Thursday, February 19, 2015

Do atoms understand language? Are you your brain and nothing else? If so, mind-control programming is quite reasonable By Jon Rappoport


Do atoms understand language?

Are you your brain and nothing else?

If so, mind-control programming is quite reasonable

By Jon Rappoport
February 19, 2015
www.nomorefakenews.com

"The idea that somewhere in all the stacked-up universes, there might be a little corner that isn't made out of matter or energy, but is truly independent of, and different from, sub-atomic particles...this idea confounds people, as if it might mean the end of all existence. It might mean a return to the old myths and fairy tales of the horrific priest-classes. It might mean everything science knows will vanish in a puff of smoke. But what if it doesn't mean any of these things? What if it means that brutal power and domination could die out? What if it means there is an adventure waiting for all of us, beyond any and all pictures of conventional reality?" (The Underground. Jon Rappoport)  

Do atoms understand language?

Why ask such a question?

Because it goes to the heart of the slow-motion car crash that conventional physics has been experiencing for the past hundred years.

The question also puts philosophic materialism into a massive dither, from which it can't hope to recover.

Conventional physics asserts that the universe is made entirely of particles. Atoms. Quarks, wavicles.

The universe includes the human brain.

Here is a sentence: "The Roman Empire collapsed, ushering in a Dark Age, a time of unprecedented chaos."


Forget the truth or falsity of that sentence. It's not at issue. What is at issue is the meaning of the sentence. You're reading it now.

Do you understand it? Do you understand its meaning?

Of course you do. So do I.

But you see, your brain is made of particles that physicists would say have no comprehension of language. None. Zero.

These particles make up rocks, chairs, toothbrushes, asteroids, suns, brains. The same particles.

They have no understanding of sentences or paragraphs or books. No understanding of meaning, as expressed in language.

So?

Understanding of language must come from somewhere else. How can it come from the brain, if the brain is entirely composed of atoms?

"Hello, atom. It rained yesterday, but today it's supposed to be sunny, and the temperature will reach 70. Do you understand what I'm saying?"

No answer.

"Hello, atom. I find the metaphysics of Kant impenetrable. How about you?"

No answer.

Of course, physicists will dodge and tap dance and offer diverting explanations: "We're just beginning to understand the mysteries of the brain...we're making enormous strides..." And this one, my favorite:

"Humans are conscious and understand meaning and language, we know that. And the only place this understanding could possibly come from is the brain. Therefore, the brain is conscious..."

That's called circular reasoning, which means you assume what you're claiming to prove. It's one of the first fallacies a student learns about, when he's studying logic (if anyone studies logic anymore).

Some "experts" will make this assertion: "There is no such thing as consciousness or understanding. They're delusions. So it's quite all right for the brain to be composed of non-conscious atoms..."

In other words, you and I, sharing the words and sentences of this article, are completely deluded into "thinking" that we understand them. We don't. We're just machines made of atoms.

If you buy that argument, I'm looking for investors in my new Thorazine-cookie company.

No, I'm afraid the conscious understanding of language is quite real; and that understanding, that knowing, right here and right now, isn't emanating from the brain, couldn't be emanating from the brain.

Where it does come from...well, all sorts of opinions can be offered. But one thing is clear. If the whole universe is composed of atoms, and if atoms have no conscious understanding, then consciousness and understanding come from someplace else. A non-atom place.

For example...

From you.

And by you, I mean a non-material being.

Unmeasurable. Unanalyzable.

No big deal. Just the difference between a squashed collapsed view of existence and an infinite view...

Here is a statement attributed to Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, 1937 Nobel Laureate in Physiology and Medicine:

"In my search for the secret of life, I ended up with atoms and electrons which have no life at all. Somewhere along the line, life has run out through my fingers. So, in my old age, I am now retracing my steps..."

How many other scientists would admit they, too, have come to the same crossroad? The deeper they probe, the farther they find themselves from what life is?

How many of them would say, "For the past fifty years, I've been quite sure everything is made out of something. Know what I mean? Everything is made out of atoms and electrons and quarks and so on. But those little particles don't understand anything. They just move through space. Something non-material must possess the quality of being able to understand meaning. And that upsets all applecarts..."

How many scientists would say that?

Again...why does any of this matter? Well, here's one reason. There is an enormous amount of mind-control brain research occurring all over the world. This research is based on the premise that, when it comes to humans, there is no one home. There is just the brain, and the functions of the brain can be manipulated and carved up and reduced, in order to make "the human machine function normally."

No problem. No conscience. No guilt. It's just tinkering with the apparatus.

Welcome to the century of the brain. Welcome to philosophic materialism taken to its obvious conclusion.

Welcome to official insanity.  

Jon Rappoport The author of three explosive collections,   THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free emails at  NoMoreFakeNews.com and OutsideTheRealityMachine.  

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