Paladin said:
the film What the Bleep do We Know has been showing in the US for nearly a year now, and has just been released in the UK. What impact has the film had on your ideas of spirituality and science? Does the film have merit, or is it merely a pedagogical artifice on quantum physics?
I liked some of the scientists' discussions. I pretty much ditched JZ's comments and the whole middle part with the wierd hormones dancing, and the rest was OK by itself.
I guess what gets me is the two extremes- the folks that think reality is completely independent of our thoughts, and the folks that think reality is completely dependent on our thoughts. What world are either of these people living in?! As a scientist and a mystic, it just always seemed obvious to me that reality is
affected by our thoughts (whether through our actions, or our perceptions of reality, or- if you buy into it- what some people think of as magic) but reality exists on its own. There really are a bunch of things out there that are
very very hard to change. Death is the prime example. Yes, there are accounts of people recovering from mortal illnesses miraculously. But, in the end, they still will die. You can "create" your reality all you want, and you will still grow old and die. Nature is creating reality too, and it seems to be a lot better at it than we are, judging by our limitations.
That said, I do think the film would encourage people to be more open-minded about affecting reality, and anybody who tried to affect their reality would (I'd guess) rapidly come to some conclusions about what can't be altered.
The danger is that by focusing so much on thought, it provides an illusion that action is unnecessary. I know people who think world hunger can be solved just by insisting that there is no bad in the world and that this problem will be resolved. No offense to those who think that way, but I'm putting my money on the people who are out there actually feeding people.