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BIOCENTRISM

Page 24

by Robert Lanza


  3

  f

  Kuffler, Stephen, 25, 27, 28,

  Feynmann, Richard, 47, 88

  131–133

  Field and Stream magazine, 25

  Filippenko, Alex, 90

  l

  Four forces, the, 84, 156

  Lampyris Noctiluca, 12

  Language, 138, 139

  g

  Limitations of, 37, 136–140

  Gisin, Nicholas, 51–52, 54

  Leslie, John, 91

  i N d e x

  2 1 1

  Libet, Benjamin, 38–39

  Probability laws, 63

  Light

  Probability state, 81

  And color, 17

  Probability waves, 51, 55, 59, 69

  Behavior of in double-slit exper-

  iment, 61–79

  Q

  Perception of, 35–36

  Quantum fluctuation, 6

  Polarized, 57, 70

  Quantum mechanics: see Quantum

  Nature of, 21

  theory

  Speed of, 49, 115

  Quantum physics: see Quantum

  Linde, Andrei, 178

  theory

  Locality, 49, 52–53, 124

  Quantum theory, 1, 21, 47–50, 52,

  Lorentz, Hendrik, 120, 121

  58, 61–62, 70, 80, 95, 124, 178

  Lorentz Transformation, 120,

  And biocentrism, 195

  199–200

  And complementarity, 53, 70,

  Luria, Salvador, 131–134

  73

  And technology, 47

  m

  As inexplicable, 51, 80, 136

  Magnetism, 21, 22

  Copenhagen interpretation of,

  Many worlds interpretation (MWI),

  54, 57–58, 177–178

  58

  Future of, 195–196

  Mars, 8

  Many worlds interpretation of,

  Michelson, Albert, 119–120

  58

  MIT, 130–134

  Quarter wave plates, 70–72, 75,

  Morley, Edward, 119

  77–79

  Muybridge, Eadweard, 101

  r

  n

  Rainbows, 22–23

  NIST (National Institute of Science

  Resonance, 88

  and Technology), 52, 79, 80

  Roemer, Ole, 102

  Newton, Isaac, 62, 96, 105

  New York Times Magazine, 34

  s

  Sagan, Carl, 8, 166

  o

  Scaled-up superposition, 59, 196

  O’Donnell, Barbara, 30, 105–106,

  Schrodinger, Erwin, 55, 177–178

  108, 109, 133, 179

  Skinner, B.F., 28, 153, 172,

  O’Donnell, Eugene, 30–32

  175–176

  Sklar, Lawrence, 121

  p

  Sound, nature of, 19–20

  Parker, Dennis, 144–146

  Space, 111–127

  Poe, Edgar Allan, 95

  As illusory, 118

  Pope, Alexander, 111

  As inconstant, 115

  2 1 2

  b i o C e N T r i s m

  Space-time, 48–49, 122

  Illustrations of, 63, 65, 67, 68,

  Special relativity, 120–122, 124,

  69

  201–206

  Spinoza, Benedict, 185

  u

  Star of Bethlehem, 153–154

  Universe, expanding, 5–6

  String theory, 1, 7, 14, 97, 162

  Strong force, 88

  w

  Superpositions, 58, 137

  Wave collapse, 16, 51

  Wave-function, 50–51

  t

  Wave–particle duality, 49, 54, 55

  Theory of everything, 1, 4, 13–14,

  Weinberg, Stephen, 48, 173–174

  119, 161–162, 174, 197

  What the Bleep Do We Know?

  Thoreau, Henry David, 28, 119,

  (movie), 61

  150, 151, 182, 183

  Wheeler, John, 55, 90–91, 178–

  Time, 95–110

  179, 181, 197

  As illusion, 90, 104

  Wigner, Eugene, 81

  Definition of, 107

  Wineland, David, 52, 54

  Dilation of, 103–104

  Direction of, 99

  z

  Perception of, 109

  Z-point energy, 117–118

  Present versus future, 57

  Zen, 114

  Time dilation, 102–104

  Zeno of Elea, 96–99, 101

  Two-slit experiment, 53–56, 61–81

  ABout the Authors

  robert Lanza

  Robert Lanza was taken under the wing of scientific

  giants such as psychologist B.F. Skinner, immunologist

  Jonas Salk, and heart transplant pioneer Christiaan Bar-

  nard. His mentors described him as a “genius,” a “ren-

  egade thinker,” even likening him to Einstein himself .

  — US News & World Report cover story

  Robert Lanza has been exploring the frontiers of science for more

  than four decades, and is considered one of the leading scientists in

  the world. He is currently Chief Scientific Officer at Advanced Cell

  Technology, and Adjunct Professor at Wake Forest University School

  of Medicine. He has several hundred publications and inventions,

  and twenty scientific books, among them, Principles of Tissue Engi-

  neering, which is recognized as the definitive reference in the field.

  Others include One World: The Health & Survival of the Human Species in the 21st Century (with a foreword by President Jimmy Carter), and the Handbook of Stem Cells and Essentials of Stem Cell Biology, which are considered the definitive references in stem cell research.

  2 1 3

  Dr. Lanza received his BA and MD degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, where he was both a University Scholar and Benjamin Franklin Scholar. He was also a Fulbright Scholar, and was part

  of the team that cloned the world’s first human embryo, as well as

  the first to clone an endangered species, to demonstrate that nuclear

  transfer could reverse the aging process, and to generate stem cells

  using a method that does not require the destruction of human

  embryos. Dr. Lanza was awarded the 2005 Rave Award for Medicine

  by Wired magazine, and received the 2006 “All Star” Award for Bio-

  technology by Mass High Tech.

  Dr. Lanza and his research have been featured in almost every

  media outlet in the world, including all the major television net-

  works, CNN, Time, Newsweek, People magazine, as well as the front pages of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and USA Today, among others. Lanza has worked with some of the greatest thinkers of our time, including Nobel Laureates Gerald Edelman and Rodney Porter. Lanza worked closely with

  B.F. Skinner at Harvard University. Lanza and Skinner (the “Father

  of Modern Behaviorism”) published a number of scientific papers

  together. He has also worked with Jonas Salk (discoverer of the polio

  vaccine) and heart transplant pioneer Christiaan Barnard.

  bob berman

  “this is a fascinating guy”

  —David Letterman

  “fasten your seatbelts and hold on tight”

  — Astronomy magazine

  Bob Berman is the most widely read astronomer in the world. Author

  of more than one thousand published articles, in publications such

  as Discover and Astronomy magazine, where he is a monthly colum-nist, he is also astronomy editor of The Old Farmer’s Almanac and the author of four books. He is adjunct professor of astronomy at Mary-mount College, and writes an
d produces a weekly show on North-

  east Public Radio, aired during NPR’s Weekend Edition.

  Document Outline

  Contents

  Introduction

  muddy universe 1

  In the Beginning There Was . . . What? 2

  The Sound of a Falling Tree 3

  Lights and Action! 4

  Where Is the Universe? 5

  Bubbles in Time 6

  When Tomorrow Comes before Yesterday 7

  The Most Amazing Experiment 8

  Goldilocks’s Universe 9

  No Time to Lose 10

  Space Out 11

  The Man Behind the Curtain 12

  Windmills of the Mind 13

  A Fall in Paradise 14

  Building Blocks of Creation 15

  What Is this Place? Religion, Science, and Biocentrism Look at Reality 16

  Sci-Fi Gets Real 17

  Mystery of Consciousness 18

  Death and Eternity 19

  Where Do We Go from Here? 20

  Appendix 1 The Lorentz Transformation

  Appendix 2 Einstein’s Relativity and Biocentrism

  INDEX

  About the Authors

 

 

 


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