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Saturday, July 17, 2010

Our Non-sense World

In today's blog, I wish to continue, in a rambling way, with the discussion of our hidden "powers."

It is believed our five senses--touch, sight, hearing, smell, taste--are all which we human's possess to experience "reality" (the three dimensional world). There is, on occasion, an acknowledgment of a possible human "sixth sense"; that being intuition. Talking about "intuition," leads directly into just what I am stipulating--that which is denied by consensus science--because a sixth non-physical sense suggests that there is something "other" about humans that is unexplainable in rational, scientific ways.

While the sciences that purport to deal with the physical human body--anatomy and physiology, with its offshoot, the medical profession--claim to know all there is to know about the organs of our five senses, they, in actuality, know, nor understand, anything real about them.

Take our eyes, for example; we have eyes, which it is believed to be how humans see. In general, the physiology of our eyes is understood--the rods the cones, the eye ball is connected to our brains, etc., but just how the physical brain translates what the eye "sees" into images is not understood.

Many experiments have been done on humans in an effort to gain an understanding, resulting in fascinating results. Did you know that the eye "sees" everything upside down, which the brain proceeds to turn right side up? In these experiments it has been found that, if the person is fitted with glasses that turn everything the eye sees, "right side up," the brain adjusts rapidly to this strange new circumstance. (Take care of your eyes, and be grateful for them; they are an unbelievable treasure.)

I first became interested in the human ability to perceive color when I worked for a printing ink company, in the '60's, that manufactured inks for the printing industry. It was there I learned about the dot system that creates colors. If you have a strong enough magnifying glass, you can check this out for yourself. All colors in the printed matter you look at is produced by a series of dots--black, white, red, blue, and yellow. Artists have to learn about color in order to produce their art--while it is believed that black is a combination of all colors, and that white is the absence of colors, in actuality, both are all colors. Mixing the three colors produces the rest of the spectrum, to which white and black are added.

I would now like to say something about animals ability to see color, as it played into my questioning back then. In an article I referenced, to see if what was believed in the '60's was still the case, I found the following:

Most birds appear to have well-developed color vision. Apes and monkeys also have the ability to tell colors apart. Most mammals, however, are color-blind. Dogs and cats seem to be color-blind and only see shades of black, white, and gray.
eNotes.com Science Fact Finder

Okay, so riddle me this--camouflage; humans who are "color-blind" are not able to distinguish colors; to varying degrees. Humans who are color-blind have been used in the military, during times of war, to see through camouflaged armaments, etc.--they are not fooled by camouflage. The riddle: animals are said to be the colors they are, because of the need to camouflage themselves from predators. If predator animals are not able to see color--are color-blind--what is the purpose of animal camouflage? This puzzle, which I was presented with in the '60's, began my questioning of scientific "facts" about the world we live in.

Another fascinating example of what the scientific experts do not know about human vision is: "What is the "third eye," and how are a great many people able to "visualize" using, it is believed, their imagination only? There are individuals who have this ability in such a strong degree, it is like they have their own personal TV set in the middle of their foreheads. It is possible to use the ability to visualize in amazing ways, if you possess it.

Another human visual ability possessed by a large number of people, is the ability to see auras around other people. While it used to be believed, by consensus science, that this was just people's "imaginations"; with the Russian invention of Kirlian photography which can photograph auras around a lot more than humans, the scoffers do their best to ignore this subject entirely.

The fact that the human body, and other life forms, have auras that can be seen is irrefutable evidence that humans have a non-physical body--actually "bodies."--and, therefore, are a part of the non-physical world we all are immersed in. It is the non-sense world.

With those words, I leave this subject for today.

Shirley Gallup

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