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The Quantum Observer: Daniken, - From A Show On TV. He Wrote Controversial Books Such As "Chariots of The Gods-Was God

The document discusses the author's journey from atheism to finding a spiritual home in Hinduism. [1] It describes how the author was initially drawn to ideas like extra-terrestrial influence on human evolution but later realized these did not align with established scientific theories. [2] The author delves into Eastern spirituality and the works of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, finding a personal, loving God to be compatible. [3] The author argues that science and spirituality are not opposed but complementary, with science exploring the observable world and spirituality addressing non-material realms like consciousness that science has not fully explained.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
123 views

The Quantum Observer: Daniken, - From A Show On TV. He Wrote Controversial Books Such As "Chariots of The Gods-Was God

The document discusses the author's journey from atheism to finding a spiritual home in Hinduism. [1] It describes how the author was initially drawn to ideas like extra-terrestrial influence on human evolution but later realized these did not align with established scientific theories. [2] The author delves into Eastern spirituality and the works of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, finding a personal, loving God to be compatible. [3] The author argues that science and spirituality are not opposed but complementary, with science exploring the observable world and spirituality addressing non-material realms like consciousness that science has not fully explained.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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THE QUANTUM OBSERVER

“Born and brought up in a traditional Hindu home, like most youth of my generation and many
previous, I was told up to believe in the existence of God.

But also like many others, by the time I reached my mid-teens I had become familiar with the secular
narrative, the western wind touched up. Questioning is not bad until one is questing right things.

Namely things like The Theory of Evolution, the vast age of the earth, and the Big Bang. But after a
few years of being a staunch teen atheist, I realized there was something important missing.

A cold, dark, largely empty universe; a void - with no apparent meaning at all did not satisfy me
internally. I needed something outside of the box. I needed answers. At one point I got into Eric Von
Daniken, - from a show on TV. He wrote controversial books such as "Chariots of the Gods- was God
an astronaut?"
His main narrative, basing it on archaeology, was that ancient cultures, and their religions, have been
influenced by extra-terrestrial visitors. He suggested interplanetary travellers had turned ape-men
into the modern human form we recognize today.

I found that idea really interesting because it accounted for evolution’s ‘Missing Links’. But then I
reasoned that the belief that there is humanoid life across the universe is incompatible with the
Theory of Evolution - -which of course by definition is earth-based.

Where did all the aliens come from then?

Did they evolve? From what?

So, God was back in the picture, but never-the-less hiding in the background. I was also a fan at the
time of Carl Sagan, the American presenter and astronomer back in the 70s and 80s. He once said
“Science is compatible with spirituality.

It is a profound source of spirituality when we recognise our place in the immensity of space and
time. There is a sense of elation and humility combined, that is surely spiritual…”

Inspired, my search continued.

My following phase included various forms of Eastern spirituality. The books that described the
Ultimate Truth as an energy rather than a person was also quite attractive to me at the time,
because that approach appeared more compatible with science. But then I came across books by

A.C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, a senior Vaishnava-Hindu holy man and scholar from India.
He spoke of a personal, loving God.
I liked his translation and commentary on the Bhagavad Gita for example, and his books
”The Science of Self Realization and Life Comes from Life” were brilliant. Indeed, I had found my
theological home.

Still, during that personal transition, I had the pressing need to be convinced that there was a sound
basis in modern scientific terms.

So how could the “religion verses science problem” be bridged?

So, I submerged myself into the works of Dr Richard Thomson, a PHD at Harvard and a disciple of
Bhaktivedanta Swami. Thomson’s first book was “Mechanistic and Non-Mechanistic Science” which
concluded that according to the law of probability, life coming about purely by chance, well it could
not have happened. With Micheal Cremo, Thomson also published books about Forbidden
Archaeology: Exposing the suppression of findings that do not fit into mainstream theories.

His other works say that some of the ancient Sanskrit text of India- – far from being mythological,
actually contain advanced scientific knowledge. For example: millions and billions of years described
in the Puranas are compatible with the modern estimates of earth’s history and indeed the solar
system and the universe.

My point here is that some ancient religious scriptures, although serve a different function, do not
necessarily have to conflict with science. The two disciplines just sometimes take different
approaches, but they also have a lot in common. Being a Computer science student and knowing
how software is designed and built, I suggest modern conventional science starts from the bottom
and explore its way up.

The ascending process.

Religion, on the other hand, tends to work– from the top down.
It is inclined to accept information from ‘above’ which is a descending process.

You see let us face it: We are tiny-tiny organisms on a speck of dust we call the Earth which floats
in the unimaginatively vast realms of space.

Can we really work it all out on our own?

In cosmic terms, are we not like tiny insects trying to understand something much larger? So how
can humankind be absolutely sure there is no cosmic hierarchy, beyond what our tiny brains are able
to perceive, or our eyes, telescopes and microscopes cannot see?

To be fair science generally does not always claim it has Absolute Knowledge. Rather it is a process.
But I argue that process focuses largely on observable matter, detectable by our imperfect senses,
or by instruments which are effectively extensions of those same senses.

I argue that spirituality is a type of science which has methods and results which go beyond matter
and our traditional sensory experience. The basis of most religious faith is the acknowledgement you
see, of the Inner Self, Consciousness, the soul, the ATMA (call it what you wish). This is something
different from the body: It is not made of matter.

It is something different from the body. Yet we know consciousness exists. Yet conventional science
cannot sufficiently explain it.

No really.

Why don’t scientists not take more time to study the difference between a dead body and a live
one? Chemically there is no difference between a body that is dying, and moments later the same
body that is dead.

Of course, the soul has left so what is that soul?

But perhaps science has no obligation to focus on spiritual things or things of that nature. It is what it
is.

FINE.
It has led to inventions which helps us live in this world. But can it really deal with All of human
society’s challenges of today?

Can it?

I do not think so. So, let us offer homage to both science and spirituality in all its various forms.

You see - both are needed.

And let us bring attention to potential ‘cosmic bridging points.’

For example, can God be the Original QUANTUM Observer, and can the expansion and contraction
of the universe be the breathing of MAHA VISHNU?

You see- - Science and religion are opposed like the thumb and forefinger are opposed. Yet they are
joined at the hand.

If you use the two together: Then and only then can you truly grasp things, pick things up– both
physical and non-physical.

This is how we can find a balance, between practicality and inner happiness in our lives.

And meaning.

Thank you for reading.

-Anjani Kumar Thakur

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