The Emotion Molecule was discovered in 1972 by scientist Dr. Candace Pert. It was found to be the same molecule that existed in a primitive creature millions of years ago. The evolutionary difference between the primitive life form molecule and the human molecule was that the human vibrates much faster. It can be considered that this evolutionary acceleration process could be caused by the fractal expansion of the universe. This proposal can be accommodated within the lost science of life of the Classical Greek Music of the Spheres. The Harvard/NASA High Energy Division of Astrophysics Library recently published papers arguing that the classical Greek worldview was based on fractal logic.
The biggest difficulties in conducting fractal life science research is, firstly, that it has been declared heresy, and secondly, it defies the physical law that governs Western scientific culture. That energy law of physics calls for the destruction of all life in the universe when heat from the universe radiates out into cold space. While it is scientifically accepted that fractal logic extends to infinity, life sciences within western universities can only deal with species evolving towards this postulated heat death extinction. The pagan base of science once argued that infinite geometric logic linked the evolutionary process to the workings of an infinite universe and once again religious dogmatic science is on the defensive.
The Jesuit priest Tieldardt de Chardin absolutely refuted the omnipotent power of the physical law of total extinction that now rules Western technology. Both he and his colleague Maria Montessori, who is listed in TIME magazine as the Greatest Scientist of 1907 in Century of Science, wanted to balance Einstein’s 1905 E=Mc2 law of destruction with a forbidden fractal logical law of ancient Greece. The Roman Holy Office denied the publication of de Chardin’s work during his lifetime and Einstein referred to the basic law of destructive ethos as the main law of all science.
Montessori was working with Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison on ideas about how electromagnetic forces might be influencing young schoolchildren to develop creative abilities other than those of parents or church dogmatism. De Chardin’s and Montessori’s electromagnetic golden gates into the future could not open for a chosen race or a privileged few, but only for all people at the same time. The Australian Arts and Science Research Center wanted to locate a pragmatic electromagnetic example of this humanist fractal logic at work in nature.
The scientist, Matti Pitkanen, expanded on Chardin’s ideas about the lost Greek science of universal love. Every 11 years, the sun sends balls of lethal electromagnetic radiation toward earth that are caught by the earth’s electromagnetic hands and flung out into outer space. Pitkanen noted that the process met the criteria to be considered an act of consciousness, in which electromagnetic forces act for the health of all life on earth at the same time.
During the 20th century, the Australian Arts and Sciences Research Center discovered new physical laws governing optimal biological growth and development across space-time. Both the mathematician and the director of the Center were awarded the Gold Medal in 2009 by the London Telesio-Galilei Academy of Sciences. Professor Simon Shnoll, head of biological research at Moscow University, also received the award after his impassioned lecture on the burning alive in Rome of scientist Giordano Bruno for teaching on the Greek science of universal love at Oxford University.
While the wrath of the Inquisition may have faded, reasoning on matters of life and death for humanity may still be under influential constraints due to existing religious dogmatic beliefs. In honor of those great Church scientists who suffered so much because of their hierarchical disposition, challenges to fixed scientific doctrine over the holographic or spiritual science debate should no longer warrant condemnation as heresy. Cicero, the Roman historian, recorded that the teachers of the Greek atomic science of universal love were called saviors. Perhaps Thomas Jefferson’s published conviction that Jesus Christ was the greatest of the scientists who had inherited the title of ‘Savior’ could provide some kind of modernist healing balm for the Church during the future technological debate.
By Professor Robert Pope
Copyright © Robert Pope 2010