Thursday, April 2, 2020

Biology of Belief by Bruce Lipton

Biology of Belief by Bruce LiptonThe Biology of Belief is the third lecture of the Physics of Belief series. With the third lecture in the series the lecturer Dr John Wiles delves into a deeper discussion of the science of the process and the scientific method. This is followed by a follow up lecture from Chris Riccardi, an influential physicist who is known for his use of physics of belief in astronomy and cosmology.The idea of physics of belief is to build a model in the lab and then go out to prove that model is valid by observing a phenomenon that an individual believes is valid. The experiment is then repeatable by future scientists.The first lecture was entitled 'Using the Restricted Dynamics and Newtonian Dynamics to Support Theory of Particle Physics'. The following lecture was entitled 'The Evolution of the Fabric of Reality'. The physics of belief lectures were designed to give a platform for the theory of science to be applied to a scientific discipline that had yet to be made the ground for debate and this was the biology of belief. This science of belief was meant to build bridges between physics and biology and explore the process that gave rise to life.Dr Bruce Lipton started the lecture by presenting the equation E=mc2 and showed how it can be used to demonstrate the process of life. The term e was coined by James Watson who wrote the famous paper of Nature, in which he stated that a proton weighed more than a neutron. The second term, m, is used to represent the mass of the proton, which becomes critical. The third term, a is called the mass of the nucleus and is the mass of the atom.Wiles then showed the relevance of the anti-biotic theory to the evolution of life by revealing that life occurs in a series of nested order systems such as fungi and then on to the root of the tree and then on to the vine and so on to humans. The emergence of life is followed by life.The third lecture then explained the process that is common to all life that is t he emergence of diversity in the universe. He discussed the work of Giordano Bruno and then discussed the effectiveness of the art of chaos to explain the process of creation of life and then discussed the role of our consciousness in the formation of all life.The Biology of Belief lecture was followed by a follow up by Chris Riccardi, a well known and respected physicist. The history of modern science can be traced back to the book by Galileo on the fixed stars. The era of science that followed the eruption of the volcano would be called the Scientific Revolution and is the heart of the development of our modern world.