Clayton it is not new. Allan On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 10:51 PM, Clayton <[email protected]> wrote:
> Before there was anything in our universe there was nothing, but how > could something come to exist from nothing. Nothing must be something > right? > > Not in my theory. > > My theory is that there is always an infinite amount of nothing > outside of something and that something is continually produced > wherever there is nothing. What that something is, is the conscience > of an unborn universe, and these consciences are also continually > being produced. Our universe was at one time one of those unborn > universes, but something happened. Just as it does for all unborn > universes. It’s conscience began to think, but what would the > conscience of nothing think about? It would think about what it is, > because it wouldn't know, and this thought would continually build up > in the conscience until it was so compressed that the pressure would > cause the conscience to explode into a big bang. What I am saying is > that thought is the first form of energy that has ever existed, and > that everything in our universe is just another form of this energy. > > I believe that the energy, that is everything in our Universe is the > God of our universe, and that God has always known everything there is > to know about the universe. In the beginning God’s knowledge was very > limited, but now it is very complex because everything that has been > created from that original thought energy is an extension of Gods > consciousness, even ourselves. However, I believe that all things that > exists also have their own conscience. Everything, from the smallest > particle on up to the entire universe. It’s just a matter of how > closely you look. I’ll use a rock as an example, because I came up > with my theory while I was in the woods on my land enjoying nature and > there was this huge beautiful rock, and it was almost as if I could > see into it and see its conscience. It was like me and the rock were > interacting. Now, when I stepped away from the rock and went up to my > car that was parked at the top of my land I could see my entire piece > of land and I could see that it was all working together as one > conscience. I see it on an even larger scale when I look at the night > sky. After this experience I came to the conclusion that everything is > very much alive. I also came to the conclusion that man, though he, > like all other things that are an extension of God has the ability to > know as much as God. I feel that man is very close to beginning > exploration outside of his own universe and that once we get outside > of our universe our task will then be to track down the beginning of > nothing and we will become an extension of God that allows him to see > outside his own universe. Something that I think will keep us occupied > for quite some time. -- ( ) I_D Allan If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
