Thursday 23 March 2023

Leon Southgate on Timeslips

 
I did an interesting HPANWO Radio show a while ago with Nik Hayes and Leon Southgate, see: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2021/10/programme-438-podcast-nik-hayes-leon.html. Now Leon has written an article called An Orgonomic Theory of Time Part One- Previous Time Theories. It's very interesting because he addresses various theories of time. We may think we all know what time is and that it is easy to define that knowledge, but that's not true. For instance, when you say something is the "present" it cannot be so because the moment you are aware of it, it becomes the past. The present is a point with no temporal dimensions at all; it is a border rolling forward from the past to the future. And what are past and future. Is the past fixed and the future highly changeable, or is it the other way round? Phenomena such as premonitions and the Mandela Effect invert that possibility. David Icke sees time as a "loop", like a groove on a media disk. However, how come it can then be different on one play to the next? Albert Einstein thought that the speed of time could change according to motion; it was the speed of light that is fixed. Other scientists questioned this; however that was unfortunately after Einstein became the "current thing" and so those other scientists were ignored. Quantum physics was more successful, for example it demonstrates that in the world of subatomic particles there is no limit on communication over a distance, which indicates information travels between them instantaneously, in other words possibly at an infinite speed. Although the father of Orgonomy, Wilhelm Reich himself, did not comment on the nature of time, Leon thinks it is similar to Hegel's, that the future is created as a synthesis of forces split in the past and reunited. I sometimes wonder if time has more than one dimension; see the background link below to my review of The Langoliers.
 
When it comes to time travel, most physicists regard the Einsteinian model as correct, meaning travelling into the future is comparatively easy; just move through space very fast and you'll manage it. Travelling into the past is supposedly impossible for various reasons, the most comprehensive of which is causality paradoxes. However, there are interesting instances where people appear to have at least perceived the past, even if they haven't literally visited it. Remote viewers sometimes latch onto a vision that is not just in a different place, but a different time; before or after the present day. There's apparently a street in Liverpool where this regularly happens. Readers may have already guessed that Leon brings up my own timeslip experience during the Bases at the Black Swan event a few years ago where I saw a very vivid immersive apparition of the function room from about a century ago, see: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2017/12/strange-vision-at-black-swan.html. Leon also mentions my doppelgänger encounter, see: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2013/04/doppelganger.html. This is a proper scientific essay and therefore some of its statements may be initially hard to understand. You might have to look up a few words and individuals. It's worth persevering with though. Source: https://www.psychorgone.com/orgone-biophysics/an-orgonomic-theory-of-time-part-one-previous-time-theories. There is now a part two recently published, see: https://www.psychorgone.com/orgone-biophysics/an-orgonomic-theory-of-time-part-two-a-new-theory-of-time.
See here for more background: https://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.com/2013/03/programme-36-podcast-peter-robbins.html.
And: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2013/03/time-and-langoliers.html.

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