brain imprints
00:11:40 This is important.
00:11:42 For example:
00:11:45 This camera is seeing
00:11:49 than what is here...
00:11:52 because it is-- has no objection
00:12:02 The only movie that's playing
00:12:06 is what we have
00:12:11 So is it possible our eyes,
00:12:13 see more than what our brain...
00:12:16 has the ability
00:12:22 [ Woman ]
00:12:25 we only see what
00:12:28 Um, we match patterns
00:12:32 uh, exist within ourselves
00:12:35 So, a wonderful story
00:12:39 is that when the Indians--
00:12:43 on the Caribbean Islands saw
00:12:48 they couldn't see them at all.
00:12:50 Because it was so...
00:12:52 unlike anything they had ever seen before,
00:12:56 [ Man ] When Columbus's armada
00:12:58 none of the natives
00:13:01 even though they existed
00:13:03 The reason that they never saw
00:13:06 they had no knowledge in their brains,
00:13:12 So the shaman starts to notice that
00:13:18 but he starts to wonder
00:13:21 So every day he goes out
00:13:25 And after a period of time,
00:13:28 And once he sees the ships, he tells
00:13:33 Because everybody trusted and believed
00:13:44 [ Explosion ]
00:14:06 [ Man ] We create reality.
00:14:11 We create the effects of reality
00:14:17 [ Man ] We always perceive something
00:14:24 - [ Screaming ]
00:14:27 As far as whether or not we're just living
00:14:30 it's a question we don't necessarily
00:14:32 I think this is a big philosophical problem
00:14:36 in terms of what science
00:14:39 because we are always
00:14:41 So we are still
00:14:43 by what is ultimately coming
00:14:47 that allows us to see and
00:14:50 So it is conceivable that all of this
00:14:54 that we have no way of really getting
00:14:59 Your brain doesn't know the difference
00:15:02 and what's taking place in here.
00:15:04 There is no ''out there'' out there
00:15:16 You okay? I heard you scream earlier.
00:15:23 - [ Mouths Words ]
00:15:26 watching Columbus's ship
00:15:31 Wow.
00:15:33 And this medicine man
00:15:36 [ Gasps ] Cool. That's--
00:15:40 Hey, maybe it was a past life
00:15:44 or a future life.
00:15:46 Get real.
00:15:52 Or maybe that dream was trying
00:15:55 I guess it just depends
00:15:59 Maybe you should try
00:16:01 My pills are fine, okay?
00:16:06 Well, I have to go get dressed.
00:16:11 Mmm. I hope you
00:16:19 [ Door Closes ]
00:16:23 God, Amanda.
00:16:29 [ Sighs ]
00:16:39 [ Man ] There actually are choices
00:16:44 that are contingent upon
00:16:50 not being washed out.
00:16:53 First of all, let's talk
00:16:56 and then we'll talk about what
00:16:59 The first thing I wanna tell you
00:17:01 is it's totally a fantasy created by
00:17:06 what the heck is goin' on
00:17:10 By little experiments, I mean big energy
00:17:15 It gets pretty nutty
00:17:17 and so subatomic physics was invented
00:17:22 We need a new science down there,
00:17:25 and it is subject to a whole
00:17:31 thoughts, feelings, intuitions
00:17:36 Matter is not what we have
00:17:39 Uh-- To the scientists, matter has always
00:17:45 in that which is static
00:17:49 Within all the atoms and molecules,
00:17:54 the particles take up
00:17:58 of the volume of an atom or molecule,
00:18:02 The rest of it is vacuum.
00:18:04 What seems to happen is that particles
00:18:07 So where do they go
00:18:10 Now, that question is tricky.
00:18:13 I'm gonna give you two answers--
00:18:17 They go into
00:18:20 where the people in that universe
00:18:23 about those particles when
00:18:26 They say, ''Where do they go?''
00:18:31 [ Man ] There's a great mystery called
00:18:36 There's a certain sense in which the
00:18:39 don't make any interesting distinctions,
00:18:43 Um, for example, it's a puzzle from the standpoint
00:18:49 why we should be able to...
00:18:52 um, remember the past, um...
00:18:55 and not have the same kind
00:18:59 It's a puzzle from the standpoint
00:19:03 why we should think something like
00:19:06 we can affect the future
00:19:09 These things-- that we have a different kind
00:19:14 that we have a different kind
00:19:17 over the future
00:19:20 these things are so fundamental
00:19:25 that, um-- um--
00:19:28 that it seems to me,
00:19:31 you know, three-quarters
00:19:43 Wanna shoot some hoops?
00:19:50 Now, you don't have
00:19:52 Come on and play.
00:19:54 Look. He likes you.
00:19:57 Don't you have time for
00:20:03 How long has it been
00:20:07 [ Chuckles ] Come on.
00:20:12 No, no, no, milady.
00:20:15 You gotta be on the court
00:20:24 [ Sighs ]
00:20:30 Welcome to Duke Reginald's
00:20:53 [ Sighs ]
00:21:03 - [ Grunts ]
00:21:06 - That hurt.
00:21:09 - Right.
00:21:13 This ball is mostly empty.
00:21:16 In fact, the universe
00:21:24 [ Man ] We like to think
00:21:28 But in fact, there is essentially nothing
00:21:32 It's completely insubstantial.
00:21:36 Take a look at an atom.
00:21:38 We think of it as
00:21:42 Then we say,
00:21:44 ''It's this little tiny point of really
00:21:49 ''surrounded by a kind of
00:21:52 popping in and out
00:21:57 But then it turns out that
00:21:59 Even the nucleus,
00:22:02 pops in and out of existence
00:22:07 The most solid thing you can say
00:22:12 is that it's more like
00:22:14 it's like a concentrated bit
00:22:19 [ Man ] What makes up things
00:22:23 but what makes up things are
00:22:28 [ Whooshes ]
00:22:30 And like I said,
00:22:41 [ Reginald ]
00:22:43 and push the other electrons
00:22:49 So nobody touches nothin'.
00:22:53 Come on. Put your stuff down.
00:22:56 Like I said, this is my court.
00:22:59 [ Sighs ]
00:23:15 - How long has it been?
00:23:18 It's only in conscious experience
00:23:22 In quantum theory, you can also
00:23:25 [ Reginald ]
00:23:28 - [ Cheering ]
00:23:30 [ Buzzer Buzzes ]
00:23:32 [ Cheering Fades ]
00:23:35 What's the matter?
00:23:39 How do you know this shit?
00:23:42 I read Dr. Quantum comics. Everybody thinks
00:23:48 That's how I do my magic
00:23:50 Yeah, I always choose
00:23:54 - He's got the weirding way.
00:23:58 Everybody's doing it.
00:24:00 Doing it constantly,
00:24:04 When you ain't lookin',
00:24:06 When you are lookin',
00:24:08 When you are not looking,
00:24:11 - [ Ball Bouncing ]
00:24:14 [ Man ] Aparticle,
00:24:17 really exists in
00:24:20 a spread-out wave
00:24:24 and it's in all of those
00:24:26 The instance you check on it...
00:24:28 it snaps intojust one
00:24:32 [ Man ]
00:24:34 a particle can be in two or more places
00:24:39 And this is a very bizarre concept, and one
00:24:45 Superheroes use superposition...
00:24:47 with the world being potential strips
00:24:51 Heroes choose what they want--
00:24:54 being in many places at once, experiencing
00:24:58 and then collapsing on the one.
00:25:03 The question is, how far down
00:25:46 Nice shot.
00:25:49 [ Man ] How can a system or an object be
00:25:49 [ Man ] How can a system or an object be
00:25:53 [ Man ] It's very easy--
00:25:57 We all have a habit of thinking that
00:26:03 existing without my input,
00:26:08 You have to banish
00:26:10 Instead,you really
00:26:12 that even the material world
00:26:14 the chairs, the tables, the rooms,
00:26:20 all of these are nothing but
00:26:25 And I'm choosing moment to moment
00:26:28 to bring my actual experience
00:26:33 This is the only radical thinking
00:26:36 But it is so radical--
00:26:38 because our tendency is that the world
00:26:41 independent of my experience.
00:26:45 It is not. Quantum physics
00:26:49 Heisenberg himself,
00:26:51 said atoms are not things,
00:26:56 So, instead of thinking
00:26:59 you have to think
00:27:02 They're all possibilities
00:27:04 You now can see in numerous labs
00:27:08 objects that are large enough
00:27:13 and they are in
00:27:16 - You can actually take a photograph of that.
00:27:19 Now, I suppose if you showed a photograph,
00:27:25 ''Here's this nice blob of colored light,
00:27:28 ''a bit of it over here and another bit--
00:27:32 What's the big deal?''
00:27:34 You say, ''Look right in the chamber.
00:27:36 ''I see two things there.''
00:27:39 That's one thing.
00:27:44 I'm not sure that people's
00:27:48 because I think--
00:27:51 I don't think people
00:27:53 And I don't mean that people say, ''Oh, you're
00:27:57 I-I think it is so mysterious that you
00:28:03 And then, furthermore,
00:28:06 ''Beam me up, Scotty.''
00:28:09 ''Oh, well, what does
00:28:11 But you've gotta really stop and
00:28:14 That it's the same object
00:28:17 When people tinker in the lab, and they get
00:28:21 and they go home
00:28:23 just as though nothing
00:28:26 because that's how
00:28:28 And yet, there's this
00:28:32 sitting right in front
00:28:36 [ Man ] Quantum physics
00:28:41 but if we accept this,
00:28:45 who, what, chooses among
00:28:48 to bring the actual event
00:28:51 So we directly, immediately see
00:28:57 The observer cannot be ignored.
00:29:03 [ Man ] We know what an observer does
00:29:07 but we don't know
00:29:12 Doesn't mean we haven't tried to find
00:29:15 We've gone inside of your head.
00:29:20 to find something
00:29:22 And there's nobody home.
00:29:24 There's nobody in the cortical regions
00:29:27 There's nobody in the subcortical regions
00:29:30 There's nobody there
00:29:32 And yet, we all have this experience
00:29:37 observing the world out there.
00:29:39 Is this the observer...
00:29:41 and which is so intricate
00:29:46 the wacky, weird world...
00:29:48 of quantum particles
00:29:54 Is this then the observer?
00:30:01 [ Man ] In my modeling,
00:30:05 inside the four-layer biobodysuit.
00:30:08 And so, it's like
00:30:13 It is the consciousness
00:30:19 and it is observing
00:30:21 The four layers of the biobodysuit
00:30:27 to pick up signatures
00:30:30 [ Horn Honking ]
00:30:32 [ Dog Barking ]
00:30:41 [ Woman ]
00:30:47 [ Chattering ]
00:30:54 [ Shutter Clicking ]
00:30:59 [ Shutter Clicking ]
00:31:04 [ Shutter Clicking ]
00:31:06 [ Phone Ringing, Vibrating ]
00:31:18 Where the hell are you?
00:31:20 but, oh, my God.!
00:31:23 There's no photographer.
00:31:26 Where, oh, where
00:31:28 Aliens?
00:31:33 Or a hot date?
00:31:36 In Washington, D.C., the so-called
00:31:39 there was a big experiment
00:31:42 where 4,000 volunteers came
00:31:45 to collectively meditate for long periods
00:31:49 It was predicted in advance
00:31:53 you would have a 25% drop
00:31:56 as defined by the F.B.I.
00:31:59 Well, the chief of police
00:32:03 ''Look. It's gonna
00:32:06 to reduce crime by 25% in
00:32:10 But by the end, the police department became
00:32:14 because the results in fact showed a 25%
00:32:20 which we could predict
00:32:24 that had already been done
00:32:26 This leads naturally
00:32:29 are people affecting the world
00:32:33 You betcha they are.
00:32:35 Every single one of us
00:32:38 even if we try to hide
00:32:42 We all are doin' it.
00:32:47 Just tell me
00:32:51 Good. But hurry,
00:32:53 - Because these models
00:32:57 - [ Sighs ]
00:33:00 Oh-- [ Muttering ]
00:33:06 - [ Train Departing ]
00:33:34 [ Woman ] Our subway exhibit comes to us
00:33:39 Mr. Emoto became
00:33:42 in the molecular structure
00:33:47 Now, water is the most receptive
00:33:52 Mr. Emoto thought perhaps
00:33:56 So he set up a series of studies,
00:34:01 and photographed it with
00:34:04 This first picture is a picture
00:34:12 And this picture
00:34:15 after receiving a blessing
00:34:24 Now in this next
00:34:26 Mr. Emoto printed out words,
00:34:32 and left them out overnight.
00:34:34 This first photograph is the picture
00:34:39 just the essence
00:34:41 These subsequent photographs,
00:34:44 This is the
00:34:49 And we move along here
00:34:53 And you can see where he taped that,
00:34:56 But if you read Japanese,
00:35:02 Now, Mr. Emoto speaks of
00:35:06 being the driving force
00:35:09 The science of how that actually
00:35:14 except to the water molecules,
00:35:18 And it's really fascinating
00:35:21 that 90% of our bodies
00:35:35 Makes you wonder,
00:35:37 If thoughts can do that
00:35:40 imagine what our thoughts
00:35:50 [ Train Approaching ]
00:36:00 Absolutely thought alone
00:36:03 Most people don't affect reality
00:36:08 because they don't
00:36:12 They write an intention...
00:36:15 and then they erase it,
00:36:18 I mean-- I can't do that. And then they
00:36:22 So time average,
00:36:25 And it really comes down to the fact that
00:36:30 If you accept with every
00:36:33 that you will walk on water,
00:36:36 Yes, it will.
00:36:38 But you know, it's, uh--
00:36:41 It's a wonderful idea,
00:36:44 but what it usually means is that I have
00:36:50 covering a whole mass
00:36:54 So thinking positive is
00:36:57 It's just disguising the negative thinking
00:37:00 When we think of things, then we make
00:37:05 and that's why we become stuck.
00:37:08 We become stuck
00:37:10 Because if reality is concrete, obviously,
00:37:14 But if reality is my possibility--
00:37:20 then immediately comes the question
00:37:24 How can I make it better?
00:37:26 You see how we are extending
00:37:30 In the old thinking,
00:37:33 because I don't have
00:37:37 Reality is already there. It's material
00:37:41 from deterministic laws...
00:37:43 and mathematics determines
00:37:48 I, the experiencer,
00:37:52 In the new view, yes,
00:37:55 It gives us the possibilities
00:38:01 But it cannot give us the actual experience
00:38:07 I choose that experience.
00:38:09 And therefore, literally,
00:38:14 It may sound like a tremendous,
00:38:18 without any understanding
00:38:21 but really quantum physics
00:38:24 ^^^^[ Electronica ]
00:38:29 ^^^^[ Woman Singing
00:38:36 [ Door Closes ]
00:38:39 Hey!
00:38:41 Sucked. [ Sighs ]
00:38:46 - ^^ [ Continues ]
00:38:48 Your boss called.
00:38:58 ^^ [ Ends ]
00:39:04 Amanda, I wanna thank you
00:39:09 I know I'm a bit much sometimes...
00:39:12 and that it's been tough after Bob and all.
00:39:16 And, um,you'vejust
00:39:19 I mean, I make a mess and--
00:39:21 Well, I clean up afterwards,
00:39:26 Sometimes I think
00:39:29 Me? [ Laughs ]
00:39:32 The day I make someone sane,
00:39:37 Anyway, um...
00:39:40 I made you something
00:39:52 Open it.
00:40:07 I went through your pictures
00:40:10 And it took me forever because there are
00:40:17 This--
00:40:20 That's for all the wonderful photos
00:40:37 - Oh!
00:40:43 Thank you.
00:41:02 [ Voices Overlapping, Echoing ]
00:41:04 What is the purpose of life?
00:41:06 Where am I going?
00:41:08 - Why is there anything at all?
00:41:12 [ Man At Exhibit ]
00:41:17 If thoughts can
00:41:20 imagine what our thoughts
00:41:23 [ Water Running ]
00:41:25 - [ Voices Overlapping ] These--
00:41:29 - Is this--
00:41:33 Have you ever thought about
00:41:36 Is there a substance of thought?
00:41:40 [ Roommate ] I guess itjust depends on
00:41:43 [ Reginald ] The world
00:41:48 until we choose.
00:41:50 [ Woman ] Are all realities in the
00:41:54 - [ Man ] My definition of an addiction
00:41:58 - Something that you can't stop.
00:42:02 There's the macroscopic world that we see.
00:42:06 There's the world of our atoms.
00:42:09 These are each
00:42:12 They have their own language.
00:42:15 They're notjust smaller--
00:42:18 But they're complementary,
00:42:21 but I am also my cells.
00:42:23 I'm also my
00:42:25 It's all true.
00:42:29 The deepest level of truth uncovered
00:42:33 is the fundamental truth
00:42:36 At that deepest subnuclear level
00:42:39 you and I are literally one--
00:42:42 [ Echoing ]
00:42:58 - [ Birds Twittering ]
00:43:02 and I consciously create my day
00:43:05 Now, sometimes...
00:43:09 because my mind is examining
00:43:13 it takes me a little bit to settle down
00:43:17 of where I am actually
00:43:20 But here's the thing.
00:43:23 and out of nowhere
00:43:28 that are so unexplainable...
00:43:32 I know that they are the process
00:43:37 And the more I do that,
00:43:41 that I accept that
00:43:44 it gives me the power and the incentive
00:43:48 ^^^^[ Man Singing ]
00:43:53 [ Woman ] In addiction,
00:43:57 to decipher
00:44:00 our intangibility of
00:44:05 and the day-to-day business
00:44:09 in a three-dimensional world
00:44:13 ^^^^[ Singing Continues ]
00:44:18 [ Shutter Clicks ]
00:44:28 - [ Shutter Clicks ]
00:44:31 - I hate weddings.
00:44:35 is that addiction is...
00:44:37 the feeling of
00:44:41 that is cascaded
00:44:45 through a whole assortment
00:44:50 and through the spinal fluid--
00:44:53 a feeling that
00:44:56 a sexual fantasy.
00:44:59 It only takes one sexual fantasy
00:45:04 In other words, it only takes
00:45:07 for a man to have
00:45:11 And yet, there was nothing
00:45:14 It was what was within him
00:45:17 - ^^^^[ Ends ]
00:45:22 [ Chuckles ] Hey, Amanda.
00:45:26 Guilty.
00:45:28 A wedding?
00:45:30 Come on, Frank!
00:45:33 This is a good assignment,
00:45:36 What's to see?
00:45:38 ''I do.'' They did.
00:45:40 Aw, God, Amanda. I mean,
00:45:43 and everything with you
00:45:47 You hate churches. You hate weddings.
00:45:51 [ Sighs ]
00:45:54 Now I want you to go
00:45:57 Don't need to.
00:45:59 I know. I took the pictures,
00:46:03 You got too many memories
00:46:06 Oh, Amanda, Amanda, Amanda.
00:46:08 You know you're the best
00:46:11 And I wanna have
00:46:15 You know what?
00:46:17 - And watch out for
00:46:20 - [ Laughs ] Come on. Get outta here.
00:46:25 When I was younger, um...
00:46:27 I had lots of ideas
00:46:30 And now I realize
00:46:33 to truly understand
00:46:41 That I am at one with the great being
00:46:45 and that formed the galaxies
00:46:49 how did that get
00:46:51 It was not hard.
00:47:07 Most of the problems that religion
00:47:13 down through the centuries
00:47:15 have been errors because
00:47:19 That God is a distinct
00:47:23 to whom I must offer worship,
00:47:27 humor, please and hope to attain
00:47:33 That is not what God is.
00:47:36 That is a blasphemy.
00:47:38 God is such a broad thing...
00:47:40 um, some parts of which--
00:47:43 that are associated
00:47:47 is something that
00:47:49 It's something I think has done a lot
00:47:53 done harm to oppressed peoples,
00:47:58 And yet, and the same point...
00:48:00 we have the epitome
00:48:05 The closest science
00:48:08 to explaining Jesus'
00:48:12 the mustard seed was larger
00:48:15 and the only science that can fit into
00:48:29 Now, we have--
00:48:34 we have great technology...
00:48:37 from antigravity magnets...
00:48:40 and magnetic fields--
00:48:43 We have all that, and we still have
00:48:47 backwater concept of God.
00:49:07 [ Man ] People fall into line very readily
00:49:10 by these cosmic sentences
00:49:13 But this is not how God is.
00:49:15 And once you start to question the
00:49:21 people feel you are
00:49:23 or a subverter
00:49:28 God must be greater than the greatest
00:49:33 and indeed...
00:49:35 the greatness of human skill.
00:49:38 That God must even transcend
00:49:43 to emulate nature
00:49:48 How can any man or woman sin against
00:49:53 How can any one
00:49:58 on Earth in the backwaters of...
00:50:03 indeed, the Milky Way,
00:50:07 betray God Almighty?
00:50:11 That is impossible.
00:50:13 The height of arrogance
00:50:17 of those who create God
00:50:32 - [ Shutter Clicking ]
00:50:34 - Mr. and Mrs. Richard ''Buck'' Filipowski.
00:50:39 - [ Cheering ]
00:50:49 ^^^^[ Continues ]
00:50:59 ^^^^[ Ends ]
00:51:01 [ Woman ]
00:51:05 is likened unto the landscape
00:51:10 And the synaptic cleft
00:51:12 - the storm and the Earth--
00:51:18 And you see this
00:51:23 boiling in the sky...
00:51:26 and you see electrical impulses
00:51:29 veins of electric light...
00:51:32 and then you see it
00:51:36 - The brain looks like a thunderstorm--
00:51:40 when it is presenting
00:51:44 - So no one is ever seeing the thought.
00:51:48 What they do see
00:51:51 is that they see
00:51:55 around different quadrants
00:51:58 - [ Thunder Rumbling ]
00:52:02 and what a person
00:52:05 a holographic image--
00:52:09 rage, murder, hate...
00:52:12 compassion, love.
00:52:15 [ Man ] The brain does not know
00:52:18 what it sees in its environment
00:52:22 because the same specific
00:52:25 The brain is made up of tiny
00:52:29 These neurons have tiny
00:52:31 and connect to other neurons
00:52:34 Each place where they connect
00:52:39 Now, the brain builds up all its concepts
00:52:43 For example, ideas,
00:52:46 are all constructed and interconnected
00:52:49 - and all have a possible relationship
00:52:52 The concept and the feeling
00:52:55 is stored in this
00:52:57 But we build the concept of love
00:53:01 - Some people have love
00:53:04 When they think about love,
00:53:07 sorrow, anger
00:53:10 Rage may be linked to hurt,
00:53:13 which then is
00:53:17 We build up models of how
00:53:22 And the more information that we have, the
00:53:27 And what we ultimately do
00:53:31 about what the outside world is.
00:53:33 Any information that we process, any information
00:53:39 is always colored by the experiences
00:53:44 and an emotional response that we're having
00:53:48 Who is in the driver's seat when we control
00:53:53 We know physiologically that nerve cells
00:53:58 If you practice something over and over,
00:54:02 If you get angry on a daily basis,
00:54:07 if you suffer
00:54:09 if you give reason for
00:54:13 you're rewiring and reintegrating
00:54:17 and that neural net now has
00:54:20 with all those other nerve cells
00:54:24 We also know that nerve cells that don't
00:54:29 They lose their
00:54:31 because every time
00:54:33 the thought process that produces
00:54:37 every time we interrupt it, those nerve
00:54:42 start breaking
00:54:46 When we start interrupting
00:54:49 not by stimulus and response
00:54:53 but by observing
00:54:56 then we are no longer
00:55:01 that's responding to its environment
00:55:05 - ^^^^[ Rock ]
00:55:17 ^^^^[ Continues, Indistinct ]
00:55:20 [ Man ] Does that mean
00:55:24 No, emotions are designed
00:55:27 something into
00:55:30 That's why we have them.
00:55:32 All emotion is
00:55:37 The most sophisticated pharmacy
00:55:40 [ Man ] There's a part of the brain
00:55:44 and the hypothalamus
00:55:46 and it is a place that
00:55:51 that matches certain emotions
00:55:54 And those particular chemicals
00:55:57 They're small-chain
00:56:01 The body's basically
00:56:03 that makes about 20 different
00:56:07 to formulate its
00:56:09 The body is
00:56:12 In the hypothalamus, we take
00:56:17 and we assemble them into certain
00:56:22 that match the emotional states
00:56:27 So there's chemicals for anger,
00:56:32 and there's chemicals
00:56:34 There's chemicals for lust.
00:56:37 every emotional state
00:56:40 And the moment that we experience that
00:56:46 that hypothalamus will immediately
00:56:50 and then releases it through the pituitary
00:56:54 The moment it makes it
00:56:57 it finds its way to different centers
00:57:01 Now, every single cell
00:57:04 - has these receptors on the outside.
00:57:06 [ Woman ] Now one cell can have
00:57:10 studding its surface,
00:57:14 And when a peptide
00:57:17 it literally, uh,
00:57:22 sits on the receptor surface
00:57:26 and kind of moves
00:57:28 and kind of like a doorbell buzzing,
00:57:32 - [ Buzzing ]
00:57:35 ^^^^[ Rock ]
00:57:52 [ Shutter Clicking ]
00:57:58 - [ Chattering ]
00:58:13 ^^^^[ Piano ]
00:58:21 [ Man ]
00:58:23 is that most of us who've had
00:58:27 are operating in
00:58:31 or we're operating
00:58:36 - What is it?
00:58:54 [ Man ]
00:58:57 or the overly emotional
00:58:59 because they've gone
00:59:05 the person is not operating
00:59:12 ^^^^[ Rock ]
00:59:14 [ Shutter Clicks ]
00:59:18 [ Shutter Clicks ]
00:59:32 - ^^^^[ Continues ]
00:59:36 Along the outside
00:59:38 are these billions
00:59:40 that are really just receivers
00:59:43 A receptor that has a peptide
00:59:47 changes the cell in many ways.
00:59:50 It sets off a whole cascade
00:59:53 some of which wind up with changes
01:00:00 - [ Shutter Clicks ]
01:00:02 When I grow up, I want to become
01:00:05 - Oh?
01:00:07 - Take lots of pictures.
01:00:12 Each cell is
01:00:15 and, uh, each cell
01:00:17 particularly if we define
01:00:19 as the point of view
01:00:21 There is always
01:00:24 [ Male Cell Grumbles ]
01:00:26 [ Female Cell Murmurs ]
01:00:29 [ Male Cell #2, Indistinct ]
01:00:33 [ Woman ]
01:00:35 the smallest unit
01:00:38 I'm hungry!
01:00:40 - ^^^^[ Disco ]
01:00:41 - ^^^^[ Disco ]
01:00:44 [ Male Cell ] Oh,yeah.!
01:00:46 - We've commandeered an entire serving platter.
01:00:52 [ Grunts ]
01:00:55 [ Exhales ]
01:00:57 - ^^^^[ Dance ]
01:01:01 Yeah! Keep it coming.
01:01:05 - Delicious.
01:01:08 [ Belches ]
01:01:10 Well, my definition of an addiction
01:01:14 something that you can't stop.
01:01:16 ^^^^[ Continues ]
01:01:19 Don't make me suffer please.
01:01:25 [ Gasping ]
01:01:27 [ Man ] We bring to ourselves
01:01:30 the biochemical craving
01:01:33 by creating situations that
01:01:35 It always happens to me.
01:01:37 - Every day!
01:01:40 And the addict will always
01:01:43 in order to get a rush or a high
01:01:47 Don't tell me to calm down!
01:01:50 So my definition really means that if you
01:01:54 you must be addicted to it.
01:01:56 Oh, I knew
01:02:00 That's not what we agreed upon.!
01:02:03 [ Man ]
01:02:05 - You won't do anything, so I will.
01:02:07 Don't dip your half-eaten shrimp
01:02:11 Screw you and your health codes!
01:02:14 I'll stick my ass in the cocktail sauce
01:02:17 What are you standing there for? Get out and
01:02:22 Fun, fun, fun.!
01:02:25 You won't do anything
01:02:27 [ Girl's Voice ]
01:02:30 [ Man Shouting, Indistinct ]
01:02:33 [ People Shouting, Murmuring ]
01:02:35 - ^^^^[ Continues ]
01:02:41 [ Shutter Clicking ]
01:02:52 ^^^^[ Ends ]
01:02:57 So how can anyone really say
01:03:01 for example?
01:03:04 They're only in love
01:03:06 of the emotions
01:03:10 Because the same person could fall out
01:03:15 My goodness, doesn't that
01:03:18 of our emotional outlook
01:03:23 ^^^^[ Rock ]
01:03:26 - [ Moaning ]
01:03:35 Oh, yeah.
01:03:38 Oh!
01:03:40 - [ Shutter Clicks ]
01:03:43 ^^^^[ Continues ]
01:04:08 - [ Needle Scratches ]
01:04:14 No! No, no, no, no.
01:04:16 You got the--
01:04:18 It's a--
01:04:21 Go on about your, uh--
01:04:24 - Uh, music?
01:04:31 Are-- Are you okay?
01:04:33 Well, I--
01:04:36 I saw that groom
01:04:41 Uh, when?
01:04:43 Just now!
01:04:47 I was with the, uh--
01:04:50 Hey, I can read lips!
01:04:52 Uh, I'm sorry. Uh, I was
01:04:57 Yeah, he loves Paulette.
01:05:00 - Where?
01:05:06 [ Woman Laughs ]
01:05:09 - [ Laughs ]
01:05:17 Polacks-- They all
01:05:20 You're not Polish,
01:05:22 - Thanks. Here.
01:05:25 This-- This'll help.
01:05:35 - Oh, thank you.
01:05:39 That was in my mouth.
01:05:42 ^^^^[ Continues ]
01:05:47 [ Exhales ]
01:05:50 So, what's your name?
01:05:53 - Elliot. Hi.
01:05:57 - It's a--
01:05:59 Hey, Amanda. I should've
01:06:04 - You photograph a lot of weddings?
01:06:08 I'm doing the thing again
01:06:13 We are emotions
01:06:16 Again I can't separate
01:06:18 When you consider that, um...
01:06:21 every aspect
01:06:23 every sphincter
01:06:25 every group of cells that
01:06:28 and then moves out to, um...
01:06:33 heal something
01:06:35 Those are all under the influence
01:06:39 I mean,
01:06:45 [ Man ]
01:06:48 Emotions are not bad.
01:06:51 They color the richness of our experience.
01:06:55 The thing that most people
01:06:58 when they understand
01:07:01 - Another drink?
01:07:04 It's biochemical.
01:07:07 Heroin uses the same receptor mechanisms
01:07:09 that our emotional
01:07:12 It's easy to see then that
01:07:15 then we can be addicted
01:07:19 - To the groom!
01:07:22 Whoo!
01:07:27 - What's up, guys?
01:07:29 - Hello.
01:07:31 - Some foxes.
01:07:33 Yeah, baby!
01:07:49 Cheers.
01:07:55 So--
01:07:59 [ Woman ] The relevant search command
01:08:02 is related to finding
01:08:06 I mean, we can't even
01:08:09 without having
01:08:12 [ Cow Moos ]
01:08:17 [ Dog Barks ]
01:08:23 [ Cow Moos ]
01:08:32 Oh. Oh, gosh.
01:08:36 She wouldn't fall for me.
01:08:38 Oh, mama! Whoo!
01:08:42 What the hell
01:08:45 Come on, ya little pussies!
01:08:50 What are you-- Ooh.! Come on. Come on.
01:08:54 [ Exhales ]
01:08:57 Come on, baby.
01:08:59 Oh, don't give me that look.
01:09:07 Now...
01:09:10 what about people
01:09:19 [ Male Cell Muttering ]
01:09:25 Whoa!
01:09:27 - Whew.!
01:09:34 Is there a rocket in your pocket,
01:09:38 [ Giggling ]
01:09:42 [ Giggling Continues ]
01:09:46 [ Wolf Whistle ]
01:09:56 ^ The lights are on ^
01:09:59 ^^But you're not home ^^
01:10:02 ^^ Your mind is not your own ^^
01:10:05 - Yeow!
01:10:08 ^^ Your body shakes ^^
01:10:10 ^^ Your kiss is what it takes ^^
01:10:13 ^^ You can't sleep, oh ^^
01:10:16 ^^ You can't eat ^^
01:10:18 ^^ There's no doubt
01:10:23 ^^ Your throat is tight
01:10:27 ^^Another kiss
01:10:31 ^^ Whoa,you like to think ^^
01:10:33 ^^ That you're immune
01:10:36 - ^^ Oh,yeah ^^
01:10:40 ^^It's closer to the truth
01:10:44 ^^ You know you're gonna have to face it
01:10:48 ^^ You see the signs
01:10:53 ^^ You're running at
01:10:57 - ^^ Your heart beats in double time ^^
01:11:01 ^^Another kiss
01:11:05 ^^A one-track mind
01:11:10 ^ Oblivion is all you crave ^
01:11:14 ^^If there's some ^^
01:11:16 - I want to hear some--
01:11:18 Would you not touch anything?
01:11:22 ^^ Whoa,you like to think ^^
01:11:25 ^ That you're immune
01:11:27 ^ Oh, yeah ^
01:11:33 - [ Belches ]
01:11:36 These people want to hear some polka music.
01:11:40 - without polka music.!
01:11:45 ^ Might as well face it
01:11:48 No! Would you leave it alone?
01:11:50 How can you have a Polish wedding
01:11:55 - Get your-- [ Bleeps ] hands off my equipment!
01:12:02 - [ Train Whistle Blows ]
01:12:05 it ain't a Polish wedding
01:12:09 ^^^^[ Polka ]
01:13:09 ^^^^[ Ends ]
01:13:42 ^^^^[ Slow Rock ]
01:14:50 [ Crowd Chattering, Applauding ]
01:14:54 [ Woman ]
01:14:58 So it all starts in the cell.
01:15:03 but it gets its signal
01:15:07 One of the things about receptors is
01:15:11 If a given receptor for a given drug
01:15:16 is being bombarded for a long time
01:15:22 it will literally shrink up.
01:15:24 There will be less of them.
01:15:26 Or it will be hooked up
01:15:29 that it is desensitized
01:15:33 So the same amount of drug
01:15:37 will elicit
01:15:47 [ Thunderclap ]
01:15:59 [ Cells Whimpering ]
01:16:05 - [ Bombs Whistle ]
01:16:07 [ Machine Gun Fire ]
01:16:15 [ Gun Fire Continues ]
01:16:17 [ Screams ]
01:16:19 If we're bombarding the cell with
01:16:24 over and over again
01:16:27 when that cell finally
01:16:31 when it produces a sister cell
01:16:35 that next cell will have
01:16:40 for those particular
01:16:43 and less receptor sites...
01:16:45 for vitamins, minerals,
01:16:48 or even the release
01:16:51 Now, all aging is the result
01:16:55 What happens when we age?
01:16:58 Our skin gets--
01:17:00 Well, elastin is a protein.
01:17:03 What happens to our enzymes?
01:17:06 What happens
01:17:08 Those are proteins that
01:17:11 What happens to our bones?
01:17:13 So all aging is a result
01:17:18 So then the question arises...
01:17:20 does it really matter
01:17:23 And does nutrition
01:17:25 if the cell doesn't even
01:17:28 after 20 years
01:17:31 to even receive,
01:17:34 the nutrients that are
01:17:45 [ No Audible Dialogue ]
01:17:54 Okay, guys. It's time
01:17:57 on our trajectory, along
01:18:01 And that course correction is
01:18:05 just an expansion of the old--
01:18:07 just as the universe is larger than
01:18:12 And it's always
01:18:21 I hate you.
01:18:25 [ Sighs ]
01:18:45 I hate you.
01:18:56 [ Screams ]
01:19:02 You idiot!
01:19:06 You suck! Look at you!
01:19:09 You're fat! You're ugly!
01:19:11 You are worth nothing!
01:19:14 I hate you!
01:19:22 [ Water Dripping ]
01:19:37 It makes you wonder,
01:19:41 If thoughts
01:19:44 imagine what our thoughts
01:20:05 [ Woman ]
01:20:08 and ever given you sufficient,
01:20:14 about your beautiful self--
01:20:16 how you work
01:20:20 Why do you have addictions?
01:20:24 You have dreamt
01:20:26 because no one has ever
01:20:30 [ Laughing ]
01:20:34 [ Woman ] Do I think that you are bad?
01:20:37 Do I think you're good?
01:20:40 I think you're God.
01:20:42 [ Laughing Continues ]
01:20:47 In general, the field
01:20:51 allow for enough...
01:20:55 freedom of action
01:20:58 meaning an awful lot of problems--
01:21:01 but an awful lot of problems that
01:21:05 really amount to people
01:21:08 And they ought to be instructed
01:21:13 Can I--
01:21:18 Wow. [ Laughs ]
01:21:20 um, borrow some toothpaste?
01:21:32 Thanks.
01:21:39 [ Man ]
01:21:41 I don't mean that
01:21:44 What I mean is that we move out
01:21:47 that has to do with
01:21:49 that has to do with our association
01:21:54 our association to things
01:21:58 We don't exist in the associative centers
01:22:03 that reaffirms our identity
01:22:07 For the average person
01:22:10 and considers their life
01:22:14 it's because they've
01:22:16 to gain knowledge and information
01:22:19 They're so hypnotized
01:22:23 through the media,
01:22:27 through people living
01:22:31 that everybody struggles
01:22:34 that no one can actually
01:22:36 in terms of physical
01:22:38 and definitions
01:22:42 that are all illusions...
01:22:44 that most people surrender
01:22:49 And they may live that life
01:22:52 their desire may never
01:22:55 so they may want to be
01:22:58 But if it does rise
01:23:01 and, uh, they ask themselves
01:23:05 Or, why am I here?
01:23:08 Where am I going?
01:23:11 They start to ask
01:23:13 They start to flirt and interact
01:23:18 that they may be having
01:23:20 and in reality, what they're doing is
01:23:23 of how they viewed their life and the world
01:24:31 We're in completely new
01:24:35 and because we're in
01:24:37 we're rewiring the brain...
01:24:40 literally reconnecting
01:24:44 Then ultimately it changes us
01:24:50 If I change my mind,
01:24:52 If I change my choices,
01:24:55 Why can't I change?
01:24:58 What will I lose that
01:25:00 and what person, place,
01:25:04 that I'm chemically attached to
01:25:07 because I may have to experience
01:25:11 Hence the human drama.
01:25:24 [ Answering Machine Beeps ]
01:25:26 Amanda, it's Bob,
01:25:30 I hope that
01:25:33 I really want to see you.
01:25:37 I know we can work things out.
01:25:48 [ Woman ]
01:25:50 that has habitation
01:25:53 in enormous subjugation
01:25:59 You know why that is?
01:26:01 It's because people
01:26:05 [ Man ] If I do this,
01:26:08 If I do the other thing,
01:26:11 This is a really
01:26:14 that tries to map out a path in life
01:26:18 but with deplorable results.
01:26:20 Because there really is
01:26:24 We're judging things far
01:26:28 Does that mean you're in favor of sin
01:26:32 It simply means
01:26:36 your expression and understanding
01:26:40 There are things that I do,
01:26:44 There are other things
01:26:46 But it's not good or bad.
01:26:50 because you did
01:26:53 [ Woman ]
01:26:57 Everyone is gods.
01:27:00 At the same time,
01:27:04 is this sort of
01:27:06 for those parts
01:27:10 which are somehow transcendent,
01:27:14 I have no idea what God is.
01:27:18 Yet I have an experience
01:27:21 There is something very real
01:27:24 although I have no idea
01:27:27 to see God as a person
01:27:30 I can't-- I can't seem
01:27:33 It's kind of like asking a human being
01:27:38 is similar to asking a fish to explain
01:27:44 God is a superposition of
01:27:51 [ Woman ]
01:27:54 and you have to walk this path.
01:27:57 But someday,you have
01:28:02 as much as you love
01:28:08 The only way that I will
01:28:12 is not what I do to my body...
01:28:15 but what I do to my mind.
01:28:25 [ Man ] So if we're consciously
01:28:29 and if we're consciously,
01:28:32 throwing in
01:28:34 that our thoughts can affect our reality
01:28:39 'cause reality equals life...
01:28:41 then I have this little pact that I have
01:28:46 I say, ''I'm taking this time
01:28:49 ''and I'm infecting
01:28:54 ''Now, if in fact the observer's watching me
01:29:00 ''and there is a spiritual
01:29:03 ''then show me a sign today
01:29:06 ''to any one of these things
01:29:09 ''and bring them in a way
01:29:13 ''so I'm as surprised at my ability
01:29:17 and make it so that I have no doubt
01:29:50 So the brain is capable of millions
01:29:53 that people just
01:29:56 how incredible they actually are and
01:29:59 and that not only do they have this
01:30:03 that can do so many things for them
01:30:07 it can make us something better
01:30:09 and it can actually help us
01:30:12 There may be some way
01:30:15 to a higher level
01:30:17 where we can actually understand
01:30:20 where we can understand our relationship
01:30:24 and we can ultimately make more meaning
01:30:27 We can show that there's
01:30:30 but it's a part that we all can have access
01:30:45 [ Man ]
01:30:48 and be so concentrated on it
01:30:52 and have so much
01:30:54 that we lose track
01:30:57 We lose track of time.
01:30:59 We lose track
01:31:01 And the moment we become so involved
01:31:06 that we lose track of ourselves,
01:31:10 that picture is the only
01:31:13 And everybody's had
01:31:16 when they've made up their mind
01:31:19 That's quantum physics
01:31:21 That's manifesting reality.
01:31:28 [ Man ] Your consciousness
01:31:33 It influences
01:31:38 It influences your future.
01:31:42 You are cocreating
01:32:11 [ Man ] Show me a sign today
01:32:14 to any one of these things
01:32:16 and bring them in a way
01:32:20 so I'm as surprised at my ability
01:32:24 and make it so that I have no doubt
01:32:33 [ Man ]
01:32:35 [ Man #2 ]
01:32:38 [ Man #3 ] Consciousness of religion
01:32:49 [ Woman ]
01:32:52 through the eyes of someone else
01:32:59 What an initiation.
01:33:08 Have you ever stopped for a moment
01:33:13 through the eyes
01:34:03 [ Man ]
01:34:07 I can be much more
01:34:11 I can influence
01:34:16 I can influence space itself.
01:34:20 I can influence the future.
01:34:24 I am responsible
01:34:28 I and the surround
01:34:32 They're part of one.
01:34:35 I'm connected to it all.
01:34:38 I'm not alone.
01:34:45 Knowing that there's this
01:34:48 that we are all interconnected and that
01:34:52 at its fundamental level...
01:34:54 I think is as good an explanation
01:34:58 It is my belief
01:35:02 is to develop our gifts
01:35:07 and learn how to be
01:35:11 We are here to be creators.
01:35:14 We are here
01:35:19 with ideas
01:35:23 We are here to make something
01:35:26 To acknowledge
01:35:29 to acknowledge the place
01:35:32 to acknowledge mind--
01:35:34 When that shift of perspective
01:35:38 we say that somebody
01:35:47 Quantum mechanics allows
01:35:52 phenomenon of freedom...
01:35:54 to be woven into
01:36:00 [ Man ] Quantum physics,
01:36:04 is a physics of possibilities.
01:36:07 It opens fundamentally the question
01:36:11 and who chooses
01:36:14 to give us the actual event
01:36:17 The only answer that is satisfactory
01:36:21 is the answer that consciousness
01:36:26 We must pursue knowledge...
01:36:30 without any interference
01:36:33 and if we can do that,
01:36:37 and our bodies
01:36:40 in new ways, in new chemistry,
01:36:45 new elsewheres of thought...
01:36:49 beyond our wildest dreams.
01:36:52 All of us one day will reach
01:36:56 that we have read about
01:36:58 the Buddhas and theJesus.
01:37:03 [ Woman ]
01:37:06 withoutjudgment,
01:37:10 without testing,
01:37:14 That we simply are has allowed
01:37:19 from the power
01:37:22 to pull out of inertness,
01:37:26 and hold it into its form...
01:37:28 and we call it matter.
01:37:40 [ Ship Horn Blowing ]
01:37:43 - [ Bell Rings ]
01:37:48 [ Man ]
01:37:50 We get to live our life and see then
01:37:54 something's changed.
01:37:57 [ Bird Continues Squawking ]
01:37:59 [ Man ]
01:38:01 we become the scientists
01:38:05 which is the whole reason
01:38:09 [ Bell Rings ]
01:38:24 [ Horn Blowing ]
01:38:50 [ Man ]
01:38:53 Test it out and see
01:39:09 - Hey, you're back.
01:39:13 - So you never answered my question.
01:39:17 How far down the rabbit hole
01:39:44 Ponder that for a while.
01:39:56 My name's David Albert.
01:39:59 I, uh, got a Ph.D.
01:40:06 I studied biochemistry
01:40:10 and then went to chiropractic
01:40:12 at Life University in Atlanta,
01:40:15 My postgraduate training is
01:40:18 neurochemistry, neurophysiology
01:40:23 I study quantum physics.
01:40:26 I have written a book on quantum physics
01:40:29 explicating the meaning
01:40:35 After my Ph.D. from Harvard,
01:40:38 a European laboratory
01:40:40 and then joined faculty
01:40:42 And my work there has been the development
01:40:46 I have about a hundred publications
01:40:50 for the discovery
01:40:53 grand unified field theory.
01:41:00 I make my living
01:41:03 and every day as I put
01:41:05 I kind of wonder where they go and why
01:41:09 That's one of the reasons
01:41:11 to anesthesia and
01:41:18 My name is Miceal Ledwith...
01:41:20 and for most of my life
01:41:28 I'm Dr. Daniel Monti.
01:41:31 with specialty training in
01:41:34 I'm on the full-time faculty at
01:41:39 I actually got very interested
01:41:41 this whole topic of the brain
01:41:44 because it had to do with the questions
01:41:48 about reality and how we understood truth
01:41:52 As I grew up
01:41:54 while spirituality was,
01:41:57 a very important part
01:41:59 science also was
01:42:01 I was ultimately looking
01:42:04 of bringing those
01:42:11 Well, my name is Candace Pert...
01:42:13 and I'm a professor at Georgetown
01:42:20 Here we are actually filming
01:42:23 Everyone in this room
01:42:25 now that we got 'em thinking.
01:42:28 That's always a trick,
01:42:33 I should make it clear that
01:42:36 I'm not a full-fledged
01:42:40 Uh, but if fortune
01:42:43 and I continue to work like a dog on
01:42:48 eventually what I hope
01:42:50 is to apply fundamental
01:42:54 to quantum information
01:42:59 So I decided, well, if I gave up
01:43:03 and if I gave up all my
01:43:05 and I gave up all my government committees,
01:43:10 that I could put to work.
01:43:12 Of course I gave up
01:43:15 but you have
01:43:17 I had to keep my day job
01:43:28 I presume that you're asking me
01:43:31 because I must be sounding
01:43:36 It's really an interesting question.
01:43:41 and seriously enough
01:43:44 if you don't come out feeling
01:43:47 you haven't understood a thing.
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