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Point-of-View



What is Your Point-of-View?

 

"A circle is a way to understand point-of-view. 

A circle has 360°. 

Most people plod throughout life from one point-of-view to another. 

There is a way to jump to the bottom line on any subject -

with very little input on the subject."



Objects seem to be solid from our point-of-view. But they actually contain more empty space than solid.

 

Point-of-view and the hot stove:  A 2 year old child is driven to experience the world around him by genetics.  This powerful process tries to insure the survival of the species.  A mother is instinctively pushed to stop the child to save him from injury.  Who is right?  They both are!

There is no right, there is no wrong; there is only “point-of-view.”

Can we use this philosophy to explain how to understand the Cosmos?  Yes, we can.  Let’s say any subject is to be learned.  Our normal way of learning is day-by-day, month-by-month, year-by-year.

By taking a larger view, you can step back and see the big picture.   For example, is it wrong for a boy coming into manhood in a tribe of South Pacific Islanders to participate in their rite of passage of cannibalism?  No.  From his point-of-view that’s the right thing to do.


 

The circle is 360°, and instead of normal linear learning processes, think of seeing the entire circle as one big picture. 

 

Instead of point-by-point, learn to take key points and jump to the center (answer).  The brain looks a lot like the Cosmos — a mass of neurons connected by pathways. 

 

Just like the Picture Jasper rock can mimic a distant mountain range, the entire cosmos is a system that can be understood the same way. 


If the same elements make up the entire Cosmos, then we can draw conclusions about its make-up.  We can say that massive stars cooked the elements that make up the earth and us.  We are made of stardust. 

 

Everything in the observable universe is made of these same elements. Therefore, instead of learning every point on the circle, we can see the central answer.  If we see what life is made from on earth, all of the possible combinations for life in the universe become staggering. 

 

So without being an astrophysicist, one can jump to the center of the circle and “see” the answer  This applies to all questions you can imagine! 

 







The more you know, the more you can know.  What’s the sense of learning about the Cosmos?  To see where we came from. 

 

Everybody’s brain is “wired” to be gifted in some area.  If we develop this part of the brain, we become outstanding in a particular field, e.g. mathematics or music.  The brain is like a computer.  The more we think, the more connections between neurons we “make.”  Learning how wolf packs operate might not seem to make sense in our everyday lives, but it does.  It teaches us how nature (and us) has evolved. 

 

One of my complaints about religions, unions, and governments, is that they want you to not use your mind.  They want to control you.  The brain is like a muscle.  The more you use it, the more it grows. 

 

Five years ago I started to notice that smart phone users were getting pleasure every time the ding went off on their phone.  Guess what? Race car drivers, skydivers, bullfighters and every other sports fan in the world drug themselves in the same way; which is why they keep going.  To all religious believers, I know you don’t want to hear this but you need to.   When you feel that feeling of grace, that is not some God imparting that upon you; that is you drugging yourself.  So the humans that keep their drug cabinets full of so-called legal drugs are just as much drug addicts as the so-called illegal addicts. Sports fans, that excitedly rise from their seats when their team scores, are drugging themselves.  These neurotransmitters, like dopamine and serotonin, are the same type of chemicals that are in marijuana.   This is an example of the circle I speak of.  You can extrapolate all the way down the line like this little example and understand the entire universe this way.  By watching and understanding human physiology and how drugs affect the human brain, you can see that all these subjects I’m discussing here are ultimately all the same.  With the ability to see through and connect all subjects, the path to understanding the universe is in view!

 

 

 

 

 

This allows the mind to see the “big picture”.  For example, is it wrong for a boy coming into manhood in a tribe of South Pacific Islanders to participate in their rite of passage of cannibalism?  No.  From his point-of-view that’s the right thing to do.

Was it wrong for our ancestors to kill and eat animals?  No.  It was survival of the fittest and that was all they knew.  But, it is now wrong to herd and kill animals.

Based on DNA similarities of humans and animals, they have just as much right to life as we do.  For the price of a couple of our B-2 bombers, we could develop a plant-based diet with supplements.  This would have the added benefit of eliminating animal fats from our diet and add to our life-span.

If we eliminate the idea that it is okay to kill to survive, it might start translating to show that killing humans is also wrong.



 

 

Geometric Optical Illusions

Geometric Illusion:

© Martin Oger at DreamsTime.com

 

Active Neurone:

Active Neurone:

© Sebastian Kaulitzki at DreamsTime.com

 

 

Geometric Optical Illusion

Optical Illusion:

© Yobidaba at DreamsTime.com

 

 


 

© 2008 Richard Hamilton

 

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