In the King James Version of the English Bible [Biblical], the text reads: "The light of the body is the eye: if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light." [Illumination] The ability to see [Clearly]
Our eyes cross, focused, fixated on what's before us. What's after us? What's on pace with us?
Relax your eyes and blur out a bit. Look at an object of your choice with your consciousness but don't focus on it with your eyes. Let that object be the only thing in your mind. Odd things begin to happen. There is no spoon.
Meditate with your eyes open, looking at an object on the other side of the room. Then imagine holding it in your hands. Ask yourself, why does it appear smaller than if I held it in my hands? Does that actually make sense? Why do I think that makes sense? How big is that object really? Odd things begin to happen. You can see in 3d for the first time.
Looking toward the other side of the room, ask yourself if you're seeing any light. Do you see any, or do you just see 2d images of objects? Try to see the light between you and those objects. You can see in 3d for the first time.
Look at someone you love and relax your eyes. Let nothing in your consciousness but the concept of your loved one. See them more with your consciousness and less with your vision. What do you notice? Keep doing it. See anything kinda scary?
Are the things you see actually things, or are they images of active processes?
Isn't "created in God's image" a very strange way to say "Created as a likeness of God"?
What is real? How do you define 'real'? If you're talking about what you can feel, what you can smell, what you can taste and see, then 'real' is simply electrical signals interpreted by your brain.
Percepts are sense impressions that mirror real concepts. Our physical bodies are mirroring devices.
People think of mirrors as things that flip an image. What they really do is present a lower-dimensional image of something real, from the mirror's perspective. They take away depth.
In the King James Version of the English Bible [Biblical], the text reads: "The light of the body is the eye: if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light." [Illumination] The ability to see [Clearly]
QUANTUM LIGHT | The Kingdom Of Heaven Is Within You! https://youtu.be/0inLK9Bte0k
Our eyes cross, focused, fixated on what's before us. What's after us? What's on pace with us?
Relax your eyes and blur out a bit. Look at an object of your choice with your consciousness but don't focus on it with your eyes. Let that object be the only thing in your mind. Odd things begin to happen. There is no spoon.
Meditate with your eyes open, looking at an object on the other side of the room. Then imagine holding it in your hands. Ask yourself, why does it appear smaller than if I held it in my hands? Does that actually make sense? Why do I think that makes sense? How big is that object really? Odd things begin to happen. You can see in 3d for the first time.
Looking toward the other side of the room, ask yourself if you're seeing any light. Do you see any, or do you just see 2d images of objects? Try to see the light between you and those objects. You can see in 3d for the first time.
Look at someone you love and relax your eyes. Let nothing in your consciousness but the concept of your loved one. See them more with your consciousness and less with your vision. What do you notice? Keep doing it. See anything kinda scary?
Are the things you see actually things, or are they images of active processes?
Isn't "created in God's image" a very strange way to say "Created as a likeness of God"?
What is real? How do you define 'real'? If you're talking about what you can feel, what you can smell, what you can taste and see, then 'real' is simply electrical signals interpreted by your brain.
Percepts are sense impressions that mirror real concepts. Our physical bodies are mirroring devices.
People think of mirrors as things that flip an image. What they really do is present a lower-dimensional image of something real, from the mirror's perspective. They take away depth.