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The Galileo of our time has some interesting thoughts about the nature of reality.

This is the video: https://youtu.be/N-bRM1kYuNA

The Galileo of our time has some interesting thoughts about the nature of reality. This is the video: https://youtu.be/N-bRM1kYuNA

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

Chris's theory isn't related to "electric universe", but perhaps other concepts you've heard of. Rupert Sheldrake's "morphic resonance" can be described via "conspansive" modeling per the CTMU. Essentially, Conspansion = "Reincarnation", and is thereby the scientific theory of reincarnation. Conspansion relates the equivalence of an "expanding universe" (with static-scaled content) to a static universe with intrinsically (internally) contracting content.

"Because the shrinkage of an object within its prior image amounts to a form of logical substitution in which the object is Venn-diagrammatically “described” or determined by its former state, there is no way to distinguish between outward systemic expansion and inward substitution of content, or between the associated dynamical and logical “grammars”. CTMU

"Internal substitution of content" is a more literal restatement of "reincarnation" than the conventionial "objects moving in (expanding) space" would imply.

[–] 0 pt

Thanks. Though unrelated, I still want to ask you about the electric universe. I actually do not know much about it. For theory, TEU would refute pre-established science but it agrees with the observable (some exceptions maybe, not sure.) So it is kind of a super set. It explains gravity as an electric caused force. Now -- I am hoping the electric universe supports hollow earth theory, where planets are hollow and have an inner sun and "gravity" that flows outward. So there's an inner world upside down from our surface world. The outer shell of planets supports life on the inside and outside. Have non-mainstream science people like Chris Langan ever talked about it?