Present-Time Notes
—8
August 07 - Congratulations to BE Center
associate Cy Grant for the publication of his "Blackness and the Dreaming
Soul," the record of a journey through the heart of darkness of Western
civiliation and into the light provided by the holographic theory of universe.
—4 June 2007 - Dr. Bruce Lipton returns to the U.S. from his European tour in June. For his speaking engagement calendar, go to http://www.brucelipton.com/calendar.
—22 May 2007 - The primary keeper of the Mayan teachings, visions and prophecies, is calling for a "holding hands around the planet" on May 22.
For full information, go to
http://people.tribe.net
—30 March 2007 - No Excuses not to read!
Congratulations to BE Center associate Bertha Rainen for publication of her book No Excuses--My Plea for World Peace. Writes Suzanne Fairbrother, author of Finding the Boddess Within: "It is filled with wonderful wisdom for creating joy in our lives and overcoming obstacles that might otherwise block our pathway in life."
http://lifeistobeenjoyed.com
—31 March 2007 - Italian physicist reports that the universe is fractalic!
Check out the March 10-16 (2007) issue of the “New Scientist” for a very interesting story on "new cosmology." On the cover, the story is titled "Fractal Universe—Supergalaxies that are shaking cosmology." Within, the article is titled "Don’t mention the F word" and sub-titled "If the universe is shaped like a fractal, it could overturn everything we thought we knew about cosmology."
Here’s a quotation from the article:
"Cosmology is founded on the assumption than when you look at the universe at the vastest scales, matter is spread more or less evenly throughout space. Cosmologists call this a ‘smooth’ structure. But a small band of researchers, led by statistical physicist Luciano Pietronero of the Universe of Rome and the Institute of Complex Systems, Italy, argues that this assumption is at odds with what we can see. Instead they claim that the galaxies form a structure that isn’t smooth at all: Some parts of it have lots of matter, others don’t, but the matter always falls into the same patterns, in large and small versions, at whatever scale you look. In other words, the universe is fractal." (30)
While you’re into the subject, check out what Buckminster Fuller had to say about matters cosmological in his book Cosmology, which was published posthumously.
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