Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Black Hole Iris

So thinking in terms of time and space and how it relates to our human experience...They say that there is a black hole in every galaxy; but what if there were a tiny black hole in the eye of every human? The idea of “black holes” is that they are points where there is no light. I propose that this is a fractal part of nature, and eyeballs are places where no light escapes. A black hole, as far as we know can exist as the seeing eye of a more larger and complex (but simple) system.

Maybe this is how the universe can observe itself. Stephen hawking called this, “Spooky action at a distance” because rightfully, the universe wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t being observed. The observer changes the reality, just as in string theory. The observer is the last piece in the entirety of atomic theory.

Most people will look at this and say “okay, so if i turn around, then it is possible that everything behind me just vanished, and collapsed to a wave-form” but not many people have thought, “maybe the universe is observing itself in an intricate way”

On another note (but still on topic) What exactly happens to light when it enters our bodies? Is it still light by the end result, or something else? Also, I don’t know if this is true but I remember reading a few places that photons already know where they will end up before leaving its source. So that star 1,000 ly away already knew I would be standing outside looking up to receive that individual photon that entered my eyeball. How does this phenomena relate?

Maybe if we can figure out how light is ‘born’ and how it ‘dies’ then we will learn more about our human experience....

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