validated by the observerâs presence. In short, an observer affects the reality of that which is being observed. Whatâs more, the observer neednât even be human.
In a study recently conducted at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, researchers discovered, with the aid of a chemical electronic electron detector, that observer witnessing was all that was necessary to cause changes in the interference patterns of electron waves. In other words, the device had the same effect on the wave changes as a human observer. Observation by anything causes changes in wave patterns. Both mathematical probability and physics continue to take our collective perception of dimensional reality to new levels.
âHilbert Space,â named after German mathematician David Hilbert in the first decade of the twentieth century, refers to extended methods of calculus and algebra from the three-dimensional space to an infinite number of dimensions. This mathematical approach revealed a theoretical framework with an infinite number of vectors in an abstract space with an infinite number of dimensions. Hilbert space bridges the logic of mathematical probability with the abstract of infinite possibility. A very different level of intellectual thought or consciousness is required to grasp the concept of a multidimensional universe.
American physicist David Bohm advanced a holographic theory of the universe he called the âimplicate order,â which connects everything with everything else as an unbroken whole, in one undivided movement, with no boundaries. Bohmâs theory, intuited from profound insights, begins with his assertion that particles are complete systems with complex internal structures containing detailed information that manifests in quantum wave form. In short, Bohm gave physics a soul. With his implicate order, elementary particles take on animation. These once âroboticâ elements suddenly emerge with a âconsciousâ identity. Bohm identified a unique DNA, spirit, and heartbeat in every particle. Furthermore, he united them, freed them, and perhaps freed us from all restrictive boundaries and dimensions.
A PERSONAL SHIFT
My perception of life has been forever changed. The person Iâve transformed into over the past thirty years is so radically different, I feel like a Ruth Montgomery âwalk-in.â I no longer perceive reality in the same way I once did. I was raised to believe that life revolves around living âstuff,â and that living âstuffâ generates the action that produces energy. I believed the universe to be a domain of forms. There were stars that shone, rivers that flowed, and animals that walked and talked. Mine was a matter-centric reality. Humans represented beings of form that produced energy by thinking, walking, talking, and doing. I was raised to accept that matter precededâand therefore producedâenergy. This all changed as soon as I began to delve into classical Chinese medicine.
Almost immediately after initiating this work, I began to see life from a very different vantage point. Chinese medicine assumes an energy-centric reality and, not unlike Bohmâs implicate order, it is based on a universal cosmology of origin, structure, and change. Through the prisms of both Bohmâs implicate order and the Chinese medicine hologram, we see past and future, East and West integrated as one. This age-old culture has forever ascribed to the belief that energy represents the unseen source of all things. This ancient quantum wisdom resonated with my innermost instincts and continues to be my greatest source of personal and professional inspiration.
During the course of my early studies, a few basic messages were common threads woven through the fabric of every scintilla of information that Iâd encountered. Energy is everywhere. Reality begins with energy. Energy isnât merely the effect, itâs the