Monday, December 7, 2020

  

18a. presences // 18b. the supernatural and story seven

 

In yesterday's blog, you added an article from sciencealert.com about biological elements from comets. 

 

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1547. Now, that is an interesting comment. From your perspective, a representative of my heartansoulanmind, what am I? That is, what is left of me besides heartansoulanmind?

 

Grandma Earth and biochemical [elements] physics; mostly consciousness, water, and chemicals. – Ms. H.

 

[Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorous, and Sulfur. Combinations of these six chemical elements make up the large majority of biological molecules on Earth.]**

 

Selected from Blog's Science Alert article, December 6, 2020.

 

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 And in context, the rest of yesterday's Blog continues:

 

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2250. Consciousness comes; first, consciousness comes with Grandma Earth. 

 

That's the way it read in your blogs; the consciousness with a common 'c.' – Ms. H. 

 

2253. Consciousness is similar in essence to background radiation from the Big Bang. 2254.

 

Yes, for purposes in a reasonable analogy in broader understanding within these books and blogs. Ms. H. 

 

[December 6, 2020]

 

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Consciousness in terms of background radiation means "having a possible intuition sense of a spiritual presence in Nothing," which is not a normal definition of consciousness in terms of cognition. – Ms. Havisham

 

1122. The above is the essence of my basic human condition. I have, as long as I can remember, an intuitive sense of a spiritual presence nearby.

 

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The british psychological society's

the psychologist . . .

 

THE SILENT COMPANIONS

 

Ben Alderson-Day considers explanations for ‘feelings of presence.’ 

 

In Moby Dick, Herman Melville wrote:

'At last, I must have fallen into a troubled nightmare of a doze, and slowly waking from it – half steeped in dreams – I opened my eyes, and the before sunlit room was now wrapped in outer darkness. Instantly I felt a shock running through all my frame; nothing was to be seen, and nothing was to be heard, but a supernatural hand seemed placed in mine. My arm hung over the counterpane, and the nameless, unimaginable, silent form or phantom, to which the hand belonged, seemed closely seated by my bed-side… I knew not how this consciousness, at last, glided away from me, but waking in the morning, I shudderingly remembered it all, and for days and weeks and months afterwards I lost myself in confounding attempts to explain the mystery. Nay, to this very hour, I often puzzle myself with it.'

Someone is there, at your side or just behind you. A feeling of a person or agency without being heard or seen. It is a felt presence, one of the most unusual experiences a person can have, and yet also a feeling that will be familiar to many. Sometimes referred to as sensed presences or extracampine hallucinations, such experiences are described in a wide variety of sources and contexts, including survival situations, bereavement, sleep paralysis, and neurological disorder.

In the above passage, Melville describes a felt presence on waking from sleep. A range of unusual experiences occur in the no-man’s land between sleep and waking, usually including short bursts of speech or visions in the transition to sleep (hypnagogic hallucinations) or fragments from dreams on awakening (hypnopompic hallucinations) (Jones et al., 2009). Felt presences, in particular are a common feature of sleep paralysis. This is a phenomenon that will occur to one-third of the population at some point in their lives (Cheyne & Girard, 2007; see also tinyurl.com/jscf0809), in which the awakening from sleep is accompanied by muscle paralysis and breathing problems. During paralysis, many people describe the intense feeling of someone or something being in the room, often with a distinct location, occasionally moving towards them, in some cases pushing down on the person’s chest, and provoking a strong sense of dread. Folk accounts of visits by demon-like nightmares, incubi, and succubi are thought to derive from such sleep paralysis experiences (Adler, 2011).

More benevolent presences are also reported, however, with perhaps the most common examples coming from people who have recently been bereaved. In a review last year, Castelnovo and colleagues (2015) reported that up to 60 per cent of cases of bereavement are associated with some kind of hallucinatory experience, of which 32–52 per cent were felt presences. Strong feelings of loved ones still being present are often described in the first month of bereavement, but they can, in some cases, persist for many years. In contrast to sleep paralysis, the presence experienced is typically associated with comfort and longing rather than any sort of malevolent intent.

Similarly, benevolent experiences are also reported by people in extreme survival situations. Known collectively as ‘Third Man’ experiences (see box, over), accounts of guiding or accompanying presences in polar treks, mountaineering expeditions, sea accidents, and natural disasters are numerous. The presences described are usually human-like, close by, and feel like they share an affinity with the person experiencing them. Occasionally they are associated with sounds or words (Geiger, 2010, p126) or vague visions, such as a shadow or outline, but more commonly, such presences are described without any sensory correlates. Like other presence experiences, though, the Third Man usually takes up a distinct spatial location, in some cases appearing to lead those in peril to safety.

The other common contexts in which presences occur are various neurological and psychiatric diseases, such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Lewy body dementia; and following traumatic brain injury. Sensations of presence are a frequent feature of PD, with one recent study reporting a 50 per cent prevalence rate (Wood et al., 2015). Presence experiences in PD are usually experienced without particular effect or intent, and they are reported as being felt alongside or just behind the patient (Fénelon et al., 2011). They are sometimes referred to as extracampine hallucinations, although strictly these refer to subtly different phenomena; following Bleuler (1903), extracampine hallucinations refer to unusual sensory experiences that go beyond the possible sensory frame; for example, one might describe seeing something occur behind you, or feeling a distant object move over your skin. Sensed presences, in contrast, are usually defined as having no clear sensory phenomenology (Sato & Berrios, 2003) and yet still feeling like a perceptual state (as opposed to a belief about someone being present, for example).

What’s going on?


Despite coming from such different contexts, the overlapping phenomenology of presence experiences raises the intriguing question of whether some underlying cognitive and neurological mechanisms may unite their occurrence. There are broadly three main hypotheses that attempt to explain felt presence: body-mapping, threat, and social representation (see Cheyne, 2011, for a review).  

The most common interpretation of presence experiences is that they represent some kind of disruption to the internal mapping of one’s own body. Along with presence experiences, survival scenarios are associated with a variety of autoscopic phenomena, such as out-of-body experiences or seeing one’s own doppelganger. Given that felt presences in such situations often feel like they are linked to the person having the experience, it has been suggested that they may be a projection of one’s own body-map, prompted by extreme conditions and stress (Brugger et al., 1997).

This idea is supported by evidence from neuropsychology and neurostimulation. Presence and autoscopic experiences can follow damage to a range of brain regions; but are often prompted by lesions to areas associated with interoception and body position, such as the insular cortex and the temporoparietal junction (TPJ) (Blanke et al., 2008). The experience of a close-by presence can also be elicited by electrical stimulation to the TPJ, suggesting a key role for that region in the representation of presence (Arzy et al., 2006).

One thing that a body-mapping account misses out on is the role of effect in presence experiences. In particular, presences during sleep paralysis are experienced as strongly negative phenomena, prompting fear and distress in the sleeper and involving the perception that the entity in the room has untoward intent. Based on this, Cheyne and colleagues (e.g., Cheyne & Girard, 2007) have argued that sleep paralysis presences, in particular, may result from the mistaken detection of threat in the environment. Specifically, they suggest that the experience of waking while paralysed; and the continuation of REM-state brain activity related to dreaming prompts a threat-activated vigilance system that provides the feeling of a malevolent presence.

Finally, Nielsen (2007) and Fénelon et al. (2011) have described the experience of presences as a social hallucination (i.e., a kind of pure perception of social agency, divorced from its ordinary sensory correlates such as a face or voice). While presences vary in body position and emotional affect, they very often feel like they have a specific identity with its own agency (irrespective of whether that identity is actually known to the perceiver), suggesting the involvement of social-cognitive processes. Fénelon et al. (2011) argue for this by pointing to the common occurrence of presences with known and familiar identities in PD, which in many cases will be people who have just left a scene (what they term ‘palinparousia’). Similarly, in presences following bereavement, the persisting identity of the perception is a clearly crucial part of the experience.

Of these three explanations, the body-mapping theory has perhaps the most evidence to date but accounts emphasising the social, magnetic, and affective elements of presences are also likely to be crucial. Understanding how comforting presences can occur in grief while terrifying presences haunt sleep paralysis will depend on further examination of what drives such vivid alterations and dissociations to the mappings of self and others. And in addition to this, each may also have something to say about another unusual phenomenon: hearing voices.

‘Sometimes you just know he’s there.’


Hearing the Voice is an interdisciplinary research project at Durham University funded by the Wellcome Trust. It was created in 2012 with the aim of investigating the phenomenology of hearing voices that no one else can hear (sometimes known as auditory verbal hallucinations). At one of its first research meetings, a voice-hearer, Adam, described the voice that he heard in the following way: ‘You know, sometimes he doesn’t even have to say anything; sometimes you just know he’s there.’ That is, the ‘voice’ that Adam often heard speaking could somehow be perceived, even when it was silent as if it had an identity or agency that could be present without its ‘usual’ sensory form as a heard object.

Interpreting the phenomenology of this apparently paradoxical experience has to be done carefully. Voices without sound do, in fact have a long psychiatric history – Bleuler (1911/1950) made reference to such ‘soundless voices’ in his original descriptions of hallucinations – but usually, these denote specifically verbal or linguistic experiences that lack an auditory phenomenology. Instead, Adam’s description of a voice-identity that just happened to be silent seems closer to Nielsen’s (2007) idea of a purely social representation: in other words, a felt presence.

Although this kind of experience is not necessarily a frequent part of how voice-hearers describe their experience, it is also not a one-off. Anecdotally voice-hearers will talk about their voices being present without speaking, taking up spatial positions even when silent, and in some cases ‘looking’ at the world alongside the voice-hearer. In the Hearing, the Voice phenomenology survey published last year (Woods et al., 2015), 69 per cent of a sample of 153 voice-hearers described their voices as being characterful or having a distinct personality, while 66 per cent associated their voices with unusual bodily sensations or changes. And in some cases, descriptions of presence were explicitly made:

I have never encountered anyone with as powerful a presence as my voices. They are loud and feel enormous. …They feel very much here when I hear them.

In these cases, the idea of a voice not just being an auditory experience but also one with a social and agent-like presence becomes much more tangible (Alderson-Day & Fernyhough, in press).

Thinking about hearing voices in this way is not necessarily new. Bell (2013) and Wilkinson and Bell (2016) have argued for social representations being key to understanding how voices are experienced and persist over time; various psychotherapeutic approaches focus on the social relations that voices seem to create (e.g., Hayward et al., 2011), and the Hearing Voices Movement itself has long argued for an understanding of the experience that involves interaction with voices as meaningful entities.

What research on felt presence has to offer is a comparative perspective on how feelings of agency and accompaniment could come about in similar ways, albeit in very different scenarios. For example, the involvement of the TPJ in presence experiences overlaps with evidence from voice-hearing: the posterior section of the superior temporal gyrus, extending up into the TPJ area, is often implicated in fMRI studies of hallucination occurrence (Jardri et al., 2011); the TPJ is a target for neurostimulation in the treatment of problematic voices (Moseley et al., 2015); and there is evidence of resting connectivity differences in the same area in voice-hearers (Diederen et al., 2013).

The TPJ is a multimodal area that is both anatomically and functionally diverse, so clear overlaps between voice and presence experiences are yet to be established. Nevertheless, for such phenomenologically unusual experiences, any clues that may shed light on overlapping or similar cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms are important to consider. And feelings of presence arguably provide a wealth of such clues: understanding the Third Man provides a model for how one’s own body could create the feeling of another; explanations of sleep paralysis highlight the role of negative affect and threat in driving unusual experiences; while the presences that follow bereavement provide examples of how identity without form can persist over time. Taken together, accounts of presence show us the ‘others’ that we carry with us at all times, the silent companions whose visits can either guide or haunt; support or confuse, comfort or terrify.

Box Text: Spirits, magnetic fields, and extrasensory perception

Unusual feelings of presence have always been associated with similarly unusual or unorthodox interpretations. Some presence experiences appear to share qualities with the feeling (and subsequent discovery) of being stared at; a phenomenon argued to be a real faculty of perception by some (Sheldrake, 2005), but without any strong empirical basis (e.g., Colwell et al., 2000). Persinger and colleagues (e.g., Booth et al., 2005) have argued that felt presences can occur as a result of changes to the earth’s magnetic field, although such effects seem likely to arise from participant suggestibility (Granqvist et al., 2005). Finally, some psychotherapists and spiritual healers consider presences to be evidence of an entity that must be persuaded to depart its host, a controversial approach known as ‘spirit release’ therapy (Powell, 2006).

Box Text: Shackleton’s ‘Third Man’

The ‘Third Man’ factor takes its name from The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot.  


Who is the third who walks always beside you?
When I count, there are only you and I together
But when I look ahead up the white road
There is always another one walking beside you
Gliding wrapt in a brown mantle, hooded
I do not know whether a man or a woman
– But who is that on the other side of you?

Eliot’s description was based on his memory of reading about one of Ernest Shackleton’s Antarctic expeditions. Referring to the lines in his notes on The Waste Land, he wrote, ‘it was related that the party of explorers, at the extremity of their strength, had the constant delusion that there was one more member than could actually be counted.’

While for the poem, Eliot specifically chose two travellers and a companion, in fact, the third man was number four: the story that Eliot recalled came from the experiences of Shackleton, Tom Crean, and Frank Worsley when they crossed South Georgia during the Imperial Transantarctic Expedition in May 1916. Following the loss of the Endurance to pack ice, the expedition had decamped to the harsh and inhospitable Elephant Island. Shackleton and five others then crossed 800 miles of the Southern Ocean in an open lifeboat in an attempt to reach help for the rest of the crew, with Crean, Shackleton, and Worsley making the final journey across the interior of South Georgia itself. During their 36 hour trek to the north coast of the island, all three men were convinced that they were accompanied by a fourth on their journey. As put by Worsley: ‘I again find myself counting our party – Shackleton, Crean, and I and – who was the other? Of course, there were only three, but it is strange that in mentally reviewing the crossing, we should always think of a fourth, and then correct ourselves’ (Thomson, 2000).

Meet the author

‘This piece was developed from a Guardian article, ‘The strange world of felt presences,’ that I wrote with David Smailes (Leeds Trinity University): see tinyurl.com/ozptw8e. I joined the Hearing the Voice project at Durham University three years ago, and through that, I’ve been lucky to have the opportunity to speak to a number of voice-hearers and clinicians about what it’s like to have the experience. One thing that kept coming up was a sense of many “voices,” having a strong sense of character or identity – including, in some cases, a feeling of presence. This is important because it has implications for cognitive and neuroscientific research on voices – which has often focused more on speech and language – and reflects a number of popular therapeutic approaches to managing unpleasant voices. Since then, I’ve been interested in exploring the ways in which unusual experiences might relate to inner speech, dialogue, and social cognition.’

Dr. Ben Alderson-Day is a Research Associate in the Department of Psychology at Durham University
benjamin.alderson-day@durham.ac.uk

References

Adler, S.R. (2011). Sleep paralysis: Night-mares, nocebos, and mind–body connection. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Alderson-Day, B. & Fernyhough, C. (in press). Auditory verbal hallucinations: Social but how? Journal of Consciousness Studies.
Arzy, S., Seeck, M., Ortigue, S., Spinelli, L. & Blanke, O. (2006). Induction of an illusory shadow person. Nature, 443(7109), 287–287. 
Bell, V. (2013). A community of one: social cognition and auditory verbal hallucinations. PLoS Biol, 11(12), e1001723. 
Blanke, O., Arzy, S. & Landis, T. (2008). Illusory perceptions of the human body and self. In G. Goldenberg & B. Miller (Eds.) Handbook of clinical neurology (3rd series, Vol. 88, pp.429–458). Edinburgh: Elsevier.
Bleuler, E. (1903). Extracampine Hallucinationen. Psychiatrisch-neurologische Wochenschrift, 25, 261–264. 
Bleuler, E. (1950). Dementia praecox; or, The group of schizophrenias (J. Zinkin, Trans.). New York: International Universities Press. (Original work published 1911)
Booth, J.N., Koren, S.A. & Persinger, M. A. (2005). Increased feelings of the sensed presence and increased geomagnetic activity at the time of the experience during exposures to transcerebral weak complex magnetic fields. International Journal of Neuroscience, 115(7), 1053–1079.
Brugger, P., Regard, M. & Landis, T. (1997). Illusory reduplication of one’s own body: Phenomenology and classification of autoscopic phenomena. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 2(1), 19–38.
Castelnovo, A., Cavallotti, S., Gambini, O. & DAgostino, A. (2015). Post-bereavement hallucinatory experiences: A critical overview of population and clinical studies. Journal of Affective Disorders, 186, 266–274. 
Cheyne, J.A. (2011). Sensed presences. In J.D. Blom & I.E.C. Sommer (Eds.) Hallucinations (pp.219–234). New York: Springer.
Cheyne, J.A. & Girard, P. (2007) Paranoid delusions and threatening hallucinations: A prospective study of sleep paralysis experiences. Consciousness and Cognition, 16, 959–974.
Colwell, J., Schröder, S. & Sladen, D. (2000). The ability to detect unseen staring: A literature review and empirical tests. British Journal of Psychology, 91(1), 71-85
Diederen, K.M.J., Neggers, S.F.W., De Weijer, A.D. et al. (2013). Aberrant resting-state connectivity in non-psychotic individuals with auditory hallucinations. Psychological Medicine, 43(8), 1685–1696.
Fénelon, G., Soulas, T., Cleret de Langavant, L. et al. (2011). Feeling of presence in Parkinson’s disease. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 82(11), 1219–1224.
Geiger, J. (2010). The Third Man factor. Edinburgh: Canongate.
Granqvist, P., Fredrikson, M., Unge, P. et al. (2005). Sensed presence and mystical experiences are predicted by suggestibility, not by the application of transcranial weak complex magnetic fields. Neuroscience Letters, 379(1), 1–6.
Hayward, M., Berry, K. & Ashton, A. (2011). Applying interpersonal theories to the understanding of and therapy for auditory hallucinations. Clinical Psychology Review, 31(8), 1313–1323.
Jardri, R., Pouchet, A., Pins, D. & Thomas, P. (2011). Cortical activations during auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia. American Journal of Psychiatry, 168(1), 73–81.
Jones, S.R., Fernyhough, C. & Meads, D. (2009). In a dark time: Development, validation, and correlates of the Durham Hypnagogic and Hypnopompic Hallucinations Questionnaire. Personality and Individual Differences, 46(1), 30–34. 
Moseley, P., Alderson-Day, B., Ellison, A. et al. (2015). Noninvasive brain stimulation and auditory verbal hallucinations: New techniques and future directions. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 9, 515.
Nielsen, T. (2007). Felt presence: Paranoid delusion or hallucinatory social imagery? Consciousness and Cognition, 16(4), 975–983.
Powell, A. (2006). The contribution of spirit release therapy to mental health. Light, 126, 1.
Sato, Y. & Berrios, G.E. (2003). Extracampine hallucinations. The Lancet, 361(9367), 1479–1480.
Sheldrake, R. (2005). The sense of being stared at – Part 1: Is it real or illusory? Journal of Consciousness Studies, 12(6), 10–31.
Thomson, J. (2000). Shackleton's Captain: A biography of Frank Worsley. Christchurch, New Zealand: Hazard Press. 
Wilkinson, S. & Bell, V. (2016). The representation of agents in auditory verbal hallucinations. Mind & Language, 31(1), 104–126.
Wood, R.A., Hopkins, S.A., Moodley, K.K. & Chan, D. (2015). Fifty percent prevalence of extracampine hallucinations in Parkinson’s disease patients. Frontiers in Neurology, 6, 263.
Woods, A., Jones, N., Alderson-Day, B. et al. (2015). Experiences of hearing voices: Analysis of a novel phenomenological survey. The Lancet Psychiatry, 2(4), 323–331.

 

Selected and edited from - https://thepsychologist.bps.org.uk/volume-29/april/silent-companions

 

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1314. The article appears to cover the subject well. As a science-oriented person and a spiritual person, I presently feel a basic dissociative sense in terms of the human spirit as I use the term in this Blog. 1323.

 

In this sense, your heartansoulanmind are self-aware of their existence within your physical framework while at the same time, your neurological systems recognize the self-reality from 'scientific' oriented observations of conscious reality. The brain recognizes the science is shown to be factual while at the same time it recognizes the emotional and intellectual aspects of being a human being by definition, and in your case, your will accepts that G-D exists (within a probability of Reason) and so thus does the soul (by any other name) also exists. – Ms. Havisham

 

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Below is a broader definition of 'the supernatural.' – Grandma Earth

 

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SUPERNATURAL

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

This article is about unexplained or non-natural forces and phenomena.

 

The supernatural encompasses all entities, places and events that would fall outside the scope of scientific understanding of the laws of nature.[1] This includes categories of entities which transcend the observable Universe, such as immaterial beings like angelsgods, and spirits. It also includes claimed human abilities like magictelekinesisprecognition, and extrasensory perception.[2]

Historically, supernatural powers have been invoked to explain phenomena as diverse as lightningseasons, and the human senses which today are understood scientifically. The philosophy of naturalism contends that all phenomenaare scientifically explicable and nothing exists beyond the natural world, and as such approaches supernatural claims with skepticism.[3]

The supernatural is featured in folklore and religious contexts,[4] but can also feature as an explanation in more secular contexts, as in the cases of superstitions or belief in the paranormal.[2]

ETYMOLOGY AND HISTORY OF THE CONCEPT

Occurring as both an adjective and a noun, descendants of the modern English compound supernatural enter the language from two sources: via Middle French (supernaturel) and directly from the Middle French's term's ancestor, post-Classical Latin (supernaturalis). Post-classical Latin supernaturalis first occurs in the 6th century, composed of the Latin prefix super- and nātūrālis (see nature). The earliest known appearance of the word in the English language occurs in a Middle English translation of Catherine of Siena's Dialogue (orcherd of Syon, around 1425; Þei haue not þanne þe supernaturel lyȝt ne þe liȝt of kunnynge, bycause þei vndirstoden it not).[5]

The semantic value of the term has shifted over the history of its use. Originally the term referred exclusively to Christian understandings of the world. For example, as an adjective, the term can mean "belonging to a realm or system that transcends nature, as that of divine, magical, or ghostly beings; attributed to or thought to reveal some force beyond scientific understanding or the laws of nature; occult, paranormal" or "more than what is natural or ordinary; unnaturally or extraordinarily great; abnormal, extraordinary". Obsolete uses include "of, relating to, or dealing with metaphysics". As a noun, the term can mean "a supernatural being", with a particularly strong history of employment in relation to entities from the mythologies of the indigenous peoples of the Americas.[5]

Dialogues from Neoplatonic philosophy in the third century AD contributed the development of the concept the supernatural via Christian theology in later centuries.[6] The term nature had existed since antiquity with Latin authors like Augustine using the word and its cognates at least 600 times in City of God. In the medieval period, "nature" had ten different meanings and "natural" had eleven different meanings.[7] Peter Lombard, a medieval scholastic in the 12th century, asked about causes that are beyond nature, in that how there could be causes that were God's alone. He used the term praeter naturam in his writings.[7] In the scholastic period, Thomas Aquinas classified miracles into three categories: "above nature", "beyond nature", and "against nature". In doing so, he sharpened the distinction between nature and miracles more than the early Church Fathers had done.[7] As a result, he had created a dichotomy of sorts of the natural and supernatural.[8] Though the phrase supra naturam was used since the 4th century AD, it was in the 1200s that Thomas Aquinas used the term "supernaturalis", however, this term had to wait until the end of the medieval period before it became more popularly used.[7] The discussions on "nature" from the scholastic period were diverse and unsettled with some postulating that even miracles are natural and that natural magic was a natural part of the world.[7]

EPISTEMOLOGY AND METAPHYSICS

 

The metaphysical considerations of the existence of the supernatural can be difficult to approach as an exercise in philosophy or theology because any dependencies on its antithesis, the natural, will ultimately have to be inverted or rejected.

One complicating factor is that there is disagreement about the definition of "natural" and the limits of naturalism. Concepts in the supernatural domain are closely related to concepts in religious spirituality and occultism or spiritualism.

For sometimes we use the word nature for that Author of nature whom the schoolmen, harshly enough, call natura naturans, as when it is said that nature hath made man partly corporeal and partly immaterial. Sometimes we mean by the nature of a thing the essence, or that which the schoolmen scruple not to call the quiddity of a thing, namely, the attribute or attributes on whose score it is what it is, whether the thing be corporeal or not, as when we attempt to define the nature of an angle, or of a triangle, or of a fluid body, as such. Sometimes we take nature for an internal principle of motion, as when we say that a stone let fall in the air is by nature carried towards the centre of the earth, and, on the contrary, that fire or flame does naturally move upwards toward firmament. Sometimes we understand by nature the established course of things, as when we say that nature makes the night succeed the daynature hath made respiration necessary to the life of men. Sometimes we take nature for an aggregate of powers belonging to a body, especially a living one, as when physicians say that nature is strong or weak or spent, or that in such or such diseases nature left to herself will do the cure. Sometimes we take nature for the universe, or system of the corporeal works of God, as when it is said of a phoenix, or a chimera, that there is no such thing in nature, i.e. in the world. And sometimes too, and that most commonly, we would express by nature a semi-deity or other strange kind of being, such as this discourse examines the notion of.

And besides these more absolute acceptions, if I may so call them, of the word nature, it has divers others (more relative), as nature is wont to be set or in opposition or contradistinction to other things, as when we say of a stone when it falls downwards that it does it by a natural motion, but that if it be thrown upwards its motion that way is violent. So chemists distinguish vitriol into natural and fictitious, or made by art, i.e. by the intervention of human power or skill; so it is said that water, kept suspended in a sucking pump, is not in its natural place, as that is which is stagnant in the well. We say also that wicked men are still in the state of nature, but the regenerate in a state of [Divine] grace; that cures wrought by medicines are natural operations; but the miraculous ones wrought by Christ and his apostles were supernatural.[9]

— Robert Boyle, A Free Enquiry into the Vulgarly Received Notion of Nature

The term "supernatural" is often used interchangeably with paranormal or preternatural — the latter typically limited to an adjective for describing abilities which appear to exceed what is possible within the boundaries of the laws of physics.[10] Epistemologically, the relationship between the supernatural and the natural is indistinct in terms of natural phenomena that, ex hypothesi, violate the laws of nature, in so far as such laws are realistically accountable.

Parapsychologists use the term psi to refer to an assumed unitary force underlying the phenomena they study. Psi is defined in the Journal of Parapsychology as "personal factors or processes in nature which transcend accepted laws" (1948: 311) and "which are non-physical in nature" (1962:310), and it is used to cover both extrasensory perception (ESP), an "awareness of or response to an external event or influence not apprehended by sensory means" (1962:309) or inferred from sensory knowledge, and psychokinesis (PK), "the direct influence exerted on a physical system by a subject without any known intermediate energy or instrumentation" (1945:305).[11]

— Michael Winkelman, Current Anthropology

Supporters of supernatural explanations believe that past, present, and future complexities and mysteries of the universe cannot be explained solely by naturalistic means and argue that it is reasonable to assume that a non-natural entity or entities resolve the unexplained.[citation needed] In contrast, detractors appeal to empiricism as a counter[12][13] using historical examples of mysteries that had been supposed by some to require supernatural attribution later explained through naturalistic means.[3]

Views on the "supernatural" vary, for example it may be seen as:

·       indistinct from nature. From this perspective, some events occur according to the laws of nature, and others occur according to a separate set of principles external to known nature. For example, in Scholasticism, it was believed that God was capable of performing any miracle so long as it didn't lead to a logical contradiction. Some religions posit immanent deities, however, and do not have a tradition analogous to the supernatural; some believe that everything anyone experiences occurs by the will (occasionalism), in the mind (neoplatonism), or as a part (nondualism) of a more fundamental divine reality (platonism).

·        

·       incorrect human attribution. In this view all events have natural and only natural causes. They believe that human beings ascribe supernatural attributes to purely natural events, such as lightningrainbowsfloods, and the origin of life

RELIGION

DEITY

deity (/ˈdiːəti/ (About this soundlisten) or /ˈdeɪ.əti/ (About this soundlisten))[16] is a supernatural being considered divine or sacred.[17] The Oxford Dictionary of English defines deity as "a god or goddess (in a polytheistic religion)", or anything revered as divine.[18] C. Scott Littleton defines a deity as "a being with powers greater than those of ordinary humans, but who interacts with humans, positively or negatively, in ways that carry humans to new levels of consciousness, beyond the grounded preoccupations of ordinary life."[19] A male deity is a god, while a female deity is a goddess.

Religions can be categorized by how many deities they worship. Monotheistic religions accept only one deity (predominantly referred to as God),[20][21]polytheistic religions accept multiple deities.[22] Henotheistic religions accept one supreme deity without denying other deities, considering them as equivalent aspects of the same divine principle;[23][24] and nontheistic religions deny any supreme eternal creator deity but accept a pantheon of deities which live, die, and are reborn just like any other being.

Various cultures have conceptualized a deity differently than a monotheistic God. A deity need not be omnipotentomnipresentomniscientomnibenevolent or eternal,[27][28][29] The monotheistic God, however, does have these attributes. Monotheistic religions typically refer to God in masculine terms, while other religions refer to their deities in a variety of ways – masculine, feminine, androgynous and gender neutral. 

Historically, many ancient cultures – such as Ancient India Ancient EgyptianAncient GreekAncient RomanNordic and Asian culture – personified natural phenomena, variously as either their conscious causes or simply their effects, respectively. Some Avestan and Vedic deities were viewed as ethical concepts.[38][39] In Indian religions, deities have been envisioned as manifesting within the temple of every living being's body, as sensory organs and mind. Deities have also been envisioned as a form of existence (Saṃsāra) after rebirth, for human beings who gain merit through an ethical life, where they become guardian deities and live blissfully in heaven, but are also subject to death when their merit runs out.

ANGEL

 

An angel is generally a supernatural being found in various religions and mythologies. In Abrahamic religions and Zoroastrianism, angels are often depicted as benevolent celestial beings who act as intermediaries between God or Heaven and Earth. Other roles of angels include protecting and guiding human beings, and carrying out God's tasks.[46] Within Abrahamic religions, angels are often organized into hierarchies, although such rankings may vary between sects in each religion, and are given specific names or titles, such as Gabriel or "Destroying angel". The term "angel" has also been expanded to various notions of spirits or figures found in other religious traditions. The theological study of angels is known as "angelology".

In fine art, angels are usually depicted as having the shape of human beings of extraordinary beauty;[47][48] they are often identified using the symbols of bird wings,[49] halos,[50] and light.

PROPHECY

 

Prophecy involves a process in which messages are communicated by a god to a prophet. Such messages typically involve inspiration, interpretation, or revelation of divine will concerning the prophet's social world and events to come (compare divine knowledge). Prophecy is not limited to any one culture. It is a common property to all known ancient societies around the world, some more than others. Many systems and rules about prophecy have been proposed over several millennia.

REVELATION

 

In religion and theology, revelation is the revealing or disclosing of some form of truth or knowledge through communication with a deity or other supernatural entity or entities.

Some religions have religious texts which they view as divinely or supernaturally revealed or inspired. For instance, Orthodox JewsChristians and Muslims believe that the Torah was received from Yahweh on biblical Mount Sinai. Most Christians believe that both the Old Testament and the New Testament were inspired by God. Muslims believe the Quranwas revealed by God to Muhammad word by word through the angel Gabriel (Jibril). In Hinduism, some Vedas are considered apauruṣeya, "not human compositions", and are supposed to have been directly revealed, and thus are called śruti, "what is heard". The 15,000 handwritten pages produced by the mystic Maria Valtorta were represented as direct dictations from Jesus, while she attributed The Book of Azariah to her guardian angel.[55] Aleister Crowley stated that The Book of the Law had been revealed to him through a higher being that called itself Aiwass.

A revelation communicated by a supernatural entity reported as being present during the event is called a vision. Direct conversations between the recipient and the supernatural entity,[56] or physical marks such as stigmata, have been reported. In rare cases, such as that of Saint Juan Diego, physical artifacts accompany the revelation.[57] The Roman Catholic concept of interior locution includes just an inner voice heard by the recipient.

In the Abrahamic religions, the term is used to refer to the process by which God reveals knowledge of himself, his will, and his divine providence to the world of human beings.[58] In secondary usage, revelation refers to the resulting human knowledge about God, prophecy, and other divine things. Revelation from a supernatural source plays a less important role in some other religious traditions such as BuddhismConfucianism and Taoism.

REINCARNATION

Reincarnation is the philosophical or religious concept that an aspect of a living being starts a new life in a different physical body or form after each biological death. It is also called rebirth or transmigration, and is a part of the Saṃsāra doctrine of cyclic existence. It is a central tenet of all major Indian religions, namely JainismHinduismBuddhism, and Sikhism. The idea of reincarnation is found in many ancient cultures,[63] and a belief in rebirth/metempsychosis was held by Greek historic figures, such as PythagorasSocrates, and Plato.[64] It is also a common belief of various ancient and modern religions such as SpiritismTheosophy, and Eckankar, and as an esoteric belief in many streams of Orthodox Judaism. It is found as well in many tribal societies around the world, in places such as AustraliaEast AsiaSiberia, and South America.[65]

Although the majority of denominations within Christianity and Islam do not believe that individuals reincarnate, particular groups within these religions do refer to reincarnation; these groups include the mainstream historical and contemporary followers of CatharsAlawites, the Druze,[66] and the Rosicrucians.[67] The historical relations between these sects and the beliefs about reincarnation that were characteristic of NeoplatonismOrphismHermeticismManicheanism, and Gnosticism of the Roman era as well as the Indian religions have been the subject of recent scholarly research.[68] Unity Church and its founder Charles Fillmore teaches reincarnation.

In recent decades, many Europeans and North Americans have developed an interest in reincarnation,[69] and many contemporary works mention it.

KARMA

Karma (/ˈkɑːrmə/Sanskritकर्मromanizedkarma, IPA: [ˈkɐɽmɐ] (About this soundlisten)Palikamma) means action, work or deed;[70] it also refers to the spiritual principle of cause and effect where intent and actions of an individual (cause) influence the future of that individual (effect).[71] Good intent and good deeds contribute to good karma and future happiness, while bad intent and bad deeds contribute to bad karma and future suffering. 

With origins in ancient India's Vedic civilization, the philosophy of karma is closely associated with the idea of rebirth in many schools of Indian religions(particularly HinduismBuddhismJainism and Sikhism[74]) as well as Taoism.[75] In these schools, karma in the present affects one's future in the current life, as well as the nature and quality of future lives - one's saṃsāra

CHRISTIAN THEOLOGY

In Catholic theology, the supernatural order is, according to New Advent, defined as "the ensemble of effects exceeding the powers of the created universe and gratuitously produced by God for the purpose of raising the rational creature above its native sphere to a God-like life and destiny."[79] The Modern Catholic Dictionary defines it as "the sum total of heavenly destiny and all the divinely established means of reaching that destiny, which surpass the mere powers and capacities of human nature."[80]

PROCESS THEOLOGY

Process theology is a school of thought influenced by the metaphysical process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead(1861–1947) and further developed by Charles Hartshorne (1897–2000).

It is not possible, in process metaphysics, to conceive divine activity as a "supernatural" intervention into the "natural" order of events. Process theists usually regard the distinction between the supernatural and the natural as a by-product of the doctrine of creation ex nihilo. In process thought, there is no such thing as a realm of the natural in contrast to that which is supernatural. On the other hand, if "the natural" is defined more neutrally as "what is in the nature of things," then process metaphysics characterizes the natural as the creative activity of actual entities. In Whitehead's words, "It lies in the nature of things that the many enter into complex unity" (Whitehead 1978, 21). It is tempting to emphasize process theism's denial of the supernatural and thereby highlight that the processed God cannot do in comparison what the traditional God could do (that is, to bring something from nothing). In fairness, however, equal stress should be placed on process theism's denial of the natural (as traditionally conceived) so that one may highlight what the creatures cannot do, in traditional theism, in comparison to what they can do in process metaphysics (that is, to be part creators of the world with God). 

— Donald Viney, "Process Theism" in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

HEAVEN

Heaven, or the heavens, is a common religious, cosmological, or transcendent place where beings such as godsangelsspiritssaints, or venerated ancestors are said to originate, be enthroned, or live. According to the beliefs of some religions, heavenly beings can descend to Earth or incarnate, and earthly beings can ascend to Heaven in the afterlife, or in exceptional cases enter Heaven alive.

Heaven is often described as a "higher place", the holiest place, a Paradise, in contrast to hell or the Underworld or the "low places", and universally or conditionally accessible by earthly beings according to various standards of divinitygoodnesspietyfaith, or other virtues or right beliefs or simply the will of God. Some believe in the possibility of a heaven on Earth in a world to come.

Another belief is in an axis mundi or world tree which connects the heavens, the terrestrial world, and the underworld. In Indian religions, heaven is considered as Svarga loka,[82] and the soul is again subjected to rebirth in different living forms according to its karma. This cycle can be broken after a soul achieves Moksha or Nirvana. Any place of existence, either of humans, souls or deities, outside the tangible world (Heaven, Hell, or other) is referred to as otherworld.

UNDERWORLD

The underworld is the supernatural world of the dead in various religious traditions, located below the world of the living.[83] Chthonic is the technical adjective for things of the underworld.

The concept of an underworld is found in almost every civilization and "may be as old as humanity itself".[84] Common features of underworld myths are accounts of living people making journeys to the underworld, often for some heroic purpose. Other myths reinforce traditions that entrance of souls to the underworld requires a proper observation of ceremony, such as the ancient Greek story of the recently dead Patroclus haunting Achilles until his body could be properly buried for this purpose.[85] Persons having social status were dressed and equipped in order to better navigate the underworld.[86]

A number of mythologies incorporate the concept of the soul of the deceased making its own journey to the underworld, with the dead needing to be taken across a defining obstacle such as a lake or a river to reach this destination.[87] Imagery of such journeys can be found in both ancient and modern art. The descent to the underworld has been described as "the single most important myth for Modernist authors".[88]

SPIRIT

spirit is a supernatural being, often but not exclusively a non-physical entity; such as a ghostfairy, or angel.[89] The concepts of a person's spirit and soul, often also overlap, as both are either contrasted with or given ontological priority over the body and both are believed to survive bodily death in some religions,[90] and "spirit" can also have the sense of "ghost", i.e. a manifestation of the spirit of a deceased person. In English Bibles, "the Spirit" (with a capital "S"), specifically denotes the Holy Spirit.

Spirit is often used metaphysically to refer to the consciousness or personality.

Historically, it was also used to refer to a "subtle" as opposed to "gross" material substance, as in the famous last paragraph of Sir Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica.[91]

DEMON

demon (from Koine Greek δαιμόνιον daimónion) is a supernatural and often malevolent being prevalent in religionoccultismliteraturefictionmythology and folklore.

In Ancient Near Eastern religions as well as in the Abrahamic traditions, including ancient and medieval Christian demonology, a demon is considered a harmful spiritual entity, below the heavenly planes[92] which may cause demonic possession, calling for an exorcism. In Western occultism and Renaissance magic, which grew out of an amalgamation of Greco-Roman magic, Jewish Aggadah and Christian demonology,[93] a demon is believed to be a spiritual entity that may be conjured and controlled.

MAGIC

 

Magic or sorcery is the use of ritualssymbols, actions, gestures, or language with the aim of utilizing supernatural forces. Belief in and practice of magic has been present since the earliest human cultures and continues to have an important spiritual, religious, and medicinal role in many cultures today. The term magic has a variety of meanings, and there is no widely agreed upon definition of what it is. 

Scholars of religion have defined magic in different ways. One approach, associated with the anthropologists Edward Tylorand James G. Frazer, suggests that magic and science are opposites. An alternative approach, associated with the sociologists Marcel Mauss and Emile Durkheim, argues that magic takes place in private, while religion is a communal and organised activity. Many scholars of religion have rejected the utility of the term magic and it has become increasingly unpopular within scholarship since the 1990s.

The term magic comes from the Old Persian magu, a word that applied to a form of religious functionary about which little is known. During the late sixth and early fifth centuries BCE, this term was adopted into Ancient Greek, where it was used with negative connotations, to apply to religious rites that were regarded as fraudulent, unconventional, and dangerous. This meaning of the term was then adopted by Latin in the first century BCE. The concept was then incorporated into Christian theology during the first century CE, where magic was associated with demons and thus defined against religion. This concept was pervasive throughout the Middle Ages, although in the early modern period Italian humanists reinterpreted the term in a positive sense to establish the idea of natural magic. Both negative and positive understandings of the term were retained in Western culture over the following centuries, with the former largely influencing early academic usages of the word.

Throughout history, there have been examples of individuals who practiced magic and referred to themselves as magicians. This trend has proliferated in the modern period, with a growing number of magicians appearing within the esoteric milieu. British esotericist, Aleister Crowley, described magic as the art of effecting change in accordance with will.

DIVINATION

Divination can be seen as a systematic method with which to organize what appear to be disjointed, random facets of existence such that they provide insight into a problem at hand. If a distinction is to be made between divination and fortune-telling, divination has a more formal or ritualistic element and often contains a more social character, usually in a religious context, as seen in traditional African medicine. Fortune-telling, on the other hand, is a more everyday practice for personal purposes. Particular divination methods vary by culture and religion.

Divination is dismissed by the scientific community and skeptics as being superstition. In the 2nd century, Lucian devoted a witty essay to the career of a charlatan, "Alexander the false prophet", trained by "one of those who advertise enchantments, miraculous incantations, charms for your love-affairs, visitations for your enemies, disclosures of buried treasure, and successions to estates",[103] even though most Romans believed in prophetic dreams and charms.

WITCHCRAFT

Witchcraft or witchery broadly means the practice of and belief in magical skills and abilities exercised by solitary practitioners and groups. Witchcraft is a broad term that varies culturally and societally, and thus can be difficult to define with precision,[104] and cross-cultural assumptions about the meaning or significance of the term should be applied with caution. Witchcraft often occupies a religious divinatory or medicinal role,[105] and is often present within societies and groups whose cultural framework includes a magical world view.[104]

MIRACLE

 

miracle is an event not explicable by natural or scientific laws.[106] Such an event may be attributed to a supernatural being (a deity), magic, a miracle worker, a saint or a religious leader.

Informally, the word "miracle" is often used to characterise any beneficial event that is statistically unlikely but not contrary to the laws of nature, such as surviving a natural disaster, or simply a "wonderful" occurrence, regardless of likelihood, such as a birth. Other such miracles might be: survival of an illness diagnosed as terminal, escaping a life-threatening situation or 'beating the odds.' Some coincidences may be seen as miracles.[107]

A true miracle would, by definition, be a non-natural phenomenon, leading many rational and scientific thinkers to dismiss them as physically impossible (that is, requiring the violation of established laws of physics within their domain of validity) or impossible to confirm by their nature (because all possible physical mechanisms can never be ruled out). The former position is expressed, for instance, by Thomas Jefferson and the latter by David HumeTheologians typically say that, with divine providence, God regularly works through nature yet, as a creator, is free to work without, above, or against it as well. The possibility and probability of miracles are then equal to the possibility and probability of the existence of God.[108]

SKEPTICISM

Skepticism (American English) or scepticism (British English;) is generally any questioning attitude or doubt towards one or more items of putative knowledge or belief. It is often directed at domains such as the supernatural, morality (moral skepticism), religion (skepticism about the existence of God), or knowledge (skepticism about the possibility of knowledge or of certainty). Formally, skepticism as a topic occurs in the context of philosophy, particularly epistemology,** although it can be applied to any topic such as politics, religion, and pseudoscience.

One reason why skeptics assert that the supernatural cannot exist is that anything "supernatural" is not a part of the natural world simply by definition. Although some believers in the supernatural insist that it simply cannot be demonstrated using the existing scientific methods, skeptics assert that such methods are the best tool humans have devised for knowing what is and isn't knowable. 

The One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge was an offer by the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) to pay out one million U.S. dollars to anyone who could demonstrate a supernatural or paranormal ability under agreed-upon scientific testing criteria. A version of the challenge was first issued in 1964. Over a thousand people applied to take it, but none were successful. The challenge was terminated in 2015.

Selected and edited from Wikipedia 

 

**

 

You, Richard, do not consider metaphysics and 'the supernatural' to exist as such. Neither do I in this context. Nature includes the term 'the supernatural,' as far as this Blog is concerned. Metaphysics is a part of Nature, not a separate distinction. – Grandma Earth

 

The article above contains a section on SPIRIT which begins:

 

**

"A spirit is a supernatural being, often but not exclusively a non-physical entity, such as a ghostfairy, or angel.  The concepts of a person's spirit and soul often also overlap, as both are either contrasted with or given ontological priority over the body and both are believed to survive bodily death in some religions and "spirit" can also have the sense of "ghost," i.e., a manifestation of the spirit of a deceased person."

**

This seventh, quite short story includes a ghost, a manifestation of the spirit of a deceased person. I should know as I, poetically, am a supernatural being myself. I have her spirit in my pocket. - Grandma

 

* * *

 

STORY SEVEN

For those of you who have never witnessed a ghost firsthand, I have one for you. The ghost's size is that of a regular green pea in a lighter shade of green. Those of you who may not have seen a spirit similar to this, make that an electrified pale green baby pea color. Grandma reaches into her pocket and pulls out the small spirit-like orb, which then floats off and up from Grandma's black right palm. Here, Grandma pronounces, "I'll let this little apparition tell her story."

* * *

A Ghost's Existence

I am the shadow of a shade of my former self. What is black to me is green to you. Grandma put me in her pocket because I was off over the Atlantic Ocean. I always wanted to see the Atlantic when I was alive, but I never did. I lived on a beautiful island in the South Pacific my entire life. My sole contact with the outside world was the disease that killed me some centuries ago. I appear as a small dot because the eye cannot see my flat self. I could slice into someone, I suppose, but I am comfortable as I am. I like the Atlantic Ocean, so I float above it in a dream, in a conscious hypnotic-like trance.

I know I am not in what the Living call the real world, but I am close to the Living. I'm close enough that you can read of me. I think it is funny that I am a dot within a capital I. The human eye is not built to see me as I am, so it won't. Most real ghosts can pass through a living person more often than you think. Some of us call it dead-dreaming, the reverse of an out-of-body experience. It is an into-the-mind experience from my point of view. You are conscious of me as an odd green pea in a Grandma Story. Dead, I am still comfortable in the shadow of Grandma's hands. That is the point. 

Grandma smiles and gently slides the pea-sized object back into her pocket as if she were a caring farmer and the tiny ghost was a baby gosling.

 

Wind in a spirited wit, or a lively wit in the wind, 

Appearing a shimmering electric green or boney white,

 

The mind's dark and witty night rests with chagrin, 

In the natural trancephysics of this spiritual light.

* * *

There are Wiki articles and definitions along with a short story, number seven, in today's blog. Do you have anything to add, Mr. Orndorff? – Ms. Havisham

 

2132. I remember the 'electric green' shimmering from the wall baseboard in the hallway in the Fall of the late 1980s or early 1990s. It appeared as a spirit ghost to me, but it was the spirit of a dead Navy man who died in the Pacific during World War II. He wants to leave this world, but he finds himself still trapped in a sunk submarine. He was the uncle, I believe, of a neighbor on our street. The neighbor had a priest exorcise the spirit from their house a few days earlier. The sailor appeared as a small greenish light dancing the baseboard. Carol and Kim, about age ten or so, we're on the first floor of the watching bilevel watching television; it was about eight o'clock in the evening. The electric-green is the only part of Grandma's story. I have a memorable visual of, even today. 2142. Grandma is a better storyteller than I am because she has no doubts, which makes her story effective. I have doubts, but the experience was real enough at the time. The witnessing caused me to sweat and feel a sickness in my stomach at the time. I dreaded telling Carol and never did, though later that night in bed, she said she thought she heard something in the hall. She got up to look but saw nothing and returned to bed a bit uneasy but soon fell asleep; meanwhile, I spent some time quietly staring at the ceiling and wondering about the reality of the incident. It would have helped if the next day I asked the neighbor, and he said they thought his uncle, who had been a sailor, was 'along the top of the wall' in the living room and had a priest do the exorcising; and, of course, Carol hearing something.  2152.

 

* * *

Sunday, December 6, 2020

 17. Ms. H's perspective

 

Smashburger's for lunch and now a stop at Kroger's on North State. You took yesterday off, Mr. Orndorff. I'm delighted. – Ms. Havisham

 

1527. I was a bit surprised too. We were busy doing who knows what, plus we watched the last new episode of The Crown and Friday night's "Blue Bloods." Carol and I are both getting more forgetful, not much we can do about it, but from now on, if we have a long list at the Kroger's, I'm going in with her to help. She appears to have much less short-term memory than I do; let's say, it is more noticeable. It is all that more important for me to write things down. 1532.

 

Most people are wearing masks. 

 

1535. I forgot to wear one into Kroger's on Columbus Pike last night. Very embarrassing. No one said anything. Carol didn't notice. The one good thing is that between seven and eight there were very few people in the store. I thought I had one on; that's the weird part. As we walked out of the store, and the breeze hit my face, I realized it was still sitting in the car waiting for me to pick it up. 1540.

 

Mr. Orndorff, your mask is not living; it has no sense of waiting or anything else. – Ms. H. 

 

1542. Just a figure of speech, Ms. H.

 

Sometimes you write like you are a figure of speech too. – Ms. H.

 

1544. That is quite bizarre because, in that sentence, I am a second person singular pronoun. 

 

Not from my perspective. – Ms. H. 

 

1547. Now, that is an interesting comment. From your perspective, a representative of my heartansoulanmind, what am I? That is, what is left of me besides heartansoulanmind?

 

Grandma Earth and biochemical physics; mostly consciousness, water, and chemicals. – Ms. H.

 

2250. Consciousness comes; first, consciousness comes with Grandma Earth. 

 

That's the way it read in your blogs; consciousness with a common 'c.' – Ms. H. 

 

2253. Consciousness is similar in essence to background radiation from the Big Bang. 2254.

 

Yes, for purposes in a reasonable analogy in broader understanding within these books and blogs. All for tonight. – Ms. Havisham

 

2258. Good night, Ms. Havisham.

 

Good night, Mr. Orndorff. 

 

* * *

Friday, December 4, 2020

 16. Story Six

 

You have over one hundred hits on your story about meeting Mr. Press Reynolds when you were five and with your grandfather. Your heart notes it even as you are focused on editing Chapter Six for Grandma E. – Ms. Havisham.

 

1212. I am getting ready to start as this is a long story and may need more editing. I do enjoy working on the book this way, though – more relaxing. We have to stop by and give Kim and Gayle a bag of Ghirardelli chocolate squares – Kim gets the dark chocolate assortment without peppermint squares and Gayle the one with the peppermint square assortment. 1223.

 

Sitting in the car next to Gayle's place in north Clintonville (Columbus), you are contentedly waiting for Carol, who is no doubt chatting with her sister. You just completed your editing and are ready to drop the work into Grammarly Pro at home for artificial intelligence inspection and commentary. – Ms. H. 

 

* * *

Here is Chapter Six; perhaps we should title these "Story Six" rather than Chapter? – Grandma Earth

 

Mr. Orndorff, what do you think? – Ms. H.

 

1642. Account Six might work, or Anecdote Six rather Chapter Six, or even Chronicle Six -- we could just use the numbered notes in red as titles without chapters. Titles should have a contextual sense to them. Nothing seems to fit. Perhaps Grandma Earth can come up with something. 1725.

 

What about simply using a written number used in Diplomat's Pouch and have Grandma Earth introduce the stories as anecdotal and let it go. – Ms. H. 

 

1731. That sounds good. 

 

* * *

SIX

Grandma Earth begins. Destiny resides not in queens and kings or drones, for that matter; destiny resides in the species as a whole. Human beings need to rise up and become what they are, more humane. People come built with brains to survive. People come made with minds for compromising. 

It happened long ago on the large Isle off France's coast not far from where Canterbury town would rise in the later Celtic territory. Rolling hills and woods and streams and the beach not far away, not more than a day's walk at most. An apprentice shaman sat attempting to discover who he is while deep within, he is where the shaman must dance. Consistency isn't his hallmark. Bracc has long black hair with roughly built limbs and a log like trunk.

He has neither a comfortable stage-like appearance nor an unusual one such as a mask or prop that would benefit him in his storytelling. In those days, everyone knew storytelling demanded an authenticity that was so deep the person becomes someone or something else while sharing the story. The question afterward is usually, 'who was telling the story, who had the shaman become?'

Sometimes it is a bear, a fox, an ant, or a butterfly. Every so often, a story was told as if it one of the Dead of the tribe who had come back to say it. Everyone knew about ghosts and hauntings. Spirits were in all things living or not. People even whisper about an old legend that the stones move within themselves. Some said the larger stones have people frozen in them, particularly those large stones standing in the great circle at Salisbury Plain.

Young Bracc has the goal to tell a good story, but he does not know a unique narrative. The principal shaman understood the young man's problem and set a meaningful way for the young man to take a journey and return to tell his own story. The old man would watch and see how Bracc would do with an experienced audience, expecting to hear and demonstrate a useful and unique narrative.

The shaman takes young Bracc aside and says, "I will give you a project, and a story will come from it that is entirely your own. The elders are expecting a story sometime this year, but they don't know when."

Bracc's face lights up, "I am ready, Master. Give me the project, and I will test myself."

The Master speaks. "You must make a wooden frame, a small rectangle as you have been taught. Trim and tighten the four corners first with the binding of tin, then reinforce this with hemp. You will need three naked arrow shafts, crossing them near a center of your choice but make sure the six outer points can set outside the naked of bark framework."

"Yes, Master," says Bracc.

The Master continues, "Eye-set each outer point equidistance from the other so that it appears a six-pointed star. Before you attach the naked arrow shafts, dress each of them with four rounded and speared disks of straw, each two-finger knuckles in diameter. The disks must be able to move up and down their respective staffs."

"Yes, Master.".

The Master continues. "The vertical shaft will have a blue, then a red, then a white disk below, and below where the axis crosses the disk will be green. The top right diagonal shaft will have a green, then a yellow, and then a brown disk above the axis and a blue disk below the axis. The top left diagonal will have a cross disk, then orange, then a yellow above the axis, and a yellow disk below the axis. Three sliding disks above the axis and one sliding disk below on each shaft."

"Yes, Master," replies Bracc diligently. 

The Master adds, "Here are the directions. On the vertical middle shaft, a blue disk is placed about a knuckle down from the top. The red disk below with two knuckles between it and the upper blue disk, then two knuckles down from the red disk, is the white disk's placement. Do the same to begin the other disks, so they are similar in distances on their respective shafts. 

The shaman's apprentice, Bracc, loops the twine-like cord around and in and out around the bottom corner piece of the framework the Master had instructed him to prepare. He did not know what it was for, but he was happy that he was on his own to put it together. He would show the Master he could do things for himself. 

He took the cord and rolled it out from his left hand across his chest to his outstretched right hand. Three lengths, then he cut it, tied it to the piece he had already wrapped, and continued looping and tightening the cord to hold help hold the corner piece together. He had already taken tiny strips of tin and hammered them in the corners to keep them, but people liked the cord, not the metal. 

Bracc looks over the frame. It was a little more than an arm and a half in length and width, but it was a bit longer than wide. He had followed the Master's instructions to the letter. It is not a square, he thinks. It is not supposed to be a square like I thought it would be. He thinks his Master wants me to arrange them with six equally spaced outer points and have the shafts cross at the center. 

Bracc takes twelve straw humped disks he had made following the instructions. He sets out to coat each disk rim the color specified. He takes his brush of horsehair on a stick and dips it into one of several small clay thumb pots of paint. On one disk, he paints Moon white, then he paints three Suns yellow. He mixed the yellow with Mars red and, after several tries, settles for a pale orange, better that than pink-orange, he thinks. From orange, he paints one disk rim red. He cleans the horsehair and dips a blue thumb pot, and paints two disk rims sky blue. "I am in the sky," he says.

Green is the next color. Again, a change of horsehair. As he colors the disk, some of the green touches the disk's center. At first, he is upset but then concludes the green was supposed to touch the center. He then painted hills on both green trimmed disks. A change of horsehair, and he paints one disk brown like a Spring flood. One disk is painted white cloud. Bracc begins wondering which is making this device, his heart, or his mind? He has one color left and does not bother to change the horsehair as it is the color of night-black Death.

He watches the disk soak up black like black soaks up the day. This is too strong for me, he thinks. Of all the colors, I am the bluest color. I am in the sky. 

I will be color my skin blue when I tell my first shaman story by the fire. I will call myself Skye and be Bracc no longer. I will be blue and free of all but Grandmother Earth. She and I will be one in my mind. I will be one of the best of the storytellers with Grandmother's help. I will become a Master. My Master will be satisfied. Grandmother will be satisfied, and the listeners will be happy. That will be my goal at the end of each story. I will do my best to always end with everyone satisfied before the fire dies down, and we all sleep peacefully and soundly. May Mother Nature help me, he prays.

Then Bracc suddenly realizes the machinery will speak from the Dead's invisible place. The machinery I have created with the Master's direction shall tell a story that I am sure – will be a Revelation. This story engine is a Destiny Shaper for the audience. I, Bracc, am ready to tell my personal story.

* * *

Bracc's Story to his First Audience

 

"We are each individual in our own way. As we are set up to be unique, we are free within the bounds of our own shells of skin and bone. We touch one another because touching is our destiny. Destiny is for our tribe. We are cousins to those in other tribes nearby, and they are cousins to those in other tribes nearby them. We know others of our tribe live far, far away from here through our stories." 

Bracc took time to point the cardinal directions, North, East, South, and West. It was then he surprised everyone. He also pointed up and then down. He continues, "Mother has given us a full moon tonight. Tomorrow we hope she will provide us with full sun. The moon moves across the sky in parts from nothing to complete in twenty-eight days, a moonth. The sun moves across the sky wholly, yet we know from stories that it also can move in parts when it wants to do so. When it does, the day sky becomes night before human eyes. The stars are seen. Then the moon marches on in opposite parts until it is whole again. This all happens within the four seasons that we have. This is a mystery of Mother Nature and Grandmother Earth." 

People understood. They were shaking their heads and even smiling at the prospect. Mother is very wise, that is always their conclusion. The Dead must make way for those yet to be born. 

Bracc begins again. "The Living are touched by the Dead in many ways. We are handled by the Dead inside our earth, our bodies, as they feel our Mother outside when they die. The Dead's world cannot be seen, but it can be known by the Dead themselves. I have a short story that one of Dead told me in passing.

 

People were suddenly amazed young Bracc would attempt such a complicated story. People had told them before, and many were horrifying. Others were pleasant enough to want to go there. It was confusing as to how it was to be dead. They sat, waiting to hear what young Bracc had to say. Most were skeptical because he was so young, and the young death seemed far away even though it struck them with surprise, sometimes sooner than any expected.

Bracc pulled his engine from the camouflage of green foliage and balanced it upright in his left hand. "What do you see?" he asks the elders.

"I know this," said one elder. "It is a story engine that the old shaman had you construct."

Bracc smiles. "It is a box of six sides," replies the elder.

"We only see one side of the box," says another with a joking though friendly banter in the audience.

With that, Bracc holds the device closer to the fire yet higher with both hands. The colored disks floated up the center shaft, he pulled the fame away slightly, and they would slowly fall down the center shaft. He did it again and again as he had practiced—warm air up, cooler air down. The disks appeared to magically dance on the center shaft. 

Even the diagonals seemed to dance slightly as he turned the framework to tilt those shafts to vertical. How do the disks come to move? Are spirits moving the disks? Bracc suddenly stops and stands between the structure and the fire. He says, "It is the Dead who stay still. The disk dances because we dance. We tell the stories, and the Dead quietly listen."

"What do the Dead listen with?" shouts one disbeliever.

They listen with all their heartansoul, so they do not forget what it was to be alive. We must be quiet when we attend the burial places to listen to the birds and all the other sounds of Nature. If they want to hear the Living, they listen through our ears as we will someday listen through the ears of the young. We are the framework I show you here. We have independent movements so that we may dance our own dance.

The machinery, the framework, suggests the other five sides are invisible. We have to imagine the sides through our senses. The Dead use this as their frame of reference, you see. He held it up. We are the other five sides to the Dead. In these six senses of the framework, we can touch the Dead, and the Dead can touch us. We know they can feel us. Many do, in our dreams and memories.

Our framework is in our heads. We are in our bones for the present. When we are dead, we are free of this framework, but that which is invisible in us, our hearts and our souls, will be visible on the other side. This is the reason the six points stick out from the frame and move into the air. It is not just to tell a story. It is to show a truth about our Nature, our invisible Nature.

"We have heard this all before," shouts the disbeliever.

 

Bracc stands, suddenly realizing the man was right. There is nothing new in what he said. The gimmick, the trick, was using the rising hot air to move the disks so that people thought it was magic like the Dead were moving the disks, which they weren't. It was nothing but hot air. It was a travesty.

 

I am a travesty, he thought. He felt his skin give up before he did. A storyteller I am not, but I shall be. Bracc flusters an honest face and, with a calm smile, replies to the entire audience, "It was the hot air that made the disk to rise. When I took the framework away from the flames, the disks slid down the wooden shafts. It was simple. I was trying to make a point, to show the Dead are still here. Now, humbled by the truth, I understand what it is to be one of the Dead."

 

With that, Bracc collapsed and died right there. He died of shame and embarrassment. He died because he ran out of imagination. 

 

The tribe learned a great lesson that day. Storytelling had to be correct to be real – no more stories about the Dead. We want only real tales in our tribe; this is what they proclaimed. Real stories are what the tribe heard from then on.

The elders decided that since Bracc had told his story just before he died, it shows the truth. The story was told by one who was closer to death than he or anyone else thought. People in the tribe understood a truth within themselves. 

When the elders told the rest of the tribe what had happened, many wondered about Bracc's story engine for a long time. Were there really six sides to the frame when they could only see one? No one knew. No one alive will ever know. This is what they rationally concluded.

 

The tribe kept the one side they could see and touch. An appropriate empty space was left around the frame among a small grove of Oak in case, Bracc's hand-built story engine really did have a six-sided structure. The open area surrounding the frame Bracc built became a sacred space. The storyline that came from nothing but imagination could still be something. It requires deeper understanding -- a mind that is next to nothing. 

This is the end of Bracc's story. Today we have heard all of these things on thousands of different levels, but Bracc's was one of the first. Some of you Readers were there and heard it first in real-time. The thoughts are in your genes, you see, both the storytelling and the listening. That's the way it is. Who am I? Grandma Earth, your earlier earthy Nature, I am your DNA ever moving forward into this world. Next to nothing, who else would Grandma be? Gray bones beget more gray bones. 

* * *

Can nothing be something Nature sent? 

Nothing quite common is nothing enchained.

 

Where else in the world is nothing time-bent?

This profane nothing is mind's cathedral contained.

 

From Grandma's white well-dentalled gums, 

This next-to-Nothing story's conclusion comes.

* * *

You finished the story. Run it through Grammarly Pro one more time, then drop it in above. – Ms. Havisham

 

2315. I feel this needs more work, but that's for later—time to move on. 

 

I agree. Ms. H. - Let's publish as-is. 

 

 

* * *

 

Thursday, December 3, 2020

 15. Creative Consciousness Background

 

While researching something else, you came across a doctor's note about a brain scan you had some years ago. Ms. H.

 

**

Here is what Dr. Ten Pas said as she went through your MRI brain scans and blood work. 

         You have a small benign tumor between the two halves of the brain. Not to worry, as it should not grow further as you are older. Your cerebellum looks very healthy. The rest of your brain looks good except for a bit of hardening of the arteries at the top left of the lateral ventricle (the central cavity). This has been caused by high blood pressure even though the blood pressure has been treated on and off since 1960 (mostly on since 1972). You have no autoimmune diseases and no inflammations in the brain. You do not have multiple sclerosis though this was suggested as a problem. You do have:

12.6: Occipital neuralgia  (15 Nov. 08)

The IHS description of occipital neuralgia is the following: occipital neuralgia is a paroxysmal jabbing pain in the distribution of the greater or lesser occipital nerves, accompanied by diminished sensation or dysaesthesiae in the affected area. It is commonly associated with tenderness over the nerve concerned. Diagnostic criteria are:

A. Pain is felt in the distribution of greater or lesser occipital nerves.

You awoke at two and lay in bed until almost three. Your legs feel better, and you wonder if it is because you lowered your dose of Gabapentin to 300mg a day rather than 600mg. You have concluded you have a hypersensitivity to the drug and that you are weaning yourself off it. Dr. Ten Pass’s office called and asked if you wanted to try another drug, but you did not return the call as you are still feeling the effects of the Gabapentin. As for the transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, you have had enough of that also as you are still feeling the effects on your neck and the top of your left shoulder.  (7 Dec 08)

Selected from -- https://encountersinmind.blogspot.com/search?q=temporal+lobe

**

 

"The above collaborates with my hospital witnessing ‘glitch in the left temporal lobe in the mid-eighties. Once or twice in that decade, I felt I had a seizure of some kind and mentioned it to the doctor, but nothing was detected."

 

Selected from "Notes – Ch.2 of book, Imagine . . .", 26 March 2012, "Encounters in Mind" Blog; https://encountersinmind.blogspot.com

 

**

 

There is one more document I would like you to add here for reference. Ms. H. 

 

**

Orbicularis oculi is a sphincter muscle around the eye and acts, in general, to narrow the eye-opening and close the orbit of the eye. This muscle has important functions in protecting and moistening the eye as well as in expressive displays. These muscles constrict skin around the eye, reduce the eye-opening, and close the eye. It has three parts, an outer or orbital part, an inner or palpebral part in the eyelids, and a small lacrimal part near the tear duct. The outer part originates in the medial part of the orbit and runs around the eye via the upper eye cover fold and lid and returns in the lower eyelid to the palpebral ligament; the palpebral part originates in the palpebral ligament and runs above and below the eye to the lateral angle of the eye. These two muscles form concentric circles around the eye. The action of the palpebral part is often involuntary, as in the blink reflex.

Orbicularis oculi is innervated by zygomatic and frontal branches of the facial nerve (VII) and is supplied with blood by the superficial temporal and facial arteries.

www.face-and-emotion.com/dataface/expression/o_oculi.html

**

Sympathetic

Both the levator and the orbicularis are striped and voluntary. However, there are unstriped fibers which are involuntary and of the sympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system

Orbicularis oculi responses to trigeminal and median nerve stimuli Occipital neuralgia

Also selected and edited from -- Selected from -- https://encountersinmind.blogspot.com/search?q=temporal+lobe / and Wikipedia

**

 

A part of myself, a representative of Richard's human spirit, his heartansoulanmind, works through the temporal lobe and the cerebellum. This is the same pathway that his spirit friend, Amorella (imaginary or not), worked. Amorella considered herself from the spirit world; however, in this blog, I consider myself spiritual in the upper reaches of that Cosmic Microwave Background mentioned after yesterday's blog. 

 

In Mr. Orndorff's blogs: "Encounters in Spirit" and "Old Man on a Study." I was represented as Richard's soul, and my name was oSoul. Here I am not, as this is a different setting and circumstance. Grandma Earth referred to the CMB as a "creative consciousness background – a background from when The Creator in that story became G-D is G-D in a metaphorical and allegorical story setting. These stories are not intended to be nonfiction, but they are stories to set forth a spiritual sense in human understanding for personal meditation and comfort if desired. – Ms. Havisham

 

* * *

This is Grandma Earth. The upcoming sixth chapter story is long, so I will include it in tomorrow's blog post. Bracc is the main character, and he tells a story to his audience, his tribe. The concluding circumstance charges the audience to decide whether Bracc's story was "true" in the sense of human understanding or not. If the story is true, then it is an important story, perhaps one worth dying for. Until tomorrow, then. – Grandma

 

The story is over five thousand words, as I've read it. Mr. Orndorff may do some further editing before Grandma Earth's presentation. – Ms. Havisham

 

* * *

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

 14a. a haunting echo / 14b. story five

 

You had quite a few hits on Facebook yesterday and today. Two of your former students live nearby. You feel good for having shared the material. – Ms. Havisham

 

1126. I do, and I am surprised that people were interested. Thank you for suggesting sharing. It feels odd to thank a part of myself, but . . . obviously, I am several parts; that is, my persona is diffused. It is strange to become conscious of a part of myself that is not connected to my heartansoulanmind; that is, the human spirit is something else again, and being human in itself is also something. The consciousness that tells me that even within being 'human' aside from heartansoulanmind, there is an afterglow, if you will, of creating the universe. This afterglow has a spirit all its own, perhaps the same spirit in all things living and not – a sense of 'being' as apart from not being. I don't remember thinking about this before. Perhaps it is possible that some people do not connect with the heartansoulanmind, the drive of being more than just existing, though existing is something in itself. 1140.

 

You drift into wonderment and imagination toying with the concept of there may be more your being human than what you have experienced, that in separating your spirit in a genuine sense, you find there is still something in being, in life and consciousness, that has to do with 'knowing' there is a separate dimension between being consciously alive and consciously something more; and perhaps something less than consciously alive but still being, as in a rock or stone is in being though not alive as such. A hum, if you will, of consciousness in all things that do not move of their own accord; but are at the same time physical matter. – Ms. H.  

 

1153. A universal sense of a non-spiritual consciousness exists, of being a part of continuous creation, an echo of being First Causation, a haunting echo of The Creator becoming G-D is G-D. 1157. 

 

At least you have worked this thinking through to a resting point. Enough for today. Take a break, and Grandma Earth will return with another story, Chapter Five. – Ms. Havisham

 

**

Science Alert

 

SPACE

An Astronomer Has Searched The Universe For a Potential Message From Its Creator 

MICHELLE STARR

 

2 DECEMBER 2020 

 

The Universe is a mysterious place. We don't know why it exists, and there are many unanswered questions as to how. But what if it was created, on purpose, by an intelligent entity? Is there some way we could find out?

In 2005, a pair of physicists proposed that if there was a Creator, they could have encoded a message in the background radiation of the Universe, leftover from when the light was first unleashed to flow freely through space. This light is called the cosmic microwave background(CMB).

Astrophysicist Michael Hippke of Sonneberg Observatory in Germany and Breakthrough Listen has gone looking for this message, translating temperature variations in the CMB into a binary bitstream.

What he recovered appears to be utterly meaningless.

Hippke's paper describing his methods and findings has been uploaded to pre-print server arXiv, (and is thus yet to be peer-reviewed); the work includes the extracted bitstream so other interested parties can study it for themselves.

The cosmic microwave background is an incredibly useful relic of the early Universe. It dates back to around 380,000 years after the Big Bang. Before this, the Universe was completely dark and opaque, so hot and dense that atoms couldn't form; protons and electrons were flying around in the form of ionised plasma.

As the Universe cooled and expanded, those protons and electrons could combine to form neutral hydrogen atoms in what we call the epoch of recombination. Space became clear, and light could move freely through it for the first time.

This first light is still detectable today, albeit very faintly, suffusing all known space. That's the CMB. Since the early Universe was not uniform, density variations at the epoch of recombination manifest today in very slight fluctuations in the CMB temperature.

Because of this ubiquity, theoretical physicists Stephen Hsu of the University of Oregon and Anthony Zee of the University of California, Santa Barbara argued - entirely theoretically - that the CMB would make the perfect billboard on which to leave a message that would be visible to all technological civilisations in the Universe.

"Our work does not support the Intelligent Design movement in any way whatsoever," they wrote in their 2006 paper, "but asks, and attempts to answer, the entire scientific question of what the medium and message might be IF there was actually a message."

They proposed that a binary message could be encoded in the temperature variations in the CMB. This is what Hippke has attempted to find - first by addressing the claims made by Hsu and Zee, and then by using the data to try and find a message.

"[Hsu and Zee's] assumptions were, first, that some superior Being created the Universe. Second, that the Creator actually wanted to notify us that the Universe was intentionally created," Hippke wrote.

"Then, the question is: How would they send a message? The CMB is the obvious choice because it is the largest billboard in the sky and is visible to all technological civilisations. Hsu and Zee continue to argue that a message in the CMB would be identical to all observers across space and time and that the information content can be reasonably large (thousands of bits)."

There are, Hippke found, several problems with these claims. The first is that the CMB is still cooling. It started at about 3,000 Kelvin; now, 13.4 billion years later, it's 2.7 Kelvin. As the Universe continues to age, eventually, the CMB will become undetectable. It may take another 10 duodecillion years (1040), but the CMB will fade.

Putting that aside, physicists found back in 2006, in response to Hsu and Zee's paper, that it's improbable the CMB would appear exactly the same in the sky to different observers in different locations. Besides, Hippke argues, we can't see the entire CMB because of foreground emission from the Milky Way. And we only have one sky to measure, which presents an inherent statistical uncertainty in every cosmological observation we make.

Based on these constraints, Hippke estimates that the information content would be much lower than that proposed by Hsu and Zee - just 1,000 bits. This gave him a good framework for the actual search for the message.

The Planck satellite and the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) both observed and recorded the temperature fluctuations in the CMB. From these datasets, Hippke extracted his bitstream, comparing the results from each dataset to find matching bits.

The first 500 bits of the message are pictured below. The black values were identical in both Planck and WMAP datasets and are thought to be accurate with a 90 percent probability. The red deviate values; Hippke chose the Planck values, and they are only accurate with a 60 percent probability.

binary(M. Hippke, arXiv, 2020)

Changing the values, he found, did not improve the situation. Searching the On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences returned no convincing results nor shifted the data to approximate the infinite future.

"I find no meaningful message in the actual bit-stream," Hippke wrote.

"We may conclude that there is no obvious message on the CMB sky. Yet it remains unclear whether there is (was) a Creator, whether we live in a simulation, or whether the message is printed correctly in the previous section, but we fail to understand it."

Whether or not any of these options is the case, the CMB has a lot more to tell us, as beautifully noted in a 2005 response to Hsu and Zee.

"The CMB sky does encode a wealth of information about the structure of the cosmos and possibly about the nature of physics at the highest energy levels," wrote physicists Douglas Scott and James Zibin of the University of British Columbia.

"The Universe has left us a message all on its own."

Hippke's paper can be read in full on arXiv.

 

Selected and edited from – sciencealert.com

**

 

Scientists have tried, but so far, they have been denied. – Ms. H. 

* * *

 

The Cosmic Microwave Background mentioned in the article above appears apropos to Orndorff's recent creative consciousness background hypothesis. Not too far afield, I have a metaphysical theme in a working Chapter Five for your preview. – Grandma Earth

 

* * *

CHAPTER FIVE

This story happened several thousand years ago. It was on an island off Southeast Asia. A woman and a man sit arguing which of the gods they want to place on their porch. The woman's goddess is kind and generous to a fault, and she thought that it would be appropriate to show their guest, whoever sheorhe was, that the guest is always welcome to their home.

The man replies that he feels his god best because he is the home's defender. This will show the guest that although sheorhe is welcome, home security is more important than hospitality—the two fight about this situation off and on during the next year. The two homeowners attempt to agree that each is better off choosing neither; than choosing the wrong one.

One might think the god and goddess would be offended because neither could stand by the door, but this is not the case. 

In time the couple breaks into a physical battle because each strongly feels herorhis choice is better. She stabs him with a knife, and he strikes her with an ax. Both die. However, both continue fighting in a place after physical death that I, Grandma, call heavenanhellbothorneither. I don't think the spiritual remnants of either human being realize that each is physically dead even today. This is because the battle continues to be a metaphysical question. The highly conscious human minds of the once Living continue in an ethereal state, depending on herorhis mindset, heavenanhellbothorneither. I see the humor here, but those in battle don't see it that way. Too bad.

Grandma grins sharply and adds to the dilemma, "Those who consider the mind to be the same weight as the brain it stems from might consider how many human minds can be put on the head of a pen. No need for Angels here."

* * *

A story state is a quantum state in these two little quatrains,

On how the ethereal mind is separated from the brains.

 

You measure once, you measure twice, and much to your surprise.

How fast and long the logic runs for the brain to theorize.

 

My goddess sits here; your god sits there on a porch laid bare.

The body to the brain sits stuck as the mind runs, seemingly unaware.

 

Yet, all the while, from Grandma Earth's tooth-filled gums.

Something new, yet familiar to the mind, this way comes.

* * *

Like other consciousnesses on the planet, human beings only have so much to work within their thinking. These simple matters are time, distance, circumstance, relationships with their own kind, as well as health, memory, and experience in every daily setting. – Grandma Earth

 

Different orders of priority for each individual at any given time and circumstance. Have a good evening. – Ms. Havisham

 

* * *

  20 April 21 Here is your first draft so far. ** ** Draft 1 of Dialogues ONE Being Human  is divided into three parts: the physical, anothe...