An experiment published in 1990 suggests that Zeno was right. In this
experiment, scientists demonstrated the quantum equivalent of the adage that "a
watched pot doesn't boil." This behavior, the "quantum Zeno effect," turns out
to be a function of observation. "It seems,"said physicist Peter Coveney, "that
the act of looking at an atom prevents it from changing". Theoretically, if a
nuclear bomb were watched intently enough -- that is, if you could check its
atoms every million trillionth of a second -- it wouldn't explode. Bizarre? The
problem lies not in the experiments but in our way of thinking about time.
Biocentrism is the only comprehensible way to explain these results, which are
only "weird" in the context of the existing paradigm.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-lanza/is-death-the-end-new-expe_b_774814.html?view=print
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