www.realityshifters.com Cynthia Sue Larson talks about exciting new scientific studies in physics at the University of Oxford with entangled diamonds, and at the University of Chicago with altruistic rats. Increasing scientific evidence supports the idea of our living in a universe in which we are interconnected in ways we are only beginning to understand... with profound personal and societal implications. View Cynthia's complete blog post on this topic at: http://bit.ly/t4gwYf
Sue if you haven't been experimenting with my favorite compound the spirit molecule ill eat my hat. If you don't know what that means you really would benefit from doing so. Just want to say every time you speak you look as if your full to the brim with smiles...makes me feel all fuzzy inside :)
imTOUGHonline 6 days ago
Here's to Humanunity.
TimecapsuleforBabyS 2 months ago in playlist Uploaded videos
Entanglement. Almost like when you play an open string on a guitar across a room, another guitar's string will vibrate on the same open string. In this case, the virtual -base strings- (going QUITE a few steps smaller than just virtual particle-antiparticle pairs) of the vacuum / dark matter / Dirac sea have VERY spooky characteristics! I think I read somewhere that entanglement could -possibly- act even across the whole universe instantaneously, not bound by C, in theory.
QuadniverousBeast 2 months ago
Kind of sad when rats have better morals than a lot of people. Back to the discussion about breaking lightspeed at Princeton, I think to truly determine if they broke C, they should place a supercooled near-zero kelvin sodium sloud in the MIDDLE of the cesium path. A supercooled sodium cloud was used by Dr. Lene Hau to slow light down to less than 10 mph. If they really broke C, the light should get trapped in the cloud. If not, they'll "entangle-transport" to the end of the path, unaffectedly.
QuadniverousBeast 2 months ago
Very nice discussion here. About the entangled diamonds, do you think the non-zapped diamond would still vibrate even if it was across the whole room / at least 30 feet away? What do you think about Princeton University researchers sending light through a path of cesium atoms at a percieved speed of 310 times faster than lightspeed / "C"? Did they REALLY break "C"?? Or, are the cesium atoms at the front of the path entangled with the atoms at the end of the path somehow? Rats = AWESOME.
QuadniverousBeast 2 months ago