Are you a machine?

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Posted on Jan 20 2005
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Are you a machine? Before you answer that, you might want to consider some recent discoveries in quantum physics.

Laboratory evidence has revealed serious flaws in Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, on which much of 20th century science rests.* The subquantum world of moving fields does not behave in a random fashion as he asserted. Rather, field interactions are governed by a precise set of rules that produce a finite set of pseudorandom field-interaction sequences, from which all things are constructed. That is why things work as they do, in precise operations that always get it right, and never forget how to do it.

Heisenberg’s failure to explain how his magical world of random actions produces the regular, causal, and deterministic macro world that we can describe so precisely with mathematics has inhibited major scientific advancement. Logically, when one bases his hypotheses on a faulty premise, it misdirects research into a stone wall that cannot be breached until the error is corrected.

For example. In the real world there are only about 100 natural elements. The precision field-flow sequences that make them up permit only a small finite number of stable atomic organizations, and thus, only a handful of basic configurations. However if random subquantum activities actually occurred, there should be an infinite variety of ever-changing natural elements…but there are not.

Moving fields, from which all things are constructed, sequence through their field-flow configurations in precise, reproducible order. Whenever an event occurs, it does so in a precise, repeatable, deterministic fashion. The result doesn’t just happen by magic, it is constructed by the mechanism of resonant fields. When you burn hydrogen you always get warm water, you never get chocolate piggies. It’s the way it is.

Because field interactions are so precise, we have only a finite number of natural compounds. The organization of field-flow within each atom determines how it will interact with other atoms. Some combinations are quite stable, others are not. Iron is very stable as iron oxide…rust. If you leave your old Chevy engine out in the weather, it will turn itself into rust. But you can leave the rust out there for centuries, and it will never become a Chevy engine all by itself.

Because all chemical and nuclear interactions are made of pseudorandom field-flow sequences within resonant fields, there exist a finite set of things that occur naturally. All other things must be constructed. This plateau of complexity is the reason Chevy engines do not come about naturally. In addition to being made out of steel, which also has to be constructed, the individual parts of the engine have to be precisely constructed separately, and then assembled correctly or the engine will not work.

The modern technique of gene splicing removes a series of genetic instructions from one living cell, and places it in a different kind of cell. The fact that it works is direct evidence, that living organisms are not only self-replicating machines that precisely construct other living cells, but like a computer, they are programmable. If we change the program in their chromosomes, we change the results. Programmable machines are a step above ordinary machines. Not only must they be initially constructed (like the Chevy engine) but they must also be programmed correctly, so that the series of chemical activities that produce metabolism, reproduction, etc. are sequenced properly. Otherwise they don’t work. Did you ever watch yeast cells reproduce under a microscope? It’s quite a choreographed show.

So, like it or not, we are machines, highly sophisticated mechanisms. Pre-programmed, metabolizing, reproducing machines do not come about naturally, for the same reason Chevy engines don’t.

Read more about resonant fields at www.coolscience.info.* Click on Extraordinary E-books. (John N. Hait)

© 2005 by CoolScience

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