Thanks.VVilliam wrote: ↑Sat Jul 18, 2020 6:05 pmHere is more on the subject of The Absolute - from the CIA document:Dontaskme wrote: ↑Fri Jul 17, 2020 8:08 amI’ve read this excerpt about a hundred times and still have absolutely no idea what the information is attempting to say.Energy in infinity is said to be completely at rest and, therefore, cannot generate holograms so long as it remains utterly inactive. It retains its inherent capacity for consciousness in that it can receive and passively perceive holograms generated by energy in motion out in the various dimensions which make up the created universe but it cannot be perceived by consciousness operating in the active universe.![]()
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The implication is "Simulated Reality" [part of the subject of the OP] and in that, the hologram experienced [by consciousness] is created by "The Absolute" [First Source]...27. Absolute in Perspective. It may be helpful at this point to pause and recap
the major aspects of our intellectual journey from time-space to the realm of the Absolute. We have spoken at some length concerning the incredibly complex hologram which is created by the intersection of energy patterns generated by the totality of all dimensions of the universe, time-space included. We have noted that our minds constitute energy fields which interact with various aspects of this hologram to deduce information which is ultimately processed through the left hemisphere of our brains to reduce it to a form that we employ for the process we call thinking. We have implied that this hologram is the finite embodiment in active, energy form of the infinite consciousness of the Absolute.
I suppose our reality could also be likened to a lucid dream experience which The Absolute [as us/consciousness] is having...It is the title we assigned to that vast pool of energy in a state of perfect rest over which the physical universe is layered, and from whence it comes. Incidentally, to describe this, Bentov uses the analogy of a very deep sea, comparing the still depths of the sea to the dimension of the Absolute while assigning the storm-tossed waves above to represent the physical universe with which we are familiar.
These are often referred to as "alternate [from our own] realities"The slightly agitated currents of the sea to be found in between the turbulent surface and the totally still depths represent energy in the process of either going into rest(i.e. approaching infinity) or coming out of rest.
Simulation Theory and The Theory that Nothing Exists
Re: Simulation Theory and The Theory that Nothing Exists
Re: Simulation Theory and The Theory that Nothing Exists
You cannot know you know. You are the 'knowing' that cannot be known.
To say that consciousness exists is really the same as to say I Am. Everyone intuitively knows that they exist, but as what do they exist? If we understand the world as a virtual reality, like the images projected from a computer screen to the point of view of an observer outside the screen, then to say that one exists as a person in the world is not true, since the observable form of the person is only another image of something in that world projected from the screen. It is much more accurate to say that one exists as the consciousness of the observer present at the point of view outside the screen to which the observable images of that person are projected.
Re: Simulation Theory and The Theory that Nothing Exists
I think that in light of the CIA Gateway Document, we all are - always have been - and always will be "The Absolute" and any journey into a rabbit hole virtual reality is an extension of that...and even a distraction from that...we can learn to get to know IT in the same way that we reflect our image of self upon IT.
Obviously IT is a 'big scary monster' in light of our particular situation within the scheme of things...but should we be frightened? Is facing our self really something we should be fearing?
I think that to deny the evidence - even by ignoring it to the point where one does not even want to investigate - is an outward expression of an inward fear...Know Thy Self Pilgrim...
Obviously IT is a 'big scary monster' in light of our particular situation within the scheme of things...but should we be frightened? Is facing our self really something we should be fearing?
I think that to deny the evidence - even by ignoring it to the point where one does not even want to investigate - is an outward expression of an inward fear...Know Thy Self Pilgrim...
Re: Simulation Theory and The Theory that Nothing Exists
IT being ABSOLUTELY everything including the “big scary monster”Obviously IT is a 'big scary monster'
Being scared of yourself seems unlikely once it is recognised what self is.
Which is the whole enchilada.
The contracted state of being is what causes the stress and fear. That’s why there is no stress or fear during sleep or meditation or when we just learn to relax completely and allow life to flow through us without resistance. Easier said than done though, but comes naturally with self knowledge and wisdom.
Knowing we are being carried through life effortlessly and effectively knowing there is no personal self is very liberating.
Re: Simulation Theory and The Theory that Nothing Exists
For me personally - I want to explore the idea of "personal Self" in relation to the Simulation Experience - so facing that self is also facing that aspect of me which created the simulation...a mirror to which the monkey me [human] responded much like this;Dontaskme wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 10:51 amIT being ABSOLUTELY everything including the “big scary monster”Obviously IT is a 'big scary monster'
Being scared of yourself seems unlikely once it is recognised what self is.
Which is the whole enchilada.
The contracted state of being is what causes the stress and fear. That’s why there is no stress or fear during sleep or meditation or when we just learn to relax completely and allow life to flow through us without resistance. Easier said than done though, but comes naturally with self knowledge and wisdom.
Knowing we are being carried through life effortlessly and effectively knowing there is no personal self is very liberating.

but in order to get the best benefit from said experience, I [as a personal self] have to adjust accordingly...