IT’S a question pondered by philosophers, scientists and the devout since the dawn of time: is there an afterlife?
While the religious would argue that life on earth is a mere warm up
for an eternity spent in heaven or hell, and many scientists would
dismiss the concept for lack of proof – one expert claims he has
definitive evidence to confirm once and for all that there is indeed
life after death.
The answer, Prof. Robert Lanza says, lies in
quantum physics – specifically the theory of biocentrism. The scientist,
from Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina,
United States, says the evidence lies in the idea that the concept of
death is a mere figment of our consciousness.
Lanza says
biocentrism explains that the universe only exists because of an
individual’s consciousness of it – essentially life and biology are
central to reality, which in turn creates the universe; the universe
itself does not create life. The same applies to the concepts of space
and time, which Professor Lanza describes as “simply tools of the mind”.
In a message posted on the scientist’s website, he explains that with
this theory in mind, the concept of death as we know it is “cannot exist
in any real sense” as there are no true boundaries by which to define
it. Essentially, the idea of dying is something we have long been taught
to accept, but in reality it just exists in our minds.
Lanza says
biocentrism is similar to the idea of parallel universes - a concept
hypothesised by theoretical physicists. In much the same way as
everything that could possibly happen is speculated to be occurring all
at once across multiple universes, he says that once we begin to
question our preconceived concepts of time and consciousness, the
alternatives are huge and could alter the way we think about the world
in a way not seen since the 15th century’s “flat earth” debate.
He
goes on to use the so-called double-slit experiment as proof that the
behaviour of a particle can be altered by a person’s perception of it.
In the experiment, when scientists watch a particle pass through a
multi-holed barrier, the particle acts like a bullet travelling through a
single slit. When the article is not watched, however, the particle
moves through the holes like a wave.
Scientists argue that the
double-slit experiment proves that particles can act as two separate
entities at the same time, challenging long-established ideas of time
and perception.
Although the idea is rather complicated, Lanza says
it can be explained far more simply using colours. Essentially, the sky
may be perceived as blue, but if the cells in our brain were changed to
make the sky look green, was the sky ever truly blue or was that just
our perception?
In terms of how this affects life after death,
Lanza explains that when we die, our life becomes a “perennial flower
that returns to bloom in the multiverse”.
He added: “Life is an
adventure that transcends our ordinary linear way of thinking. When we
die, we do so not in the random billiard-ball-matrix but in the
inescapable-life-matrix.”
Lanza’s theory is explained in full in
his book Biocentrism: How Life and Consciousness are the Keys to
Understanding the True Nature of the Universe.
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