|
QUANTUM PHYSICS LOOKS AT THE 2004 ELECTION:
Did Bush win the election or did he steal it?
Paul Levy
Quantum physics
points out that the way we observe the universe in this present
moment literally evokes the universe that is observed.
Our perception of the universe is a part of the universe that is
happening through us that has an effect on the universe that we are
observing. Quantum physics points out that it makes no sense whatsoever
to talk of an objective universe separate or independent from the
observer. To quote noted physicist John Wheeler “Useful as
it is under everyday circumstances to say that the world exists ‘out
there,’ independent of us, that view can no longer be upheld.
There is a strange sense in which this is a participatory universe.” In a variation
of the classic “two-slit experiment,” which
is the cornerstone of quantum physics, Wheeler has demonstrated in
the “delayed choice experiment” that not only does our
act of observation in this present moment effect the way the universe
manifests in this present moment, but that the act of observation
in this present moment actually has an effect on the past. This bit
of quantum weirdness seems particularly relevant for our current
times after the controversial presidential election of 2004. Consensus reality,
as embodied in the views of classical physics, describes the present
as having a particular past. Quantum physics,
on the other hand, because of its probabilistic nature enlarges the
arena of history such that the past is an amalgam of all possible
pasts that are compatible with the version of the present moment
that we are currently experiencing. The quantum universe is one in
which the past involves a wide range of possible pasts all co-existing
in a state of unmanifest potential. Speaking in physics terms, by
imagining the past to be a certain way, we literally collapse the
infinite potentiality of the past’s wave function, and concretize
the past as being something very particular. This is analogous to
the quantum physicist’s question: is it a wave or a particle?
And the answer, of course, is that it depends on how we are observing The quantum universe
is one which pulsates in and out of the void multiple times every
nano-second, endlessly recreating itself anew.
Each moment brings with it a potentially new past, which we are the ‘builders’ of
in the present moment. In this present moment right now there are
endless possibilities, it is an infinitely textured moment in time
seething with unmanifested potential. In the future, when we consider
this multi-dimensional moment we are in now, we will probably focus
our attention and only remember a certain slice or aspect of this
very moment, solidifying it in time, and this will be our ‘memory’ of
that seemingly past event. And yet, by the way we remember this present
moment in the future will have an actual effect on the way that moment
in the future manifests. So on the one hand, the way we contemplate
the past has a creative effect on how the present moment manifests. What Wheeler
is pointing out through the delayed choice experiment, though,
is that the past doesn’t actually exist in a solid
and objective way that causes or determines our present moment experience
like is imagined by classical physics. Rather, he is saying our situation
is just the opposite. He is saying that by the way we observe in
this present moment we actually reach back into time and create the
past. It is not just the future that’s undetermined, but the
past as well; just as there are ‘probable’ futures there
are ‘probable’ pasts. Our present observations select
one out of many possible quantum histories for the universe. We have entranced
ourselves and fallen under a self-created spell if we imagine that
the past exists in a solid, objective way. To
quote Wheeler “It is wrong to think of that past as ‘already
existing’…..the past has no existence except as it is
recorded in the present.” When we become convinced that the
past exists in a solid way, we solidify it in our imagination as
being that particular way, which will thereby create compelling evidence
that proves the rightness of our point of view (that the past really
is that way). When we imagine that the past is a particular way,
for example, this conviction effects our present moment experience
AS IF the past really was that way, which just confirms to us our
conviction that the past REALLY IS that way, which just makes the
past seem even more AS IF it really was that way, ad infinitum. This is to fall into a self-created and infinitely self-confirming
feedback loop that is synchronistic and atemporal in its operation
and thereby has the nature of a self-fulfilling prophecy. We have
unwittingly literally hypnotized ourselves by our own power of effecting
reality by the way we observe it. Because of the limited and limiting
way we view the past it seems convincingly solid and objectively
existing in a way that it simply is not. The past is much more malleable
than we have been imagining. For what really did happen in the past?
For that matter, what is actually happening right now? In a circular,
non-linear and acausal feedback loop, the past effects us in this
present moment, while at the same time, in this present
moment we effect the past. The way we observe the past in this present
moment actually effects the past which simultaneously effects us
in this present moment in what I call a ‘synchronistic, cybernetic
feedback loop.’ The doorway is the present moment, which is
the point where our power to shape reality is to be found. In quantum
physics the universe wasn’t created billions of years ago in
the big bang but rather is being created right now by what Wheeler
refers to as “genesis by observership.” The mystery of
this universe doesn’t lie at some point way back in the past,
but rather, right now, in this very living present moment. This quantum
perspective on the past arising or being conjured up out of and
into the present moment collapses the sense of sequential
time and linear causality. This points to the non-local nature of
space and time, in that the past, present, and future completely
interpenetrate and are inseparable from each other. In a bit of quantum
weirdness, if we ask whether the universe really existed before we
started looking at it, the answer we get from the universe is that
it <I style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal">looks as
if it existed before we started looking at it. Quantum physics
is describing what I call the physics of the dreamlike nature of
reality. Like a mass shared dream, we are all literally
moment by moment calling forth and collaboratively ‘dreaming
up’ this very universe into materialization. And dreams, by
their very nature don’t exist in a ‘flat-land’ where
they are fixed in meaning, but are extremely multi-dimensional. When
we contemplate the past in this very moment, it has the same ontological
status of and no more reality than a dream we had last night. Just
like this present moment, when we contemplate it tomorrow, will in
that present moment have no more reality than a figment of our imagination. What actually
did happen on November 2? Did George Bush win the election? Or
did he steal it? And if he stole it, is this criminal
act something we can do nothing about? If this universe is like quantum
physics describes, then we are only <I style="mso-bidi-font-style:
normal">not able to do anything about it because of our own
self-imposed limitations and a failure of our imagination in this
very moment. If even some of the overwhelming evidence that Bush
stole the election is true, can we step into a universe in this very
moment in which we have the power to do something about it? Or is
the past written in stone? Quantum physics points out that this is
a participatory universe in which the power to change reality is
literally in our hands at every moment and that the choice is truly
ours. Let us not get fooled into giving away our power by the source
of our real power, namely, the reality-creating function of our own
sacred imagination.
Paul
Levy is a spiritually-informed political activist. He can be
reached at
paul@awakeninthedream.com.
Please
visit his website at www.awakeninthedream.com,
where his article “The Madness of
George Bush: A Reflection of Our Collective Psychosis” is available.
Please
feel free to pass this article along to a friend if you feel
so inspired.
© Copyright
2004 Paul
Levy.
|