IDEALISM
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE
MATRIX
AND THE TRUE NATURE OF MATTER
SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS
INTO THE
ESSENCE OF MATTER
Do We Live in a Holographic
Universe?
New
Scientist is one of the best-known science magazines. Its
March 27, 2002 cover story was written by scientist J.R. Minkel,
titled "Hollow Universe." "Why we all live in a hologram"
the cover headline reported. To sum up the article, we perceive
the world as a single bundle of light. Therefore, it would
be a mistake to consider matter as the absolute truth by relying
on our perceptions. Admits Minkel:
You're holding a magazine. It feels solid;
it seems to have some kind of independent existence in space.
Ditto the objects around you-perhaps a cup of coffee, a computer.
They all seem real and out there somewhere. But it's all an
illusion.
Minkel's article states that some scientists
call this idea the "theory of everything," and that scientists
consider this theory the first step towards explaining the
nature of the universe. This magazine article explains scientifically
that we perceive the universe as an illusion in our brains
and that, therefore, we are not interacting with matter itself.
Perceptions Lost to the Senses,
Recovered with Artificial Signals
In its March 11, 2002 issue, Time magazine
published an article entitled "The Body Electric," revealing
an important scientific development. The article reported
that scientists melded computer chips with patients' nervous
systems to treat permanent damage to their senses.
With their newly developed systems, researchers
in the USA, Europe and Japan aimed to give sight to the blind
and help paralyzed patients recover. They have already achieved
partial success with this new system by planting electrodes
into the relevant areas of the body, and silicon chips were
used to connect artificial limbs with living tissue.
The New Scientist's April 27,
2002 issue with its cover story, "Hollow Universe"
and headline, "Why we all live in a hologram."
"The Body Electric," an article
in Time magazine's March 11, 2002 issue, contained
evidence proving that the external world is a copied
image in our mind.
Following an accident, a Danish patient by
the name of Brian Holgersen was paralyzed from the neck down,
except for very limited movement in his shoulders, left arm
and left hand. As is known, such paralysis is caused by damage
to the spinal cord in the neck and back. The nerves are damaged
or blocked, disabling neural traffic between brain and muscles,
and cutting off communication between the nerves that transmit
signals back and forth from the body to the brain. With this
patient, the aim was to bridge his spinal cord's damaged area
with an implant, letting signals from the brain bring back
a little movement to the arms and legs.
They used a system designed to recover basic
functions of the left hand, like grasping, holding and releasing
objects. In an operation, eight small coin-sized flexible
cuff electrodes were implanted into the muscles responsible
for those movements in the patient's upper left arm, forearm
and shoulder. Later, ultrathin wires connected these electrodes
to a stimulator-a kind of pacemaker for the nervous system-
implanted in his chest. The stimulator was in turn linked
to a position-sensing unit attached to Holgersen's right shoulder-over
which he retains some motor control.
According to the same issue
of Time magazine, experiments in artificial visual
systems revealed that blind people can regain partial
sight with artificially generated signals without
the need for their eyes-or any external object to
see.
Now, when the patient wants to pick up a
glass, he moves his right shoulder upward. This movement sends
an electrical signal from the position sensor, worn under
his clothing, to the stimulator in his chest, which amplifies
it and passes it along to appropriate muscles in his arm and
hand. They contract in response, and his left hand closes.
When he wants to release the glass, he moves his right shoulder
downward, and his left hand opens. The University of Louvain
in Brussels used a similar application of technology in relation
to eyesight. A patient's rod and cone cells had degenerated,
causing the retina to become insensitive to light. Consequently,
she became blind. An electrode implanted around her right
optic nerve enabled her to regain partial sight.
Discoveries of modern physics show that the physical
universe is the sum total of our perceptions. The
renowned English journal New Scientist, investigated
this subject in its January 30, 1999 cover story,
"Beyond Reality."
The July 27, 2002 issue of
New Scientist suggested the possibility of us living
in an artificially created world in an article titled:
"Life's a sim and then you're deleted."
In
this patient's case, the electrode was connected to a stimulator
placed inside a cavity in the skull. A video camera, worn
on a cap, transmitted the images to the stimulator in the
form of radio signals, bypassing the damaged rod and cone
cells, and delivered the electric signals directly to the
optic nerve. The brain's visual cortex reassembled these signals
to form an image. The patient's experience is comparable to
watching a miniature stadium billboard, but the quality is
nevertheless sufficient to prove that this system is viable.
This system is called a "Microsystem-based
Visual Prosthesis," a device permanently implanted into the
patient's head. But to make it all work, the patient needs
to go to a specially designated room in the University of
Louvain and wear what looks like a badly damaged bathing cap.
The bathing cap is made of plastic with a standard video camera
installed on its front. The more pixels there are to form
an image on the screen, the greater the number of electrical
stimulations; therefore, the greater the resolution quality
of the image.
The same article referred to an interesting
show by a performance artist who made use of the same technology:
During one 1998 performance, Stelarc wired
himself up directly to the Internet. His body was dotted with
electrodes-on his deltoids, biceps, flexors, hamstrings and
calf muscles-that delivered gentle electric shocks, just enough
to nudge the muscles into involuntary contractions. The electrodes
were connected to a computer, which was in turn linked via
the Internet to computers in Paris, Helsinki and Amsterdam.
By pressing various parts of a rendering of a human body on
a touch screen, participants at all three sites could make
Stelarc do whatever they wished.
These technologies, provided that they can
be sufficiently reduced in size and placed inside the body,
will pave the way for radically new developments in medicine.
These developments demonstrate another important fact: The
external world is a copied image that we watch in our minds…
The Time article showed practical examples
of how we can create perceptions like sight or touch by artificially
created impulses. The most obvious proof is that a blind person
was able to see. Despite the patient's eye not being functional,
she could see by means of artificially created signals.
Can the Virtual Worlds of
Some Films Be Duplicated in the Real World?
In "Life is a sim and then you're deleted,"
an article published in the July 27, 2002 issue of New Scientist
magazine, Michael Brooks states that we might well be living
in a virtual world not unlike the one in the film Matrix:
"No need to wait for Matrix 2 to come out. You could already
be living in a giant computer simulation... Of course you
thought The Matrix was fiction. But only because you were
meant to."
What! Are they in doubt about
the meeting with their Lord? What! Does He not encompass
all things? (Qur'an, 41: 54)
Author Brooks supports his views by quoting
philosopher Nick Bostrom of Yale University, who believes
that Hollywood movies come much closer to reality than we
realize. He calculates, too, that there is some probability
that we are living in a simulated or virtual world as some
movies depict.
The scientific fact, much better understood
in recent years, that we are not interacting with matter itself,
causes people to reflect more deeply. This situation, the
frequent inspiration for movies, points out that virtual environments
recreate reality so realistically that people can be fooled
by these illusionary images.