James van Praagh talks about children in the afterlife:
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Death doesn't exist, a scientist said
For most humans of the 15th century, the notion of
Earth as ball of rock was nonsense. It was argued that if the earth were
really round, then the people at the bottom would fall off.
A theory called Biocentrism says that everything we
see and experience right now is a whirl of information occurring in your
mind. Space and time are simply the tools for putting everything
together. Space and time are not the hard objects we think. Biocentrism
may change what we believe, turning the planet upside down again with
the revolutionary view that life creates the universe instead of the
other way around.
Biocentrism is a concept proposed in 2007 by American Doctor of medicine
Robert Lanza, a scientist in the fields of biology and regenerative
medicine, and a professor at Wake Forest, North Carolina. "By treating space and time as physical things, science picks a completely wrong starting point for understanding the world," Lanza declared.
He said we believe in death simply because we’ve been taught we die,
because we associate ourselves with our body and we know bodies die, end
of story.
Labels:
Robert Lanza
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