A Sky Full of Ghosts
“The Soul and other Spiritual bandwidths in the fractal electrodynamic universe can now be contemplated from the perspective of ‘coherent-states-of-being’ or the ‘harmony’ of their frequency-patterns. In research, coherence is the keyword, but coherence is a general overview relative to the scope of heart-potential.” - Stephen Brock Schafer June 1, 2019
read more...
David Bohm has been described as one of the most significant theoretical physicists of the 20th century and was a fellow of the royal society. He worked with Einstein at the Institute for Advanced Study, and on the Manhattan Project with Oppenheimer. Later he pioneered research into quantum physics and models of the brain, being increasingly interested in consciousness, order and thought. Bohm’s books include Wholeness and the Implicate Order, Science, Order and Creativity, and Causation and Chance in Modern Physics.
Holoflux is David Bohm’s theory of consciousness that maps reality as a nondual energy that cycles mathematically in a process of transformation. It's the dynamic universe in which everything moves together in an interconnected process characterized as the "holomovement."
His theory describes a dynamic energy process that bridges the space-time domain with a transcendent flux domain located at the spatial center which cycles mathematically, lens-like, in a process of infinite transformation. The theory manifests in three modes: electromagnetic energy in space-time, holoflux energy in a transcendent order, and vibrating isospheres.
Holoflux energy (to the left in the diagram) resonates with the electromagnetic energy of the same frequencies (to the right in the diagram), in the space-time region, or Explicate Order, the three-dimensional world of objects, space, and time.
Bohm maintains that space and time might actually be derived from an even deeper level of objective reality, which he calls the Implicate Order. In this structure, there is a reciprocal flow between consciousness and matter. In the Implicate Order, everything is connected and any individual element reveals information about every other element in the universe in what Bohm describes as “undivided wholeness.”
For example, transmitted signals like radio, TV, and Wi-Fi hold implicit information that is unfolded by the recipient as explicate communication. The Implicate Order usually goes unnoticed because we typically dwell within the Explicate Order. In listening to music however, we directly perceive an implicate order. Our experience of movement intermingles both realms. Time on the other hand, skips back and forth between the implicate and the explicate as we catalog memory and then recombine memory with new sensory information.
The theory was further developed by neuroscientist Karl Pribram in collaboration with Bohm. It describes human cognition by modeling the brain as a holographic storage network. Their theory builds on the initial theories of holograms originally formulated by Dennis Gabor.
Cyber-physical architect, Güvenç Özel is a pioneer of Extended Reality (XR), interactive robotics and machine learning in architecture. “Cyberphysical,” he says, “meaning the work covers cyberspace and physical environments and the interaction between the two.” His recent 60-foot-tall installation Holoflux, at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival is a a steel structure wrapped in iridescent fabric that is continually changing by day or night.
By day, the fabric responds to the physical environment reflecting light and reacting to the wind. By night. real-time video images collected from the festival are blended with enhanced imagery and projected on its surfaces.