Life sciences in the face of the Big Bang


Isaac Newton’s infinite universal first principle theories of gravity were derived from ancient Greek science. Today these principles can demonstrate that Einstein’s quantum mechanical worldview had been based on the false assumption that Newton believed that the mass of objects in space was the primary cause of gravity. Einstein’s quantum mechanics led to the Big-Bang theory of the universe expanding from nothing, which seems pretty absurd. In 1952, Nobel Prize-winning scientist Erwin Schrödinger referred to a multiverse that to his audience might have sounded like a lunatic idea, but his prize-winning mathematics argued otherwise. The existence of multiple parallel universes is now at the center of a huge controversy. The 2007 Nobel laureate, Steven Weinberg, pointed out that if they existed, the Big Bang theory would be doomed to failure.

A multiverse universe is considered to be capable of communicating information electromagnetically to the outer membrane of our universe. The ancient Greek scientific explanation of gravity, referred to by Newton in his 28th Discussion, began when a father of science, the philosopher Thales, associated the nature of gravity with a sexual demiurge to cast seeds into the cosmic egg. . Now we can play with the concept that once the ‘seed’ penetrates the universal membrane, it begins to grow its baby at Big Bang speed. Furthermore, the Greek science on this process was considered ethical if it involved giving birth to healthy and compassionate offspring.

It was held that this ethical purpose was achieved through nurturing and harmonic feminine information, resonating from the planetary movement being repeated by all living atoms in the universe. This process was mentioned by the ancient Greek Science for ethical purposes ace wisdom through beauty associated with music of the spheres.

Einstein’s mechanistic worldview held that the universe would eventually be destroyed in accordance with his understanding of the universal laws of thermodynamics and entropy. However, Newton’s first law logic was concerned with the life process within an infinite universe. We can use that first principle logic to reason about the existence of ethical emotional thinking. For example, infinite fractal mathematics is used to model biological systems.

The electromagnetic golden age of Danish science showed how this can be achieved. First of all, his goal was to find an ethical motor to make Faraday’s electromagnetic motor a child’s toy by comparison. In the image of the demiurge to cast the seed into the cosmic ovum, the human sperm is propelled towards the ovum by an electromagnetic motor driving its tail. Upon entering the ovum, the electromagnetic liquid crystal structure of the ovum’s membrane transforms the sperm’s motor into a centriole. This centriole then electromagnetically charges the first bone formed in the embryo, the sphenoid bone. Attached to the sphenoid bone is the vagus nerve, the basic building block of human compassion. Therefore, we can update the ancient Greek of the third century BC Science for ethical purposes.

Scientists have deduced that the nature of the communication between our universal membrane and a parallel universe is spoken in a mirror-image electromagnetic language. The philosopher of science Immanuel Kant, in his distinction between artistic aesthetics and ethical artistic wisdom, along with his contemporary Emmanuel Levinas, argued that evolutionary artistic wisdom is a spiritual inner creative vision induced by an electromagnetic field of image speculate ethics. The electromagnetic geometric shape assumed by the cell at the point of cell division employs electromagnetic mirror image field properties. These properties prevent the dysfunctional information present pertaining to our thermodynamic worldview from being transmitted to the replica cell. This dysfunctional information that now belongs to the epidemic transmitted by the mass production of information and communication devices that is now causing incredible social damage can be considered a form of cancer. The antidote lies in an entirely new worldview beyond the limitations of the Big Bang theory.

Art, particularly stereoscopic art, plays an important role in helping to realize Kant’s electromagnetic universal purpose. The artist Salvador Dalí experimented with stereoscopic art to explain the existence of a future deeper scientific culture. Viewing many 21st century paintings through asymmetrical electromagnetic stereoscopic lenses, Salvador Dalí’s message about a future culture of science and art becomes immediately visible. The new technologies of Science-Art have made it possible. From this information, an antidote to the current dysfunctional stereoscopic epidemic, transmitted by the mass production of information and communication devices, becomes feasible.

By programming a computer with ancient Greek spiritual wisdom, previously banned because it did not fit today’s science demand for our extinction, we can free ourselves from the dictates of the universal thermodynamic law of heat death and rapidly generate a rigorous simulation of the human survival model.