Eternal Life And Mystery Of Quantum Physics
When we die, explains Professor Lance, our life becomes a perennial plant that starts to bloom in the multiverse.
Robert Lanza, a professor of the Medical School Wake Forest in North Carolina, said that the answer to the question of whether there is life after death, which attracts philosophers, scientists and believers, lies in quantum physics, especially the theory of biocentrism.
According to him, the proof of the fact that the afterlife truly exists is contained in the idea that idea of death is just a part or fragment of our consciousness.
On his website, Lance explains that the image of death as we know "cannot exist in the real sense," and that we have trained and learned to accept "the idea of dying", but that it exists only in our minds.
The world exists only because of the awareness of individuals about it. Life and biology are essential to the reality, which in turn creates the world. The world, however, does not create life. This also applies to time and space, which are only a" tool of the mind, claims the scientist. To prove that the way we perceive the particle can affect its behavior, Lance used a double-slit experiment.
When scientists consider a particle that passes through a barrier with two openings, it behaves like a projectile that always goes through one slit. On the other hand, when it is not observed a particle, it is moving through the slits like a wave. Scientists say the experiment proves that particles can behave as two separate entities, questioning the long-established ideas of time and perception.
Professor Lance claims that this can be easily explained by the color: we might perceive the sky as blue, but when the cells of the brain were altered so that our sky looks green, the question is "whether the sky is really blue or we did only so experienced.
When we die, explains Professor Lance, our life becomes "a perennial plant that starts to bloom in the multiverse."
- Life is an adventure that goes beyond the borders of our straight-through way of thinking - he says.