IDEALISM
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE
MATRIX
AND THE TRUE NATURE OF MATTER
THE MATRIX
We Cannot Go Beyond the Images
in Our Brains
Since we've been using our five senses since
the day we were born, we may never have thought that the "external"
world could be different from what our senses show us.
Human knowledge is formed by the sensory
perceptions we acquire through what we see with our eyes,
what hear with our ears, and feel with our hands. In other
words, each man lives in his "personal world." Thousands of
times, we have met with millions of details like the stars
in the firmament, the Earth we walk on, the billions who populate
the world, every living creature in our environment, the furniture
in our homes, house, the chair you are sitting on right now
and the book you hold in our hand. But all of these are perceptions
of your own personal world. No human being has ever been able
to step outside the world he's experiencing. Whatever a man
does, he cannot alter the fact that his entire life, even
his body too, are perceptions and that he cannot deal with
their originals.
Everyone on it will pass away;
but the Face of your Lord will remain, Master of Majesty
and Generasity. (Surat ar-Rahman, 26-27)
The frames from the film shown opposite show
Morpheus explaining to Neo what the Matrix is. During their
dialogue, Morpheus compares this system to a screen that prevents
Neo from seeing:
Morpheus : Let me tell
you why you are here. You are here because you know something.
What you know you can't explain, but you feel it. You've felt
it your entire life, felt that something is wrong with the
world. You don't know what, but it's there. Like a splinter
in your mind, driving you mad. It is this feeling that has
brought you to me. Do you know what I'm talking about?
Neo : The Matrix?
Morpheus : Do you want
to know what it is? The Matrix is everywhere. It's all around
us. Even now, even in this very room. You can see it when
you look out your window or when you turn on your television.
You can feel it when you go to work . . . when you pay your
taxes. It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes
to blind you from the truth.
Until
Neo is awakened and rescued from the capsule he was in, he
remains unaware of the imaginary world that's been imposed
on him. Every aspect of his life was part of this system;
and feedback from all those around him suggested that this
life was reality. For this reason, it takes Neo a while to
become persuaded and comprehend that his life, which he thought
real until then, was really a dream.
Today, the same is true for some of those
who are made aware of the true nature of matter. People who
believe in matter's absolute existence are positive that they
are dealing with "real things" in the external world and dismiss
this theory as illogical. But what has been revealed here
is as certain as the laws of physics, regardless of the objections
that other people may raise.
Some of our explanations are compatible with
these scenes from The Matrix:
All events and objects that we encounter in real life-buildings,
people, cities, cars, places-in fact, everything we see,
hold, touch, smell, taste and hear-come into existence
as visions and feelings in our brains.
Conditioning means that we imagine that the world outside our brains is a fixed one and that we think we see and feel the originals of these things. In reality, however, we never see or touch real,
existing materials. In other words, every material entity
in our lives that we believe exists is in fact, only a vision
created in our brains. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.10)
If you think heedfully, you can sense that the intelligent
being that sees, hears, touches and thinks, reading this
book at this moment, is only a soul who watches the perceptions
called "matter" on a screen. One who comprehends this
is considered to have moved away from the domain of the
material world that deceives a major part of humanity,
and to have entered the domain of true existence. . .
. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, p.247)
Our Eyes Cannot See- Vision
Occurs in the Brain
In line with our lifelong conditioning, we
believe that we regard the whole world through our eyes. We
could say that our eyes are the windows that open up the world
for us. But according to the scientific explanation for vision,
the truth is not so! We do not see with our eyes. The millions
of optic nerve cells only fulfill their role as a "cable,"
transmitting to our brain the signals which then become "vision."
The hero of The Matrix is misled to believe
that he's living a truly vivid life, whereas he is really
stretched out on a chair, his eyes closed, with wires connecting
him to the machine. All the bright, colorful, vivid images
he's ever seen were shown to him without the need for physical
eyes. Likewise, he experiences the sensations of moving, running,
and fighting without using any of his muscles. He just thinks
he's doing so, while actually lying on his chair.
When Neo returns to real life, he is shocked
to realize that until then, he's been living in a glass cylinder,
albeit in an imaginary world created by electrical impulses
to the brain. In that virtual world, he was a computer programmer,
whereas he was actually sleeping in the room, as shown in
the accompanying photographs. In other words, everything he
thought to be real life was actually an illusion.
Neo : What are you
doing?
Morpheus : Your muscles
have atrophied. We're rebuilding them.
Neo : Why do my eyes
hurt?
Morpheus : You've never
used them before.
As this dialogue shows, Neo was under the
impression of living a real life without his ever using his
eyes or muscles, thanks to artificial signals being transmitted
to his brain. In spite of never having used his vision, he
experienced a truly bright and vivid and colorful world. Likewise,
without ever using his muscles, he always thought himself
to be on the move.
Both East and West belong to God,
so wherever you turn, the Face of God is there. God
is All-Encompassing, All-Knowing. (Surat al-Baqara, 115)
This situation is more or less the same for
every human being. For instance, when you watch people shopping
in a supermarket, you do not see them or the supermarket with
your eyes:This sight is formed not in front of your eyes,
but in the vision center at the back of your brain. Therefore,
it will be possible for you to see the same sight by stimulating
the relevant area of your brain with artificial impulses,
with no need for using your eyes.
Some passages from our books are relevant
to the frames from the film shown above:
When you look out of the window, you think
that you see an image with your eyes, as this is the way that
you have been taught to think. However, in reality this is
not how it works, because you do not see the world with your
eyes. You see the image created in your brain. This is not
a prediction, nor a philosophical speculation, but the scientific
truth. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.12)
As we know, the electric signals coming
from cells in our retinas are transformed into an image in
our brains. For example, the brain interprets some electrical
signals coming to the visual center in the brain as a field
filled with sunflowers. In reality, it is not the eye that
is "seeing."
Therefore, if we are not seeing with our
eyes, what is it that does see the electrical signals as a
sunflower field, at the back of our brain, in a pitch dark
place, without any need for any eyes, retina, lens, visual
nerves or pupil-and still enjoys the view?
.
. . Who is it, then, that perceives the sights in a brain
as if watching television, and becomes excited, happy, sad,
nervous, or feels pleasure, anxiety or curiosity while watching
them? Who is responsible for the consciousness that can interpret
everything seen and everything felt?
. . . What is the entity in the brain that
has consciousness and, throughout life, can see all the sights
before him in a dark, quiet head; that can think, reach conclusions,
and make final decisions?
It is obvious that the brain, made up of
unconscious water, lipids, proteins and atoms, does not perceive
all this and is responsible for consciousness. There must
be a being beyond the brain.
. . . That entity inside the brain that says,
"I am seeing" sights inside the brain, and "I am hearing"
sounds inside the brain and aware of its own existence; and
which says, "I am me," is the soul God has given to human
beings. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion: 81-82)
All
Flavors are Formed in the Brain
As with all the other senses, taste can be
explained in a similar way. In the small bumps of the tongue
are the taste receptors, which respond to the flavors of salty,
sweet, sour and bitter. Following various processes, these
stimuli are converted into electrical signals and transmitted
to the brain, where they are perceived as tastes. The taste
of cheese, an orange, or a cake you like to eat is in reality
the brain's interpretation of electrical signals.
In The Matrix, this point is dramatized in
a conversation taking place at the table:
Apoc : Breakfast of
champions, Neo. (Neo is served a wheat-like food)
Mouse : Close your
eyes, it feels like you're eating runny eggs. You know what
it reminds me of? Tastee Wheat. Did you ever eat Tastee Wheat?
Switch : No, but technically
neither did you.
Mouse : That's exactly
my point. Exactly. Because you have to wonder how do the machines
really know what Tastee Wheat tasted like? Maybe they got
it wrong. Maybe what I think Tastee Wheat tasted like actually
tasted like oatmeal or tuna fish. That makes you wonder. Take
chicken, for example. Maybe they didn't know what to make
it taste like which is why it tastes like everything.
Dozer : It's a single-celled
protein combined with synthetic aminos, vitamins and minerals.
Everything the body needs.
In another scene, one character who knows
the reality-that the Matrix system keeps them in an artificially
created world-describes the food he's eating:
Mr. Reagan : You know,
I know this steak doesn't exist. I know that when I put it
in my mouth, the Matrix is telling my brain that it is juicy
and delicious.
If nerves connecting the taste
buds to the brain were severed, someone drinking strawberry juice would not
taste anything at all.
He knows that a computer program makes his
whole life appear to him as if it was real. Therefore, he
says that the taste of the beefsteak he's eating doesn't exist
in reality, that his brain only perceives this is so. But
he also says that he enjoys it, just as if it was real. Some
of the similar passages in our books are as follows:
We know that everything we see, touch, hear, and perceive as "matter,"
"the world" or "the universe" is nothing but electrical
signals forming in our brain.
Someone eating a fruit, in fact confronts
not the actual fruit but its perception in the brain. Actually,
the object the person considers to be a "fruit" consists of
an electrical impression in the brain concerning that fruit's
shape, taste, smell, and texture. If the visual nerves to
the brain were suddenly severed, the image of the fruit would
suddenly disappear. Any disconnection in the nerves from the
receptors in the nose to the brain would completely interrupt
the sense of smell. Simply put, the fruit is nothing but the
brain's interpretation of electrical signals. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, p.222)
An image of a cake will be linked with the taste of
the sugar, all of which occurs in the brain. Everything
sensed is related to the cake you like so much. The taste
you are conscious of after eating your cake, with a full
appetite, is nothing more than an effect generated in
your brain caused by electrical signals. You are aware
of only what your brain interprets from the external stimuli,
and can never reach the original object. For example you
cannot see, smell, or taste the actual chocolate itself.
If the nerves from your tongue to your brain were severed,
it would be impossible for the taste of foods to reach
your brain, and you would lose your sense of taste entirely.
Certainly the tastes you are aware of seem extraordinarily
real, but that should not deceive you. This is the scientific
explanation of the matter. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, pp.40-41)
In the same way, nobody has been able to taste original
mint. The taste someone would sense as mint is only a
perception which occurs in the brain. This is because
the person cannot touch the original of the mint, see
the original of the mint or smell or taste the actual
mint. In conclusion, throughout our lives, we live with
copy-perceptions that are shown to us. However, these
copies are so realistic that we never realize that they
are copies. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.48)
The taste you get when you eat fruit or
a chocolate is the brain's interpretation of electrical signals.
You can never reach the object outside; you can never see,
smell or taste the chocolate itself. For instance, if nerves
from your tongue that travel to your brain are cut, no flavors
you eat will reach your brain; you will completely lose your
sense of taste. At this point, we come across another point:
We can never be sure that a food tastes the same to us as
it does to another person, or that a voice we hear sounds
the same as when another person hears it. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, pp.220-221)
All Smells Form in the Brain
The smells you perceive do not reach you
from any distance. You mistake the effects taking place in
your olfactory center are the smells of some external matter.
Just as the sight of a rose occurs inside your vision center,
likewise the rose's smell "happens" in the brain's center
for smell. You cannot know the outside existence of a rose
or its scent: The external world that our senses present to
us is really nothing more than the totality of electrical
signals reaching our brains. The brain interprets these signals
throughout our lives, and so throughout our lives, we never
realize that we're wrong to believe that we're interacting
with actual matter "out there."
One scene of The Matrix questions the reality
of smell, but on the other hand, notes its overpowering presence:
Agent : I hate this place, this zoo, this
prison-this reality, whatever you want to call it. I can't
stand it any longer. It's the smell. If there is such a thing,
I feel saturated by it.
From this statement from the Matrix system's
agent, we can deduce that it's impossible to determine what the original of the smell is,, just like all our other senses. Our books also explore this subject:
Volatile molecules emitted by vanilla or roses reach
the receptors in the epithelium of the nose and become
involved in an interaction that is transmitted as electrical
signals to the brain and perceived as smell. Everything
we smell, be it nice or noxious, is nothing but the brain's
perception of volatile molecules' interactions, transformed
into electrical signals. You perceive the scent of perfume,
a flower, a food that you like, the sea, as well as other
odors you like or dislike in your brain. The molecules
themselves never reach the brain. Just as with sound and
vision, what reaches your brain is simply electrical signals.
In other words, all the odors that you have assumed, since
you were born, to belong to external objects are simply
electrical signals that you feel through your sense organs.
(The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, p.220)
There is no need to know what the original on the outside is like to form an
image in your mind. This same situation holds true for
the sense of smell. Just as in your dreams or imagination,
you can become aware of a smell that doesn't really exist,
you can't be sure whether the objects you smell in real
life are like on the outside. You can never have direct experience of the originals of these objects on the outside.
(Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.40)
How Can You Prove That You're
Not Dreaming Right Now?
Smells from the external world,
which we've known since birth, are simply electrical
signals received through our nostrils.
When people awaken from a dream, straightaway
they realize what they experienced was a dream, but never
question what they call "real life," beginning with the "waking
scene." They never consider that for some reason, it might
possibly be a dream itself. We perceive what we call "real
life'" identically as we do our dreams: Both are visions of
the mind. As long as we are not awakened from a dream, we're
not aware that it is one. Only on awakening can we say, "Ah,
it was only a dream."
How can you ascertain that what you're seeing
now is not a dream? Couldn't you be considering this moment
as real simply because you haven't yet woken up? It's very
possible that one day, we'll waken up following a longer dream
than usual and have to face up to this reality. We have no
evidence to the contrary!
In your dreams, you hold objects in your
hands and see with your eyes, but there are really no hands
or eyes, nor anything to behold or hold. There is no material
basis for all this outside the brain; clearly you are being
fooled. But what separates real life and the dream world?
Is real life continuous, and dreams seen only in intervals?
Or in the dream world, do perhaps a different set of cause-effect
rules operate? Fundamentally, these differences are not significant,
because in the end, both lives are lived in the brain. If
we can perfectly live an unreal life in our dreams, couldn't
the same be true for the so-called "real" world we live in?
When we wake up from one dream, we can't be certain that another
new, longer-lasting one called real life doesn't begin. Our
only basis for concluding that dreams are imaginary and the
world is real are habit and conditioning. One day, we might
get woken from the life we think we're living in this world,
just as when we're woken from a dream.
This important subject is explored in The
Matrix, where Neo finds himself in an ongoing confusion between
real life and a dream world. In one scene, he sees his face
split three ways in a cracked mirror. But then the cracks
in the mirror disappear, and he sees himself reflected whole,
as he would expect. Still stunned from this experience, he
turns and asks the others whether they also saw this transformation.
To check the reality of his experience, he touches the mirror-which
immediately turns into a sticky substance that starts to cover
his body in a metallic coating. He even feels the coolness
of this substance on his body. But even though he doesn't
consider this to be possible, it's realistic enough for him
to lose his equilibrium. The wise Morpheus asks him what the
difference is between the real and the dream world, with the
intention of helping Neo not be fooled by what he sees and
experiences.
Morpheus : Have you
ever had a dream, Neo, that you were so sure was real? What
if you were unable to wake from that dream, Neo? How would
you know the difference between the dream world and the real
world?
Neo : This can't be
. . .
Morpheus : Be what?
Be real?
Below
are some extracts from our previous books on this subject:
A person falling in a dream feels it with all his body,
even though he is lying immobile in bed. Even sleeping
in a very hot room, one might dream of slipping in a puddle,
getting soaked and feeling chilled by a cold wind. But
in such a case, there is neither puddle nor wind: One
experiences the wetness and cold as if one were awake.
(Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.62)
A person sleeping in his house can see himself on a
rapidly turning wagon in a fair ground while dreaming.
He can realistically sense the wind that he would experience
on a fast-moving wagon in the real world. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.63)
Another Matrix scene draws attention to the
similarity between dreams and the real life, in which Neo
addresses customers coming to his front door to buy computer
chips. In the adjoining stills, Neo just can't tell whether
or not he has woken up. When he does wake up, he hears the
alarm clock ringing. He is in his room and he sees his desk
and his computer. But what he experienced in his dream was
so realistic that he can't be sure it was only a dream. Customers
coming to his door tell him that he doesn't look too good,
because of Neo's confusion over his contradictory experiences.
He tries to share this duality he witnessed by asking them,
"Ever have that feeling where you're not sure if you're awake
or dreaming?"
Actually,
the duality Neo experiences is quite natural; every thinking
person can become aware of it. Many parts of our books
deal with this issue, of which the following are only a few:
What would happen if we didn't wake up and kept on
dreaming? Would we be able to realize that we weren't
actually dealing with the originals of anything we lived
and saw in our dream?
Of course not. Unless we wake up and discover
that we have been sleeping, we can never realize that we have
been dreaming, and will spend our entire dream supposing that
this is our real life. So how can we prove that our real life
is not a dream? Do we have any evidence to the contrary-that
one day we'll depart from the currently visible life and find
ourselves watching images of our present life from some different
location? (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.67)
Morpheus, who is aware of the reality, repeatedly
advises Neo not to believe everything he sees, because one
must investigate reality in order to understand it. In the
following dialogue from the film, Morpheus points out that
Neo must question everything he perceives before believing
in it:
Morpheus : I can see
it in your eyes. You have the look of a man who accepts what
he sees because he is expecting to wake up. Ironically, this
is not far from the truth.
We too must question the reality of the world
we live in. We must come to realize that we'll never be able
reach the actual world that exists outside ourselves
and from "inside" here, we must find our true purpose in this
world.
The reality-that we are not interacting with
matter itself-is frequently brought to our attention in the
film; below are some excerpts from our books on the subject:
People usually do not include or rather, do not want
to include everything in the concept of the "external
world."
. . . If you think sincerely and boldly on
this issue, you'll come to realize that in fact, your house
and furniture in it, your car-perhaps recently bought, your
office, your jewels, bank account, wardrobe, your spouse and
children, your colleagues and all else that you possess are
included in this imaginary external world projected to you.
Everything around you that you perceive with your five senses
is part of this "imaginary world"-the voice of your favorite
singer, the hard chair you sit on, a perfume whose smell you
like, the Sun that keeps you warm, a flower of beautiful colors,
a bird flying past your window, a speedboat moving swiftly
on the water, your fertile garden, the computer at your job,
or your hi-fi with the world's most advanced technology. .
.
This is the reality. The world is only a
collection of images created to test man. All through their
limited lives, people are tested with perceptions, the originals of which they can never experience. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, p.232)
Think for a moment about those who are swept
away by material greed: What do they value most? A fine house,
luxurious things, ostentatious jewelry, the latest model car,
big bank accounts, a yacht . . . These people are afraid that
they might be observing on a screen in their brains all the
things they possess, and that they will never actually possess
these things.
Like it or not, they are living in a world
of facsimiles composed in their brains and cannot possibly
have any relationship with the external world. Sounds, light
and smells cannot enter the skull; but only electrical impulses
coming from the sense organs. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.106)
Everything a person thinks he possesses-house, car,
family, job and friends -all are composed of images and
sensations that occur in the brain. Anyone who understands
this will also understand that the One Who has created
these images in his brain is God, to Whom all things belong.
For that reason, those who are emotionally attached to
the life of this world greatly fear this reality. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.105)
The Reality of Timelessness
Time is a relative concept, based on comparisons
we make between the events we experience. For example, someone
gets in a car, turns on the ignition and puts his foot on
the gas pedal. After driving a certain distance, he parks
at the curb. Making comparisons between these actions, he
thinks that a certain amount of time has passed between them,
and thus he obtains a sense of duration.
Because we perceive everything sequentially,
in a certain order, we come to believe that time flows forward.
For instance, a leaf always falls down, not up. And raindrops
fall from the sky; we never see them moving upwards, drop
by drop. In this scenario, a leaf still on the tree is the
present. Its falling to the ground is the future.
But if the data in our memories were to be
rewound like a film on tape, the future-in other words, the
leaf on the ground-would be past, and its being still on the
tree would lie in the future. As we can see from this example,
time is relative, dependent on the viewer's perception. A
great span of thousands of years in our view, can be less
than an instant in another dimension.
The
Matrix points out that alongside all other perceptions, time
is relative too. Neo comes to realize that he was wrong about
time. In the frames shown below, Neo finds himself inside
an American-ship built in 2060 designed for land and air transport.
The fashionable garb he wore in the Matrix is replaced with
worn clothing, and the 20th-century world he lived in has
made way for a derelict environment.
Neo : Morpheus, what's
happened to me? What is this place?
Morpheus : More important
than "what" is "when."
Neo : When?
Morpheus : You believe
it's year 1999 when in fact, it's closer to 2199. I can't
tell you exactly what year it is, because we honestly don't
know. There's nothing I can say that will explain it for you.
As with everything else experienced with
artificial stimuli, it is possible to alter someone's perception
of time. From our books, here are some passages on the subject
of timelessness:
Since
time consists of perception, it depends entirely on the
perceiver and is therefore relative.
The speed at which time flows differs, according
to the references we use to measure it, because the human
body has no natural clock to indicate precisely how fast time
passes . . .
Time's relativity is plainly experienced
in dreams. Although a dream seems to last for hours, in fact
it lasts for only a few minutes, or even a few seconds. (Timelessness
and the Reality of Time, p.62)
. . . that time is a relative notion; that it is not
static and unchanging as materialists long believed; and
that it is a changing form of perception were also discovered
in this century. The relativity of time and space has
been proven by Einstein's Theory of Relativity, which
laid the basis of today's modern physics.
To sum up, time and space are not absolute
concepts. They have a beginning, and God created them from
nothing. God, Who has created time and space, is certainly
unfettered by these. God has defined, determined and created
every moment of time in timelessness . . . (Timelessness
and the Reality of Time, p.10)
. . . Being bound by time, such an incident seems impossible
for man. Yet in the Sight of God, time does not exist.
As stressed earlier, past and present are all one single
moment; just as a videotape cassette includes all the
action, moment by moment, in a film. After watching a
film, it is possible to rewind and re-watch it. The same
is likewise true for daily events; by the will of God,
it is possible to see past events again. We only need
God's making us experience once more the same perceptions
belonging to these events. (Eternity
Has Already Begun, 95)
Our Memories are Also Imaginary
He will say, "How many
years did you tarry on the earth?" They will say,
"We tarried there for a day or part of a day. Ask
those able to count!" He will say, "You only tarried
there for a little while if you did but know!" (Surat al-Muminun, 112-114)
Upon Neo's return to the virtual environment
of the Matrix, after discovering that what he thought to be
his life was only imagined, he is simply amazed by this environment.
Throughout the car journey, Neo remembers events of his past,
but is perplexed to consider that none of it was real. Everything
he thought was a memory of his past, had been planted in his
memory artificially.
Morpheus : Unbelievable,
isn't it?
Neo : God . . .
Trinity : What?
Neo : used to eat there
. . . Really good noodles. I have these memories, from my
life. None of them happened.
Our books offer some explanations on this
subject:
Because of suggestions we receive, we believe
we live in separate divisions of time called past, present,
and future. However, the only reason we have a concept of
"past" (as we explained earlier) is that various things have
been placed in our memories. For example, the moment we enrolled
in primary school is a bit of information in our memory and
therefore, we perceive it as an event in the past. Because
future events are not in our memories, however, we regard
things we don't yet know about as what we'll experience in
the future. Just as the past has been experienced from our
point of view, so has the future. But because these events
have not been given to our memories, we cannot yet know them.
(Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.141)
Similarly, the sweet taste you discovered
in chocolate when you were only five years old, the anxiety
you felt on the first day of the primary school, the boredom
you felt in one of your high school classes, the difficult
equations your physics teacher wrote on the blackboard, the
grief you felt on losing a close friend in a traffic accident,
the pride you took in your academic accomplishments, the glow
of happiness you felt when you succeeded at something you
had strived for-in brief, all your experiences and feelings
remain just as they were; not simply kept in your memory.
You perceive your memory as simply the past. Though these
scenes exist right now, the brain does not perceive them…
Believing them bound by a steady, unvarying time flow from
the past to the future, people assume their lives are divided
into distinct sections of past, present and future…However,
knowing that every living thing, every event and object is
created eternally, frame by frame-just like the frames making
up a roll of film-and brought into being simultaneously, will
make this easier to comprehend. (Eternity
Has Already Begun, pp.79-80)
The Conclusion We Reach from
This Reality
Outside the brain exists a world we call
matter, evoking sensations of solidity and visibility. But
you can never reach this world with your senses. Every human
being watches a world that takes shape in his brain, touches
this world in his brain and listens to its sounds in his brain.
God lets every human being watch this material
world as a vision in his brain adding to it solidity and hardness,
to the point that this vision is perceived as real. Imam Rabbani
explained this reality, proven in the twentieth century by
scientific evidence, in great detail. In one of his letters,
he wrote:
Nothing exists in truth and on the outside
except the Almighty God. With His power, He has displayed
in the appearance of the beings He created the perfection
of His names and attributes. That means that He created matter
in the sphere of perception and illusion. Thus matter exists
as an illusion and continues to exist in our imaginations.
Therefore, matter exists because it appears to be so in the
imagination. Because God Almighty allows these images to continue
and gives substantiality to the structure of matter, which
He keeps from vanishing. Because He made eternal processes
dependent on these, illusonary beings continue to seem real.
(Imam Rabbani, Maktubat-i Rabbani (Letters of Rabbani), vol.
2, letter 44)
The Matrix and Matrix Reloaded
created great controversy. Many TV channels, magazines,
and newspapers discussed the scientific facts of
matter in relation to these films' subject. One
of the foremost reasons why the film attracted the
interest of millions, is their awareness of-and
pondering on-this subject's importance. Newsweek;
Dec, 30, 02/Jan, 6, 03
Every human being must reflect most seriously
upon the reality revealed here, because everyone who ignores
it, is fooled for the duration of his life by a perception
appearing on one small area of the brain, which he believes
to be real. For example, a man becomes vain and arrogant to
think that he owns the buildings appearing on one portion
of his brain, forgetting that one day, he too will die. In
the brain of someone else, the perception of being destitute
leaves him hopeless and depressed. One who loses the visualization
of money in his brain becomes instantly devastated. Someone
else who sees-in his brain-his car's paintwork scratched becomes
angry, and his love of property drives him frantic.
In
reality, none of these people is any different, one from the
other. Seeing one's self poor or rich, or seeing one's car
being scratched, is an image forming in the brain. No one
ever can see or know what lies outside his brain. Only God,
Who creates the world inside-and also outside-our brains,
knows this.
People who are ignorant or unaware of this
reality or those do not want to acknowledge the very clear
truth, will always live in error. They are comparable to someone
watching a play or movie in the belief that it's real and
therefore, wants to be part of it. No matter how much the
audience around him try to persuade him or show him the truth,
he will always pretend not to understand.
Without exception, every human being will
understand this truth, comprehend, and acknowledge it one
day. This moment will come to everyone upon his death, when
his brain's perception of life in this world will give way
to the perception of death, Judgment Day, and the Hereafter.
As God revealed in the Qur'an, death will be like awaking
from sleep, like proceeding from a dream to reality. One will
move on to the true, endless life; and the perception of this
life will become much clearer too. God, the Lord of all the
worlds, reveals this reality in the verses:
They will say, "Alas for
us! Who has raised us from our resting-place? This is what
the All-Merciful promised us. The Messengers were telling
the truth." (Surah Yasin, 52)
"You were heedless of this,
so We have stripped you of your covering, and today your sight
is sharp." (Surah Qaf, 22)
In one of his hadith, our Prophet (peace
be upon him)-a role model of trustworthiness, knowledge and
wisdom-pointed out this reality when he said, "Humans are
asleep, they are awakened ith death." (Imam Ghazali)
… We have stripped you of your
covering and today your sight is sharp (Surat Qaf,
22)
Return to your Lord, well-pleasing and well-pleased!
(Surat al-Fajr, 89: 28)
Reality is the life after death. Earth is
an imaginary world shown to us on a little area of our brains,
just like a dream. It is an enormous and heedless error to
be misled by this imaginary world, forgetting to ponder the
real, infinite life to come. Those who refuse to recognize
this fact during this life will suffer great remorse in the
hereafter. When they realize that the people, properties,
ranks and offices-to which they were devotedly attached throughout
their lives; which they blindly pursued by believing that
they were real;which they associated with God by forgetting
Him and the Hereafter-are actually only imaginary and people who realize that throughout their lives they only ever had direct experience of copies in their brains will express their remorse. They will be devastated to see all the things
they thought would exist forever falling, one by one, by the
wayside. In the Qur'an, God reveals their confessions in the
Hereafter:
Then they will be asked,
"Where are those besides God you associated with Him?" And
they will reply, "They have forsaken us. Or rather, we were
not calling to anything at all before." That is how God misguides
the disbelievers. (Surah Ghafir, 73-74)
... Such people's portion
of the Book will catch up with them, so that when Our messengers
come to them to take them in death, saying, "Where are those
you called upon besides God?" they will say, "They have left
us in the lurch," testifying against themselves that they
were disbelieving people. (Surat al-A'raf, 37)
Every single person who refuses to acknowledge
and ponder this reality in this life can well be saying these
same things, experiencing this same irreversible regret in the
hereafter. Those who lose themselves in this worldly life, which
God shows us just like a dream; who think that this life is
the only real one and that death is its end, will wake from
their sleep of ignorance, leave their dreams behind with their
death, and see the real truth. On the other hand, every sincere,
carefully thinking person will realize the reality while still
on Earth and make a genuine effort to win his life to come in
the Hereafter.