"The Brain Is A Biological Machine With Over A: ESP Enigma (.) The Scientific Case For Psychic Phenomena, (New York
"The Brain Is A Biological Machine With Over A: ESP Enigma (.) The Scientific Case For Psychic Phenomena, (New York
Estiphan Panoussi
"Each of our cells has the same genetic information Diane Hennacy Powell, The
about our whole body [the emphasis not in the ESP Enigma[.] The Scientific
2 original]", but the genes in these cells are selectively Case For Psychic
turned on or off during the development depending Phenomena,(New York:
upon the type of cell. [...]. This means that we are Walker & Company, 2009),
living holograms; each of our cells has information pp. 215, 230
about our whole being. [the emphasis not in the
original]" [...]. After just fifty cellular division [of the
fertilized eggs], humans have more cells than the
number of stars in the Milky Way, and each cell
undergoes an average of a hundred thousand
chemical reactions per second during this early
developmental process. Genes get turned on and off,
but what 'oversees the project' and orchestrates the
[evolutionary] actions of the genes? [...].
"The ESP Enigma represents a shift that could
become the next major evolutionary leap in
understanding ourselves and our place in the
universe. In the past we have created our own prisons
by holding on to limited beliefs about what is
possible. Perhaps we now can begin to open up our
minds und unlock the gates."
The author of these quotes assumes that
a. the orchestration of the [evolutionary] actions of
the genes is already explained by biologists.
Interpretation b. the orchestration of the [evolutionary] actions of
of Nr. 2 the genes is already explained by religions.
c. the orchestration of the [evolutionary] actions of
the genes is an enigma
d. none of the above
4
"What realm of human endeavor is not morally ambiguous? [the emphasis not in
the original] Even folkinstitutions that purport to give us advice on behavior and
ethics seem fraught with contradictions. Consider aphorisms: Haste makes waste.
Yes, but a stitch in time saves nine. Better safe than sorry; but nothing ventured,
nothing gained. Where there's smoke there's fire; but you can't tell a book by its
cover. A penny saved is a penny earned; but you can't take it with you. He who
hesitates is lost; but fools rush in where angels fear to tread. Two heads are better
than one; but too many cooks spoil the broth. There was a time when people
planned or justified their actions on the basis of such contradictory platitudes. What
is the moral responsibility of the aphorist? Or the Sun-sign astrologer, the Tarot card
reader, the tabloid prophet?
"Or consider the mainstream religions. We are enjoined in Micah to do justly and
love mercy; in Exodus we are forbidden to commit murder; in Leviticus we are
commanded to love our neighbor as ourselves; and in Gospels we are urged to love
our enemies. Yet think of the rivers of blood spilled by fervent followers of the
books in which these well-meaning exhortations are embedded.
"In Joshua and in the second half of Numbers is celebrated the mass murder of men,
women, children, down to the domestic animals in city after city across the whole
land of Canaan. Jericho is obliterated in a kherem, a 'holy war.' The only
justification offered for this slaughter is the mass murderers' claim that, in exchange
for circumcising their sons and adopting a particular set of rituals, their ancestors
were long before promised that this land was their land. Not a hint of selfreproach,
not a muttering of patriarchal or divine disquiet at these campaigns of extermination
can be dug out of holy scripture. Instead, Joshua 'destroyed all that breathed, as the
Lord God of Israel commanded' (Joshua 10:40). And these events are not incidental
[the emphasis not in the original], but central to the main narrative thrust of the Old Testament.
Similar stories of mass murder (and in the case of the Amalekits, genocide) can be
found in the books of Saul, Esther, and elsewhere in the Bible, with hardly a pang of
moral doubt. It was all, of course, troubling to liberal theologians of a later age. Carl
Sagan, Science as a Candle in the Dark. The Demon-haunted World. (New York: Random
House, 1996), pp. 290-1"It is properly said that the Devil can 'quote Scriptures to his purpose'
[the emphasis not in the original]. The Bible is full of so many stories of
contradictory moral purpose that every generation can find scriptural justification
for nearly any action it proposes - from incest, slavery, and mass murder to the most
refined love, courage, and self-sacrifice [the emphasis not in the original]. And this
moral multiple personality disorder is hardly restricted to Judaism and Christianity.
You can find it deep within Islam, the Hindu tradition, indeed nearly all the world's
religions. Perhaps then it is not so much scientists as people who are morally
ambiguous."
"[...] The price of moral ambiguity is now too high. For this reason - and not
because of its approach to knowledge - the ethical responsibility of scientists must
also be high, extraordinarily high, unprecedentedly high. [...]."
In this quote, Carl Sagan
a. is rejecting the claim that, in the Bible, being the Word of God, there was a justification for mass murder of men, women, children,
down to the domestic animals, and destruction of all that once was breathing, and genocide.
Interpretation b. is confirming that the moral ambiguity and multiple personality disorder which is embedded in the Bible is not restricted to Judaism
and Christianity, but also it can be found in other religions as well, e.g. in Islam, the Hindu tradition, nearly all the world's religions,
of Nr. 4
and eventually even by some scientists lacking the ethical responsibility.
"Immersion in magic and 'occultism' seems to demand a peculiar temperament; it can be seen in a dozen cases, from Paracelsus and
Cornelius Agrippa to Macgregor Mathers and Aleister Crowley, all of whom combined the temperament of a genuine 'seeker after
10 truth' with that of confidence trickster. ... . The main difference between Jung and Freud was that for Freud the world is divided into
sick people and 'normal' people, while Jung had always been fascinated by 'supernormal' people - saints and men of genius. Jung
wanted to find a connection between 'depth psychology' and supernatural people, and thought that he might have found it in alchemy,
which like certain earlier researchers he was inclined to see as a 'mystery religion'."
Sources
"... . Civilization is a product of the cerebral cortex.
"The language of the brain is not the DNA language of the
genes. Rather, what we know is encoded in cells called neurons
- microscopic electrochemical switching elements, typically a
few hundredths of a millimeter across. Each of us has perhaps a
hundred billions neurons, comparable to the number of stars in Carl Sagan,
the Milky Way Galaxy [Emphasis not in the original]. Many Cosmos, First
12 neurons have thousands of connections with their neighbors. Ballantine Books
These are something like a hundred trillion, 1014, such Edition: November
connections in the human cerebral cortex. ... . 1985, p. 229
"Even in sleep, the brain is pulsing, throbbing and flashing with
the complex business of human life - dreaming, remembering,
figuring things out. Our thoughts, visions and fantasies have a
physical reality [Emphasis not in the original]. A thought is
made of hundreds of electrochemical impulses. ... ."
a. Carl Sagan is saying that even God, angels and the like have to have a brain to be able to think.
Interpretation b. Carl Sagan is saying that Extraterrestrials have a brain similar to the one we have, otherwise they
of Nr. 12 could not think.
c. Carl Sagan is speaking about us, the humans as in the physical world.
d. Carl Sagan is speaking about us, the humans, both in the physical world and in the afterlife.
"I have written a biography of Wilhelm Reich, and I agree Colin Wilson et Damon
that Reich was dogmatic and paranoid, as well as being a Wilson, The Mammoth
13 thoroughly disagreeable character. But then, the trouble with Encyclopedia of the
Unsolved, (New York: Carol
Reich was that he had, like so many other psychoanalysts, & Graf Publishers, 2000), 3-
4.
borrowed from Freud a mantle of papal infallibility. All
neurosis is sexual in origin, and neurotic person is incapable
of facing up to the sexual nature of his problems. You
disagree? It only proves that you have sexual problems that
you are afraid to acknowledge. In this respect Reich is like
Dr. Johnson; if his pistol misfires he will knock you down
with the butt. Anyone who disagrees with him must be
"mentally sick". But Gardner's own book is full of this same
tone of brutal dogmatism. ... . A century ago, Darwin’s
theory of evolution by natural selection was regarded as
scientifically unshakeable; today, most biologists have their
reservations about it. ... . It seems perfectly conceivable that
our descendants of the twenty-second century will wonder
how any of us could have been stupid enough to be taken in
by Darwin, Freud or Einstein."
This quote indicates that, according to the author:
a. there is such an infallibility to be accepted in theories of Freud, Reich,
Gardner, Darwin, or Einstein.
Interpretation
b. there is not such an infallibility to be accepted in theories of Freud, Reich,
of Nr.13
Gardner, Darwin, or Einstein.
c. that a and b above are compatible.
d. none of the above
1. Could it be known with what kind of speed? Certainly not the light's speed, because there is
not going through empty space. And with what speed does mental thought/activity exchange
information and let the result take its way to become a verbal expression thereof? E.P.
2. The "son of God", bnē 'elōhīm, as mentioned in Genesis, 6,2, has been differently translated
in the standard Bibles.
A. As "sons of God," in Annotated Bible with the Apocryph, 1973, The Holy Bible, Oxford
University Press, 1989, The New Oxford Annotated Bible with the Apocrypha, 1989, The
Jerusalem Bible, 1966, Holy Bible, NKJV.
B. As "The sons of the gods," in The New English Bible, 1970.