The Holographic Universe Of Our Minds

Not everyone is keen to read and understand quantum physics though it is being touted as the science of 'God'. David Bohm was the first to postulate the existence of multiple dimensions and unseen realms in his book 'Wholeness and the Implicate Order'1980. Today this concept is widely accepted and being tested in the large Hadron collider.

A sensational discovery has been made by experts as scientists have found that the human brain is home to structures and shapes that have up to 11 dimensions. Neuroscientists welcome the discovery saying: “We found a world that we had never imagined.”

Scientists Have Found A Multidimensional Universe Inside Our Brain


Mathematical methods of algebraic topology have helped researchers find structures and multidimensional geometric spaces in brain networks. According to experts, a new study has proven that the human brain is home to structures and shapes that have up to 11 dimensions.

Human brains are estimated to be home to a staggering 86 billion neurons, with several connections from each cell webbing in every possible direction, forming a super-vast cellular network that SOMEHOW makes us capable of thought and consciousness, reports Science Alert.

Scientists Have Found A Multidimensional Universe Inside Our Brain
Conceptual illustration of brain networks (l) and topology (r), courtesy of Blue Brain Project.


An international group of scientists gathered around the Blue Brain project has obtained results never before seen in the world of neuroscience, according to the study published in the journal Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience. 

This team managed to find structures in the brain that present a multidimensional universe, uncovering the first geometric design of neural connections and how they respond to stimuli. Scientists made use of in-depth computer modeling techniques to understand how exactly human brain cells are able to organize themselves in order to carry out complex tasks.

Researchers used mathematical models of algebraic topology to describe structures and multidimensional geometric spaces in brain networks. 

In the study, it is denoted that structures are formed at the same time that they are interlaced in a “union” that generates a precise geometric structure.

Henry Markram a neuroscientist and director of Blue Brain Project in Lausanne, Switzerland said: 

“We found a world that we had never imagined. There are tens of millions of these objects even in a small speck of the brain, up through seven dimensions. In some networks, we even found structures with up to 11 dimensions.”

As noted by experts, every neuron inside of our brain is able to interconnect to a neighboring one, in a specific way to form an object with complex connections. Interestingly, the more neurons join in with the clique, the more dimensions are thus added to the object. Using algebraic topology, scientists were able to model the structure within a virtual brain, generated with the help of computers. Afterward, scientists carried out experiments on real brain tissue to verify the results.

After scientists added stimulus into the virtual brain tissue, they discovered that cliques of progressively HIGHER dimensions assembled. They found that in between these cliques were holes or cavities.

Ran Levi from Aberdeen University, who worked on the paper, told WIRED:

“The appearance of high-dimensional cavities when the brain is processing information means that the neurons in the network react to stimuli in an extremely organized manner.”

“It is as if the brain reacts to a stimulus by building then razing a tower of multi-dimensional blocks, starting with rods (1D), then planks (2D), then cubes (3D), and then more complex geometries with 4D, 5D, etc. The progression of activity through the brain resembles a multi-dimensional sandcastle that materializes out of the sand and then disintegrates.”

While shapes that are three-dimensional have height, width and depth, the objects discovered by experts in the new study don’t exist in more than those three dimensions in the real world, but mathematicians used to describe them can have 5, 6 7 or up to 11 dimensions.


The meaning of existence, Happiness, and Your brain As a Holographic instrument


Manifestly, your mind has a lot to do with the which means of existence. Your mind, after all, is where the thoughts reveals part of its house. i have been reading currently from The Holographic Universe, with the aid of Michael Talbot. The items Talbot talks about are astounding. as an instance, and in my personal phrases, the mind is a long way, far larger, more giant than anyone ever imagined.
however what does this must do with the meaning of lifestyles? properly, for one element, we are able to say that the which means of lifestyles, to be happy, isn't always restricted to the physical shape, or gray count number, of the mind. The mind and/or brain is one a part of a large hologram - the Universe. basically meaning that any a part of the universe, irrespective of its size, includes the entire of the Universe. much like any a part of a true piece of holographic movie holds the whole of the image on the movie.
(what's a hologram? look on any of your credit score playing cards and you will find a symbol that seems to return off the surface towards you. this is in essence a holographic photograph. Or do not forget the first in the series of Stars Wars to pop out. Princess Leia's holographic photograph is projected from C-3PO, as Leia attempts to touch Obi-Wan "Ben" Kenobi.)
If the complete Universe is a hologram and your thoughts is one a part of that hologram, the entire Universe is out so as to be glad. The Universe "desires" you to be glad. The natural nation of being for human beings is properly-being.
Why? Happiness may be described as harmony, best concord. So the Universe, being total or best in and of itself, seeks Its own happiness. but while It does, It takes you "along with it." because it is holographic, every "piece" of it incorporates the entire. So, you as a piece of the whole, your highest fee, so to talk, is to be glad, as the Universe is and seeks to be. The which means of existence is inside the very shape of the Universe AND, consequently, for your own mind/brain.




Professor Cees van Leeuwen, from KU Leuven, Belgium, told Wired: 

“Outside of physics, high-dimensional spaces are frequently used to describe complex data structures or conditions of systems, for instance, the state of a dynamical system in state space.”

“The space is simply the union of all the degrees of freedom the system has, and its state describes the values these degrees of freedom are actually assuming.”

The Holographic Mind

What if it is true, as some scientists are suggesting, that the universe is, in fact, a hologram? What does that make us, make of our minds, our consciousness, our lives? Depending on how you view the suggestion, your response to it will lie somewhere between alarm and excitement. If alarmed, it is likely because you think being a holographic reality would imply that you are somehow less real, a sophisticated avatar at best, or a plaything of something beyond you, projecting you as a super sensory effect. To arrive at such conclusions is understandable, but what of the most exciting possibility that they also beg to suggest: that you are also an aspect of the consciousness that designed and created the holographic sensory self in the first place. Of course this begs the next question - why?

The essence of our life is experiential, a stream of consciousness that experiences itself through infinite variations of energetic vibration. For example, the physical body, a dense field of localised energy, is a highly sophisticated receiver and transmitter of energy, a sensory field that is designed with specificity in mind. 

The eye, for instance, is designed to sense and translate light vibration in a way that makes us visually aware and experientially conscious of three-dimensional space. Of course three-dimensional space is one kind of reality, and is the one we are most aware of, but we know too, it is not the only reality.

If our sensory apparatus were designed differently, our conscious experience of reality would differ also. We might be less localised, invisible to ourselves and to others, but no less aware, and no less able to create. As humans, we create to improve, enhance, and challenge our experience. It is a force within us that is quintessential to our nature and cannot be suppressed. It flows from the source of our consciousness as a means of expressing itself.

If the universe is in fact a holograph, then could it not be that the 3D holographic reality we are conscious of ourselves in, is a specifically created reality (created by some part of ourselves) for the purpose of our source - consciousness - to become amplified by experiencing itself multi-dimensionally through individuated points of conscious experience? Those individuated points, in this 3D instance, being us.

If so, is the transcendental follow through not obvious?  That continued expansion of consciousness will inevitably result in individuated consciousness (us) to become coherent, making 'us' experientially conscious of ourselves as one, realising ourselves to be an infinitely expanding 'universal mind', unconfined by dimensional barriers. Just a thought! For more information please visit:  Click Here To Manifest Magic Into Your Life

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