Terence McKenna – The Role of Psychedelics in Simulation Theory (Video)

Terence McKenna – The Role of Psychedelics in Simulation Theory (Video) | Third Monk image 2

An artistic visual presentation of a Terence McKenna lecture that explores simulation theory and how code can be the language behind our DNA, space, time, matter, and energy.

Terence McKenna -DNA, Life Codes Lecture Excerpts

In other words, we have to begin to take seriously the consequences of generalizations like quantum connectivity. It’s one thing to bask in the overarching metaphor, which says that everything is connected to everything else. It’s quite another thing to say, and so then what are the consequences, for me, of this? The answer seems to me to be that the inside of our imagination, the inside of our heads really is the most vast frontier imaginable, and we must leave it for future generations figure out why an animal nervous system would evolve a propensity for accessing non-local data, in other words, quantum mechanically accessible data at a different level of the physics of things. 

What we have to grapple with is that it is so, that you have the Hubble telescope inside of you. You have inside of you an informational gathering instrument that can give you good intelligence about things so immeasurably distant from this point that to state it in numbers and units is meaningless. It’s just elsewhere; the elsewhere of the absolute infinite of the plenum of the imagination in which apparently beings rise and fall like plankton in the sea, and of course the psychedelics are the naturally evolved nano-machinery of the Gaian matrix that knits together this cosmic ecology, this system of living relationships.

DNA-Simulation-Theory

Alan Watts – The Connection Between Dreams and Consciousness (Video)

Alan Watts - The Connection Between Dreams and Consciousness (Video) | Third Monk image 2

Alan Watts describes the nature of consciousness through a series of dream analogies.

Reality is a dream we share as one.

Alan Watts – The Connection Between Dreams and Consciousness Transcript

If you awaken from this illusion and you understand that black implies white, self implies other, life implies death; or shall I say, death implies life. You can feel yourself not as a stranger in the world. Not as something here on probation. Not as something that has arrived here by fluke. But you can begin to feel your own existence as absolutely fundamental.

I’m not trying to sell you on this idea in the sense of converting you to it; I want you to play with it, I want you to think of its possibilities. I’m not trying to prove it. I’m just putting it forward as a possibility of life to think about.

So then, let’s suppose that you were able every night to dream any dream you wanted to dream. And that you could, for example, have the power within one night to dream 75 years of time, or any length of time you wanted to have. And you would naturally as you began on this adventure of dreams, you would fulfill all your wishes, you would have every kind of pleasure you could perceive. And after several nights of 75 years of total pleasure each you would say, “Well that was pretty great, but now let’s have a surprise! Lets have a dream which isn’t under control! Where something is going to happen to me that I don’t know what it’s gonna be”. And you would dig that and come out of that and say, “Wow that was a close shave wasn’t it!”.

Then you would get more and more adventurous and you would make further and further out gambles as to what you would dream. And finally you would dream where you are now. You would dream the dream of living the life that you are actually living today; that would be within the infinite multiplicity of choices you would have, of playing that you weren’t god. Because the whole nature of the god head, according to this idea, is to play that he’s not. So in this idea then, everybody is fundamentally the ultimate reality. Not god in a politically kingly sense but god in the sense of being the self; the deep down basic whatever there is. And you’re all that! Only you’re pretending you’re not.

Alan-Watts-dreams-consciousness

Chief Tecumseh – The Fear of Death Poem

Chief Tecumseh - The Fear of Death Poem | Third Monk image 3

Chief-Tecumseh-poemChief Tecumseh (Crouching Tiger) of the Shawnee Nation bestows ancient wisdom which is lined with an understanding that the reality around us is shaped by the way we choose to be, the way you interpret yourself and your outlook on life.

Chief Tecumseh – The Fear of Death Poem

So live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart.

Trouble no one about their religion; respect others in their view, and demand that they respect yours.

Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life.

Seek to make your life long and its purpose in the service of your people.

Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide.

Always give a word or a sign of salute when meeting or passing a friend, even a stranger, when in a lonely place.

Show respect to all people and grovel to none.

When you arise in the morning give thanks for the food and for the joy of living. If you see no reason for giving thanks, the fault lies only in yourself.

Abuse no one and no thing, for abuse turns the wise ones to fools and robs the spirit of its vision.

When it comes your time to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with the fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way.

Sing your death song and die like a hero going home.

Maynard James Keenan (Lead Singer, Tool) Recites Tecumseh Poem on the Joe Rogan Podcast

What’s Invisible? More Than You Think – John Lloyd Ted Talk Animated (Video)

What's Invisible? More Than You Think - John Lloyd Ted Talk Animated (Video) | Third Monk

The part of existence that we cannot see is constantly at work and our understanding of these concepts at the moment is limited. John Lloyd presents all that is invisible in a lighthearted approach that is mentally stimulating.

John Lloyd – What’s Invisible? More Than You Think – Animated Ted Talk Transcript

So the question is, what is invisible? There is more of it than you think, actually. Everything, I would say, everything that matters except every thing, and except matter.

We can see matter. But we can’t see what’s the matter.

We can see the stars and the planets. But we can’t see what holds them apart, or what draws them together. With matter, as with people, we see only the skin of things. We can’t see into the engine room. We can’t see what makes people tick, at least not without difficulty. And the closer we look at anything, the more it disappears. In fact, if you look really closely at stuff, if you look at the basic substructure of matter, there isn’t anything there. Electrons disappear in a kind of fuzz, and there is only energy. And you can’t see energy.

So, one of the interesting things about invisibility is that things that we can’t see we also can’t understand. Gravity is one thing that we can’t see, and which we don’t understand. It’s the least understood of all the four fundamental forces, and the weakest. And nobody really knows what it is or why it’s there.

For what it’s worth, Sir Issac Newton, the greatest scientist who ever lived, he thought Jesus came to earth specifically to operate the levers of gravity. That’s what he thought he was there for. So, bright guy, could be wrong on that one, I don’t know.

Consciousness. I see all your faces. I have no idea what any of you are thinking. Isn’t that amazing? Isn’t that incredible that we can’t read each other’s minds. But we can touch each other, taste each other perhaps, if we get close enough. But we can’t read each other’s minds. I find that quite astonishing.

In the Sufi faith, this great Middle-Eastern religion, which some claim is the route of all religions, Sufi masters are all telepaths, so they say. But their main exercise of telepathy is to send out powerful signals to the rest of us that it doesn’t exist. So that’s why we don’t think it exists, the Sufi masters working on us.

In the question of consciousness and artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence has really, like the study of consciousness, gotten nowhere. We have no idea how consciousness works. With artificial intelligence, not only have they not created artificial intelligence, they haven’t yet created artificial stupidity.

The laws of physics: invisible, eternal, omnipresent, all powerful. Remind you of anyone? Interesting. I’m, as you can guess, not a materialist, I’m an immaterialist. And I’ve found a very useful new word, ignostic. Okay? I’m an ignostic. I refuse to be drawn on the question of whether God exists, until somebody properly defines the terms.

Another thing we can’t see is the human genome. And this is increasingly peculiar. Because about 20 years ago, when they started delving into the genome, they thought it would probably contain around 100 thousand genes. Every year since, it’s been revised downwards. We now think there are likely to be only just over 20 thousand genes in the human genome.

This is extraordinary. Because rice, get this, rice is known to have 38 thousand genes. Potatoes, potatoes have 48 chromosomes. Two more than people. And the same a gorilla. You can’t see these things. But they are very strange.

The stars by day. I always think that’s fascinating. The universe disappears. The more light there is, the less you can see.

Time, nobody can see time. I don’t know if you know this. Modern physics, there is a big movement in modern physics to decide that time doesn’t really exist. Because it’s too inconvenient for the figures. It’s much easier if it’s not really there. You can’t see the future, obviously. And you can’t see the past, except in your memory.

One of the interesting things about the past is what you particularly can’t see, my son asked me this the other day, he said, “Dad can you remember what I was like when I was two?” And I said “Yes.” And he said, “Why can’t I?”

Isn’t that extraordinary? You can not remember what happened to you earlier than the age of two or three. Which is great news for psychoanalysts. Because otherwise they’d be out of a job. Because that’s where all the stuff happens that makes you who you are.

Another thing you can’t see is the grid, on which we hang. This is fascinating. You probably know, some of you, that cells are continually renewed. Skin flakes off, hairs grow, nails, that kind of stuff. But every cell in your body is replaced at some point. Taste-buds, every 10 days or so. Livers and internal organs sort of take a bit longer. A spine takes several years. But at the end of seven years, not one cell in your body remains from what was there seven years ago. The question is, who, then, are we? What are we? What is this thing that we hang on, that is actually us?

Okay. Atoms, you can’t see them. Nobody every will. They’re smaller than the wavelength of light. Gas, you can’t see that. Interesting. Somebody mentioned 1600 recently. Gas was invented in 1600 by a Dutch chemist called Van Helmont. It’s said to be the most successful ever invention of a word by a known individual. Quite good. He also invented a word called blass, meaning astral radiation. Didn’t catch on, unfortunately. But well done, him.

Light. You can’t see light. When it’s dark, in a vacuum, if a person shines a beam of light straight across your eyes, you won’t see it. Slightly technical, some physicists will disagree with this. But it’s odd that you can’t see the beam of light, you can only see what it hits.

Electricity, you can’t see that. Don’t let anyone tell you they understand electricity. They don’t. Nobody knows what it is. You probably think the electrons in an electric wire move instantaneously down a wire at the speed of light when you turn the light on. They don’t. Electrons bumble down the wire, about the speed of spreading honey, they say.

Galaxies, 100 billion of them, estimated in the universe. 100 billion. How many can we see? Five. Five, out of the 100 billion galaxies, with the naked eye. And one of them is quite difficult to see unless you’ve got very good eyesight.

Radio waves. There’s another thing. Heinrich Hertz, when he discovered radio waves in 1887, he called them radio waves because they radiated. And somebody said to him, “Well what’s the point of these Heinrich? What’s the point of these radio waves that you’ve found?” And he said, “Well, I’ve no idea. But I guess somebody will find a use for them someday.”

The biggest thing that’s invisible to us is what we don’t know. It is incredible how little we know. Thomas Edison once said, “We don’t know one percent of one millionth about anything.”

And I’ve come to the conclusion because you’ve asked this other question, “What’s another thing you can’t see?” The point, most of us. What’s the point?

But, the point, I’ve got it down to is there are only two questions really worth asking. “Why are we here?” and “What should we do about it while we are? And to help you, I’ve got two things to leave you with, from two great philosophers, perhaps two of the greatest philosopher thinkers of the 20th Century. One a mathematician and an engineer, and the other a poet.

The first is Ludvig Vitgenötajn who said, “I don’t know why we are here. But I’m pretty sure it’s not in order to enjoy ourselves.” He was a cheerful bastard wasn’t he?

And secondly and lastly, W.H. Auden, one of my favorite poets, who said, “We are here on earth to help others. What the others are here for, I’ve no idea.”

The Genius of Schrödinger’s Cat Paradox Experiment (Video)

The Genius of Schrödinger's Cat Paradox Experiment (Video) | Third Monk

The genius of this experiment and why people have thought about it so long and still get excited is because it links an act, an event on the atomic scale; one atom disintegrating or not, to something everybody can understand…the cat being dead or alive.

The Schrödinger’s Cat Paradox introduces a subjective element of reality through a scientific scope in the way that certain quantum elements shift based off of the act of observation.

The Afterlife Dysfunction – Consciousness is Quantumly Infinite, An Afterlife is Statistically Inevitable (Video)

The Afterlife Dysfunction - Consciousness is Quantumly Infinite, An Afterlife is Statistically Inevitable (Video)  | Third Monk

Quantum theories suggest that reality is much like the dream world where all moments are possible, there is no beginning, no end, only infinity.

Consciousness Creates Reality

The theory of biocentrism describes reality as a process that fundamentally involves our consciousness. Robert Lanza’s scientific theory explains how, without consciousness: all matter dwells in an undetermined state of probability, time has no real existence and space is just a concept we use to make sense of things.

If we look towards neuroscience and quantum mechanics to further fill in the blanks and shortcomings of biocentrism, all that we are left with are quantized states of consciousness. Reality, how we know it, does not exist. And if it had any sort of existence that we could visualize, it would look something like an endless sea of static, of information in which all probabilities exist. Imagining all these probabilities within a zero-dimensional space without time is not easy. But it is perhaps as close as we’ll ever come to imagining what reality really is.

Linear Time is an Illusion

Any perception of time or continuity is actually an illusion. This is one of the reasons why Robert Lanza’s recent biocentric universe theory was considered to be “a wake-up  call” by NASA’s astrophysicist David Thompson: when we look at the big bang or when we observe how quantum particles jump back and forth in time, we have the arrogance of assuming that time simply moves forward in a straight line and we then go on to see these time-anomalies as unusual and counter-intuitive. But there is no indication that our perception and memories define the arrow of time.

All of this seems to suggest that our reality would completely disintegrate or, at the very least, become highly inconsistent and random at any moment. But the reason why we experience a rigid world with deeply structured laws of nature is because consistent patterns evolve according to mathematical principles. Since every possible pattern can exist within infinity, the only connection between two independent quantized moments of consciousness is the information that overlaps. Smaller or more compressed units are more common and the laws that we are subject to naturally emerge and bring about our consistent reality as it is the most probable one.

Patterns can be found in any type of chaos and since very complex structures are required for consciousness to exist, the reality that we experience evolves along the probable branches of its own specific pattern. If neural disorders such as Capgras syndrome have taught us anything, it’s that we have an incredible ability to rationalize the oddities in our reality. There is one claim though, that becomes hard to refute: that the pattern of quantized moments of experience is inherently infinite and, statistically, an afterlife is inevitable.

Theories Covered in The After Life Dysfunction By Athene

Scientific background on The Afterlife Dysfunction, such as similar theories and thought experiments proposed in popular interpretations of quantum mechanics:
Quantum suicide and immortality
Biocentrism (cosmology)
Anthropic principle
Capgras Syndrome
Split-brain
The Many Worlds Interpretation
The Copenhagen Interpretation
Time Dilation
The Blue Brain Project
Quantum Tunneling
CP Violation
The Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser Experiment

Alan Watts Discusses Nothingness (Video)

Alan Watts Discusses Nothingness (Video) | Third Monk

Alan Watts discusses the state of Nothingness.

“So, you know the story; when the sixth patriarch was given his office as successor, because he was truly enlightened, there was a poetry contest, and the losing one wrote the idea that the mind (the consciousness) was like a mirror, which had to be polished. And constantly, you know, I have to polish my mirror; I have to purify my mind, see? So that I am detached and calm and clear-headed, you know, Buddha. But the one who won the contest said that there is no mirror, and the nature of the mind is intrinsically void, so where is there anywhere for dust to collect? By seeing that nothingness is the fundamental reality, and you see it’s your reality, then how can anything contaminate you?”

Lucid Dreaming Quick Cheat Sheet (Guide)

Lucid Dreaming Quick Cheat Sheet (Guide) | Third Monk

By lucid dreaming you can open your experience up to infinity. Life doesn’t stop when your eyes close.

First – Make an effort to remember your dreams

Tell yourself before you go to sleep that you WILL remember your dreams.

Start a journal, blog, or podcast, record the entirety of your dream in some concrete way.

Second – Reality Check

Reality checking is making a habit of checking whether or not you’re dreaming, while you’re awake. This habit will carry over into you’re dreaming.

Look over the dreams you have recorded and note patterns. These patterns will help you identify when you are dreaming.

Looking at digital clocks, into mirrors and flipping light switches are all great ways to check on reality.

Third- Now You’re Lucid Dreaming

Explore your imagination. Fly, breathe underwater, space travel, time travel get crazy with it and enjoy.

When dreaming rub your hands together and spin to prolong a lucid dream state.

Instead of thinking about what you want to do when you become lucid, think about it while you’re awake.

Fourth – Lucid Dreaming Supplements

Practice meditation. You get used to being in an altered state of mind and become more comfortable with lucid dreaming.

5-HTP is a natural dietary supplement that aids in serotonin production. 5-HTP has been proven to make lucid dreams more common and more vivid.

> Lucid Dreaming | High Existence