Mysticism is very subjective, seldom taking the physical world into
account, only going so far as to affirm that we exist, although quite
often in a profound way. One important qualification can be added: as
Descartes stated; "I think, therefore I am." Within the whole of
reality, within the vast domains of philosophy and science, can there
be anything more vital and important? When it comes to each of us as
unique individuals, I think not. Yet human experience begs the
question: is there any intrinsic relationship between the existence of
mind and the universe itself? Scientists have come up with very
convincing theories, backed by calculations, that describe the origin
and possible fate of the universe. Unfortunately, you and I, and
mankind as a whole, seem to come out of these theories as some sort of
accident, rather than with any kind of intent. 'We have no cosmic
purpose, we should find meaning within our lives, and be content with
that,' they tell us. I beg to differ. My own mystic intuition leads me
to believe that mind was present at the formation of the universe, and
more importantly, the reason for the existence of the universe--nothing
less.
The Future of Astrology:
Origin and Physics of the Sentient Universe
by John Hammelton
Foreward
Dear fellow astrologer,
Like many of you, I have come to believe astrology by virtue of
working with it. Those that criticize have not had that experience;
nonetheless, it's a problem for astrology and astrologers. I learned
early on that the scientific community had no appreciation for
astrology other than as an antiquated superstition. They believe we are
out to bilk a gullible public; we're nothing more than charlatans. On
the other hand, Western theologians are quick to denounce astrology as
blasphemous, and astrologers as servants of Satan. If you have ever
listened to a sermon by a preacher ranting and raving about the occult,
you'll know what I mean. They'll even discourage you to study
philosophy because it may lead you to question your faith. Even among
certain groups of neither persuasion that I occasionally mingle with, I
dared not admit to being an astrologer, because I knew I'd lose my
credibility. It usually comes across as raised eyebrows; a long
silence, then a change of subjects.
If this isn't bad enough, astrologers have made it even worse;
they squabble among themselves over petty differences while the truth
of astrology itself is ignored. At seminars and conventions, I became
like Socrates, stopping the citizens of Athens to question their
beliefs. I asked astrologers why and how it worked; what were the
underlying principles. Their responses were appalling. They really had
no idea. But most of them simply stated they didn't know, but it
worked, and that was good enough for them--end of discussion.
During my schooling in philosophy I searched high and low for
some fundamental reason why astrology should work. Finally I discovered
the system of Plotinus, a third century AD philosopher often referred
to as the father of Neo-Platonism. Over the years I've worked to put
together a conceptual foundation for astrological thought entitled the
Philosophy of Astrology. I somewhat expected the astrological community
to accept this as a defense for their beliefs. Rather than try to
exploit it financially, I put it up on the Internet for all to think
about. After many years, to my consternation, astrologers have shown no
interest at all. I soon realized that due to preconceptions and biases
it was too much of a stretch to make astrologers comfortable. No one
has argued against it, but no one has accepted it either.
If I still have your attention, then I humbly ask for a little
more. With recent satellite studies of the heavens, and new theories
about the origin of the universe, I think I can give a scientific
explanation that supports a Philosophy of Astrology. If the explanation
that follows is found to be credible, then my interpretation of
Plotinus' metaphysical description of the solar system stands on firm
ground, and the implications have to be accepted. Those of you that
have an interest, and desire to take astrology out of the world of
superstition, and make it worthy of greater respect are encouraged to
consider what I'm saying. I would greatly appreciate any response.
Physics and Metaphysics
Mysticism is very subjective, seldom taking the physical world into
account, only going so far as to affirm that we exist, although quite
often in a profound way. One important qualification can be added: as
Descartes stated; "I think, therefore I am." Within the whole of
reality, within the vast domains of philosophy and science, can there
be anything more vital and important? When it comes to each of us as
unique individuals, I think not. Yet human experience begs the
question: is there any intrinsic relationship between the existence of
mind and the universe itself? Scientists have come up with very
convincing theories, backed by calculations, that describe the origin
and possible fate of the universe. Unfortunately, you and I, and
mankind as a whole, seem to come out of these theories as some sort of
accident, rather than with any kind of intent. 'We have no cosmic
purpose, we should find meaning within our lives, and be content with
that,' they tell us. I beg to differ. My own mystic intuition leads me
to believe that mind was present at the formation of the universe, and
more importantly, the reason for the existence of the universe--nothing
less.
It is easy to say that, but much more difficult to explain. The
explanation rests within philosophy and scientific theory; philosophy
describes the metaphysical reality, and science describes its physical
structure. Since mind plays the primary role in this essay, and because
mind manifests in several ways, it is necessary to find definitions
specific to its nature. Mind simply defined means: psyche, anima, Nous,
intellect, thought, conscience, soul, spirit, quintessence, sentience,
and aether. Mind, or henceforth M-theory, is divided into three
categories, or states, or functions; they are: mind-flux, or M-flux,
mind-field, or M-field, and mind-factor, or M-factor. M-flux refers to
primordial mind, to mind without content; mind as an ontological
foundation or function. M-field refers to stellar entities, often
referred to as solar logos, the sun; the life source of any planet.
M-factor pertains to living organisms, most likely from the level of
fungi to human beings, and is not unique to the planet Earth. Mind is a
form of mass/energy; we'll call this the M-force.
The Formation of the Universe
The latest and most convincing theory about the formation of the
universe comes from inflation theory. Alan Guth at MIT worked out the
basic idea. Physicists predicted as early as 1922 and confirmed in the
1960s that the universe came from a tiny point that exploded into a
fireball of extreme heat and density. This tiny point became known as a
singularity, it is believed that at the time of the singularity all the
known forces of the universe were unified. The four forces are gravity,
electro-magnetism, and the strong and weak nuclear forces. Fairly
recently all of these forces, except gravity, have been unified in what
is now called a grand unified theory or GUT. Understanding gravity at
the atomic level has been elusive; gravity at the cosmic plane is well
known having been described by Newton several centuries ago. At the
level of stars and galaxies, gravity is a powerful force pervading the
universe, but is almost undetectable at sub-atomic levels. A theory of
quantum gravity will have to be understood before all four forces of
nature can be unified. Nonetheless, gravity was essential to the
beginning of the universe.
Prior to Guth's inflationary theory scientists knew little about how
the Big Bang, as it is called, came into being. Inflation theory solved
many riddles about the beginning of creation that have come to be
accepted by most physicists and cosmologists today. Within a second of
this explosive period the universe expanded by 25 orders of magnitude.
This means that the universe expanded from a point a billionth the size
of a proton, which is one of the building blocks of matter, to the size
of a marble. It then slowed and cooled over time to the size it is
today, which is still expanding. This is equivalent to a pearl
exploding to the size of the Milky Way. The power of this fireball is
unimaginable, evolving into a boiling stew or quark soup; within that
fraction of a second the forces of raw energy began splitting apart.
(That fraction of a second has been calculated to between ten to the
minus 37th second, and ten to the minus 34th second. This is a decimal
point followed by 33 zeros and a one).
Guth surmises that the whole universe may be a "free lunch." [1]
This is not an easy concept to explain. One reason is that it comes out
of the weird world of quantum mechanics. Quantum theory holds that in
any physical system probability rules over absolutes. It is impossible
to predict the properties of an atom, although one can predict the
properties of atoms in general. Now think of a pure vacuum; it seems
counter-intuitive, and even contradictory to say that something can
come out of nothing. If something can come out of a vacuum, then it's
not a vacuum by definition. Right? Wrong! Due to quantum uncertainties
something can come out of nothing. It is scientifically possible that a
particle can materialize out of a vacuum and disappear back into it.
Physicists call it a vacuum fluctuation. Even empty space contains a
slight energy field. It tends to answer the age-old philosophical
question of why there isn't just nothing. Out of this primordial vacuum
came a hot plasmic stew from which bubbled sub-atomic particles that
existed for the briefest of moments. Inflation theorists call this
eruption a false vacuum. Since the universe is still expanding from the
initial Big Bang, the false vacuum is considered to have a repulsive
gravitational field. As the expansion doubled exponentially, so too did
the energy of gravity, and hence the doubling of matter, such as
particles of electrons, positrons, and neutrinos. To explain the
emergence of matter, cosmologists say that some state of the false
vacuum decayed; this is an important aspect of creation. Einstein
recognized this possibility when he perceived that energy and matter
are essentially equivalent--as in E=MC2. After about 300,000 years, the
universe cooled sufficiently to allow simple atoms to form like
hydrogen, helium, and lithium. The dense fog that existed before
dissipated, and the universe became very dark; there were as yet no
stars.
M-force and M-theory
Before I get too far ahead of myself, I want to go back and incorporate
M-theory into the scenario being created in this essay. My purpose is
to present the latest ideas and theories in physics and cosmology that
are consistent with M-theory. It is my firm belief that any theory that
purportedly attempts to explain everything can't be complete unless it
includes the very consciousness that formulates it. The only thing
known about gravity has been its attractive force; now inflation theory
requires it to have a repulsive force too. I think it has one more
property that will unify all the known forces, as we shall see. It
should be emphasized that this is a theory without much evidence to
back it up; other than it makes sense, and brings metaphysics and
physics together for the first time.
As I stated at the beginning of my discussion, M-flux was present at
the beginning of creation, and may have been a random, spontaneous,
free lunch, but I think there was meaning and purpose behind it. While
maybe not planned in any conscious sense, there is possibly an
autonomic reaction that occurs in other places as well where there is
no space or time. M-flux is not a thing with properties that can be
detected in a machine, because it is all around us; it is a force
associated with gravity, and is not separate from the energy that holds
it, although it may well be the source of the energy itself. From
within, its power manifests both as a repulsive force driving the
expansion, and the attractive force of matter. The brief period before
inflation has been referred to as the era of quantum gravity. As I
mentioned earlier, quantum gravity is unknown, but has to be assumed
for the sake of theory, once its nature is discerned it should fit in
with the other three known forces; this will be a rare moment for
science. The repulsive gravitational field, or M-force, or false
vacuum, had the power to explode from an incredibly dense point into a
universe. With the doubling of energy and its subsequent decay into
particles of simple matter, we might think of this as the first act of
creation. Matter and energy separated out of the M-force to become
opposing entities. After the inflationary period ended the M-force
returned to a less energetic state, or M-flux, now governed by the
classic laws of big bang theory, or Newtonian physics.
About eighty-five years ago Albert Einstein observed the universe as
it appeared, unmoving and static with stars and galaxies fixed in their
positions. But he also realized that the gravitational attraction
between these bodies would slowly pull them together, although that did
not seem to be happening. So he introduced a few calculations into his
General Theory of Relativity that created an opposing force to counter
gravity. He called it Lambda, and it later became known as the
Cosmological Constant. In 1929 Edwin Hubble using the new 100-inch
telescope on Mt. Wilson discovered that the stars and galaxies were
actually moving away from each other, and that the universe was
expanding. Einstein quickly dropped Lambda. Soon new ideas arose
concerning the shape of the universe and the geometries that determine
it. Einstein's theory of relativity entailed a non Euclidean geometry
that resulted in a closed universe because space bends in on itself; it
has a finite volume and the shape of a sphere. A spaceship traveling in
a straight line will eventually return to where it started. In a closed
universe gravity will overcome the expansion and begin to contract; all
the stars and galaxies will be pulled back into what's called a Big
Crunch. In another cosmological model, a universe with very little mass
will lack enough gravitational force to stop the expansion, so space is
open, or infinite in volume, and the universe will expand forever.
There is a third model that is precisely the borderline between a
closed and an open universe. It is the exact point between eternal
expansion and eventual collapse; cosmologists say that it has reached
critical mass density. Amazingly enough the universe is at that point
today; amazing because theorists are at a loss to explain why those
values are so precise, and because there is no necessity, we're aware
of, that they should be. When in perfect balance scientists say that
Omega equals one; if less than one, an open universe results; if more,
a closed universe. A universe in which Omega equals one is said to be
flat. (Referring to its Euclidean geometry). The conservation of energy
in a flat universe is maintained due to the perfect equilibrium of all
the negative energy of gravity and all the positive energy of matter.
Precise measurements of the energy left over from the Big Bang, called
the cosmic background radiation, confirm that Omega equals one.
M-flux, or Dark Matter
While you may think this is all very interesting, it is crucial to
understanding how the M-flux, or in more popular terms, dark matter,
came to be identified, and why its role is so important today. When
astronomers attempt to tally up all the matter in the universe they
come up 90 to 99 percent short of what should be there. It's
interesting to wonder what astronomers are thinking when they look
through their telescopes knowing that maybe they're only seeing one
percent of what's out there. The M-flux, or dark matter, exists
throughout the universe, but remains elusive until it reveals itself
through its gravity. This is most apparent where gravity is the
strongest, and that's around galaxies and clusters of galaxies. As
galaxies bunch within huge clumps of dark matter, the light coming from
behind these galaxies bends to reveal the outline of this invisible
stuff. Supercomputer simulations predict that bright galaxies will
group tightly together under powerful gravitational forces within huge
concentrations of dark matter. It is almost as if a parent were
gathering its children unto itself. One more thing needs to be said
before we move on. Recent studies have surprised the scientific
community with the realization that the expansion of the universe is
not slowing down as expected, in fact, it's accelerating. Some unknown
and unseen force, now being called dark energy, is behind this
discovery. I've already discussed the repulsive force behind inflation,
and believe it works just as well to explain the acceleration. If
energy and mass are equivalent, then enough gravity will preserve the
balance required to keep Omega at one. Paul Steinhardt of Princeton
University theorizes that the delicate balance between energy and
matter would be suspicious if there were no communication between the
two. He proposes that repulsive energy senses the presence of matter
and changes its strength and distribution to maintain a balance of
densities. [2] I believe this is consistent with M-theory.
The early universe was smooth and uniform, and very nearly without
structure or features. The gravity of M-flux, or dark matter, evenly
and smoothly distributed throughout space, remained quietly still for
millions of years. Eventually slight perturbations of gravity began to
grow from tiny primordial fluxuations. These became the seeds of later
galaxy formation once stars began forming. The M-flux slowly clumped
and formed halos around regions that had grown to slightly higher
concentrations of gaseous matter. As the halos grew more massive, they
pulled in and confined small amounts of hydrogen and helium gas;
exactly what the first stars were made from. [3] This happened rapidly
enough that the material did not fragment, but instead grew into
massive hot stars. Light flooded through the universe, ending the
cosmic dark ages. Soon numerous other stars flashed into existence.
These first stars differed from many stars that exist today because
they lacked any heavy elements such as iron and gold, but within their
hot cores, under intense pressure and heat, the simple atoms were
crushed into more complex heavy elements. These first stars being as
heavy and massive as they were tended to have short lives, and ended by
exploding their outer shells into space. Such stars are called
supernovas. Future generations of stars, such as our sun, could now
form from this new material. Without heavy metals, life could not have
evolved on Earth. We, quite literally, along with our cars and
televisions, are the products of stellar forces, not only physically
but as sentient beings as well. In my nomenclature this is the
transition from negative M-flux to positive M-field. In terms of
physics the negative false vacuum decayed into matter that accreted
into stars with an attractive gravitational force. In terms of
Plotinus' dialectic, the One went out of itself into its otherness;
unity now became multiplicity.
The M-flux, as defined, may have had nothing more than a vague
intent, such as maybe an egg having the intent of becoming a chicken.
With the intent now further realized in the M-field, the means took
shape with the power and the material to act. The star was born with an
objective, that objective contained a plan; from universal M-flux to
particular M-field, M-factor now became possible. In plain terms, life
emerging from the cosmos is much more than an accident. A single
mushroom produces millions of spores, but only a few, if even those,
ever produce mushrooms. Stars spawn life, but only a few ever do so;
conditions are rather exacting. When an astronomer observes the heavens
she sees stars, galaxies, and clusters of galaxies. This arrangement
enhances the possibility for life. It took billions of years for stars
to form life-supporting planets, and those planets must be at the right
distance from the star, in what's called the habitable zone. The star
must also be in the right place within the galaxy; too close to the
center and too far from the outer edge make life impossible. I would
expect that life throughout the universe might not look or be anything
like what the Earth holds, but I'll let science fiction writers work on
that. Our star is more than a burning ball of gas. The M-field of the
Sun turns to Earth and through heat and light the M-factor emerges into
living organisms of matter, energy and sentience; giving back to the
cosmos what it has taken in; never cut off from its source; returning
to itself what it has always been in eternal perpetuation, in living
legacy to be born again.
Genesis & the Big Bang
What I've said so far may sound reasonable, but if it's true, then
it has profound implications. My theory puts mind at the beginning of
creation. Cosmologists put mind at the end of creation. My theory is
based on Platonic philosophy, but the scientific view is consistent
with Genesis, which tells how God made everything first, then added
Adam and Eve; finally He gave them choice, or sentience. Oddly enough,
science doesn't need God since everything can pretty well be explained
without Him; my theory is mystical, but doesn't need Genesis, yet
somehow requires a god-like something that gives rise to the Idea of
creation. My theory presumes that the Big Bang could have just to as
easily erupted from something prior, rather than nothing, suggesting an
infinite and eternal source. Big Bang theory postulates a beginning of
time and space giving it a sense of temporality and finiteness. Let me
ask this, as others have: where do the laws of physics come from? Alan
Guth says: "We are a long way from being able to answer that one." [4]
In my theory the laws of physics have always been there. Scientists
have discovered them, not invented them.
The Big Bang occurred about thirteen thousand million years ago.
Life on Earth began between one and two thousand million years ago.
Humans diverged from primates about seven or eight million years ago.
The development of human intelligence has taken thousands of years, but
it has only been since the early Greeks that mathematics became a tool
for explanation. In the last few decades alone the leap in knowledge
has been phenomenal. Scientists that pool their intellectual brilliance
should be the first to recognize what power the mind has. I think it
would be natural for them to feel that if there were something God-like
about creation, the closest thing in the universe that even comes close
to the ideal of God is the human species. (I know: humans don't often
live up to that ideal, but nevertheless, the statement may be true.) In
fact, scientists feel just the opposite; they seem to be ashamed that
sentience should hold any place of value in the scheme of things. They
confuse intellect with ego, and call it human chauvinism. You can't
have science without mind, but it has no status other than as a simple
tool, and worse yet, falls into the black pit of mysticism. OK, that's
not a problem, since mysticism can't be left out of any final theory.
Sentient Life
The M-factor, sentient life, rests on three pillars: mind, matter,
and energy. Like the universe, they are in perfect balance, proportion,
and unity. One way to diagram the three M's: flux, field, and factor is
to imagine a circle, or draw a circle on paper, then imagine another
circle, or draw it, and superimpose that one on the other, but only
partially, say about a fourth or third. You now have three spaces; one
has been formed in the middle by over-lapping the two circles. Now
think of a third circle or draw it, and superimpose it over the other
two in the same proportion as the first two. The three circles now
overlap, creating a single space in the center. All three circles share
this same space. (It's called a Venn diagram). In one circle you could
write M-factor, in the second circle M-flux, and in the third circle,
M-field. The point here is to illustrate that while basically of the
same "stuff," they are three distinct entities with overlapping
dimensions. But the main point is that they are never cut off from each
other, or spatially separate; there is always a place of unity. They
share the same eternal moment in time and space. To make it a little
more proportional draw the flux circle large; the field circle smaller,
and the factor circle even smaller. This illustration might serve many
explanatory purposes; remember when you were a kid, your parents told
you: "Be good, cause God knows what you're thinkin'." It could also
explain how prayers work. But probably the most important thing of all
is that it opens the way to an eternal heaven; yes, life after death.
When the scientist excludes mysticism from his mind, no matter how
brilliant a theorist he or she might be, they shut off a good portion
of their psyche. For them, mind is a product of the brain that perishes
with death.
The M-factor might be thought of as consisting of waves, maybe
gravity waves. Since the M-factor includes all life of varying
complexity, it seems natural that different life forms would emit
different wavelengths. It allows each species to communicate, in terms
of interaction, at its own specific frequency. Because human beings
live at frequencies that are very close to the same so-called
bandwidth, there is an innate potential for the frequency to become
variable, and interface directly between individuals. Most of us are
not aware of this; it only becomes apparent when psychic episodes
occur. Like it or not, telepathy, clairvoyance, and other forms of ESP
are a fact. From stars to life the M-factor interfaces with them all,
but at frequencies that don't usually connect. A mother suddenly
becomes intensely aware of an immediate danger to her child a thousand
miles away. We know who's on the phone a second before it rings:
life-wave frequencies connecting. The history of mysticism tells even
more: Plotinus' ascent into the One; Saint Teresa, or Saint John of the
Cross lifting to divine union with the Father; the Hindu merging with
the Absolute; the mushroom tripper experiencing cosmic consciousness.
The Godhead is open to all, because we're not cutoff from it. One
condition that all mystics have understood from the beginning is that
wavelengths interfacing with higher levels of consciousness require a
high level of moral consciousness to open a channel. To paraphrase
Plotinus: " . . . cut away all that is excessive, straighten all that
is crooked, bring light to all that is overcast; never cease until you
shall see the perfect goodness surely established in the stainless
shrine." [5] As mankind becomes ever more intimately connected to
technology and sense experience, so do the deeper intuitive reservoirs
of awareness begin to dry up. The Goodness we should be seeing today in
the world is over-shadowed by dark clouds; we need to look further
about us for the light.
The M-factor, or psyche, doesn't seem to fit within the classic laws
of physics, but a theory of quantum gravity just might, even though
physicists haven't been able to come up with it, yet. In one famous
scientific experiment researchers aim a beam of light through two
parallel slits allowing photons to pass through either one or the
other, recording the photons as they impinge on a photographic plate.
If an experimenter observes the photons passing through the slits, then
the photons arrive at the plate as particles. If the researcher does
not observe the experiment, then the photons arrive at the plate as a
wave, which records as a band of light and dark shades rather than as a
cluster of dots. This phenomenon remains unexplained. Standard quantum
theory holds that sub-atomic particles don't have any properties, such
as spin and velocity, until they are observed. In another famous
experiment an electron and its opposite, a positron, are allowed to
collide and annihilate each other producing two photons that scatter in
different directions. The first photon doesn't have any properties
until noted by an observer, which causes the photon to take on a
certain spin. What's strange is how the second photon, that no matter
how far apart, and despite no connection whatsoever, takes on the
opposite spin. When scientists try to explain these phenomena, they
come up with vague and bizarre notions. The great physicist John
Wheeler says: "The process whereby the macroscopic world reacts to a
quantum event--the process that makes physical reality--can, in my
view, be accomplished with inanimate matter. Following Niels Bohr, I
like to call this process 'registration' rather than observation (which
too strongly suggests human involvement)." [6] Andrei Linde, another
great physicist, says: "I can't imagine a theory of everything that
ignores consciousness," and "In the absence of observers, our universe
is dead." [7] He adds in a letter: "When I talk about conscious
observers, I do not necessarily mean human beings." [8] What these two
very distinguished gentlemen seem to be saying is that the researchers
that set up the experiments mentioned above, and then observed the
results, are not 'necessarily' human. It's interesting to see how far
scientists will go to avoid implicating mysticism in any description of
reality; might as well throw the baby out with the bathwater.
It's also interesting to contemplate how scientists are going to
shun this paper, and outright reject what I've said as ridiculous,
while at the same time, theologians will claim that my ideas are just
as ridiculous, and even go so far as to call them blasphemous, and
Satanic. These two sides are so far apart that any chance of
reconciling both science and religion looks virtually impossible.
What's even more certain is that when I go on to explain how astrology
comes to bring these two diverse positions together they will mutually
denounce me as totally off my rocker. Nonetheless, there has to be a
way of showing how a spiritual universe works in terms of how a
physical universe works. Yes, they are opposite sides of the same
thing, as the two sides of a coin; yin and yang, positive and negative,
thesis-antithesis, good and evil, love and hate, life and death; this
is what reality is all about.
Life emerged out of the creative forces born from the caldron of
stellar fire as an Idea, and an Ideal. From this point of light,
distinction appeared in octaves of power stepped down to mighty Beings
we see as planets. Creation became manifest in the Earth, as the Idea
unfolded into reality. To continue on with what has been started here
go to: http://www.soultrek.com.
References and Notes
Guth, Alan. The Inflationary Universe. New York: Addison-Wesley, 1997.
Kraus, Lawrence. Quintessence. New York: Basic Books, 2000.
Plotinus. The Enneads. Trans. by Stephen Mackenna. New York: Pantheon Books, n.d.
Rubin, Vera. Bright Galaxies Dark Matter. New York: American Institute of Physics, 1996.
1. Guth, Alan. Inflationary Universe. p. 15.
2. Wright, Karen. "The Very Dark Universe." Discover, March 1991, p.76.
3. Cowen, Ron. "Cosmic Dawn." Science News. June 8 2002. p. 362-4.
4. Lemley, Brad. "Guth's Grand Guess." Discover, April 2002, p. 38.
5. Plotinus. The Enneads. 1.6.9.
6. Discover. "Letters." August, 2002, p. 8.
7. Folger, Tim. „Does the Universe Exist if We're Not Looking" Discover, June 2002. p. 48.
8. Discover. "Letters." August, 2002, p. 8.
Special thanks to Dr. Gary Bowman of the Physics and Astronomy Dept. at
Northern Arizona University for his helpful suggestions and comments.
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