Showing posts with label Dr. Iain McGilchrist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Iain McGilchrist. Show all posts

Tom Campbell and Dr. Iain McGilchrist | A Discussion on the Nature of Reality | March 4, 2023

Source: my-big-TOE.com, channelmcgilchrist.com



This discussion is between two scientists on the nature of our reality and ourselves. It is a stellar example of something significant: two researchers from different fields who have explored truth for decades share their unique perspectives and shared conclusions.

Their approaches may be different, but it is exciting when their conclusions are fundamentally the same. It's all about the bigger picture!

“Our talent for division, for seeing the parts, is of staggering importance -second only to our capacity to transcend it, in order to see the whole”
Iain McGilchrist

"Love is not just a nice idea, it is the fabric of our reality" Tom Campbell

00:00:00 Intro
00:06:14 the two brain hemispheres
00:06:40 seeing the worlds in different ways
00:07:36 portals of understanding
00:08:09 paths to truth
00:08:26 intuition and imagination
00:12:40 time as fundamental, space, matter, and the sacred
00:13:22 reductive materialism
00:17:50 debugging software 00:19:19 an insight into reality
00:20:03 verifiable evidence
00:20:50 Robert Monroe
00:22:20 another reality
00:26:26 deriving physics
00:26:55 probability distributions
00:27:30 speed of light
00:28:18 paradoxes in science
00:29:30 two assumptions of science
00:31:15 double slit experiment
00:31:30 founding of quantum mechanics
00:32:41 consciousness was a known fact
00:34:53 consciousness is fundamental
00:35:12 free will choice
00:47:19 experience and reality
00:51:11 the language of physics
00:53:27 math as not the whole story
00:54:48 intuition and imagination and business
00:55:30 imagination and reality
00:57:20 Darwin
00:57:58 math cannot describe the quality of relationship
01:00:58 logical paradoxes of McGilchrist
01:04:59 scientific understanding for right and left brain
01:13:02 resistance
01:17:03 a computer analogy
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