Tag: Albert Einstein

You cannot study Quantum Mechanics without looking at how matter interacts with the energy of subatomic particles. In fact, it is an energy that is the foundation of this entire branch of physic at its core. So, what IS energy? Well, simply put energy = life and is manifested as waves. And if we look at how a group of particles in the form of cells reacts to energy as a survival tool, we can gather a heaping pile of useful knowledge to apply to our own lives when making conscious choices. #QuantumMechanics

Understanding our True Nature is really the product of deep Awareness. Often times people equate this kind of focus with ascetic traditions and difficult meditation techniques. And while those are excellent ways of evolving your consciousness, perhaps one way of our conscious evolution comes through the simple method of relaxation, particularly in the form of […]

According to Quantum Theory, if we simply rely on “common sense” to understand the nature of reality, we refuse ourselves the chance to see the whole picture; which takes a bit of being open to…well, a little bit of weirdness. It says that our rational minds simply cannot perceive the ultimate truth of reality and to even begin to understand, we need to expand, go deeper and think outside of the box.

So, as if Quantum Entanglement wasn’t mind-blowing enough, now theoretically we can say that any number of particles can become entangled with one another; it’s just that the chances of that occurring diminish as you increase the number of particles involved. Regardless, entangled particles are bringing us into the new age of science and flouting the traditional rules of physics.

Every so often, there comes a man who is able to see the universe in a new way, whose vision upsets the very foundations of the world as we know it. Throughout his life, Einstein would look for the harmony, not only in his science but in the world of men. The world wanted to know Albert Einstein and yet he remained a mystery to those who only saw public face and perhaps to himself as well. However, the next 7 practical life lessons can reveal Einstein’s way of thinking and formulating the miracles in former times.

In 1908, the physics world woke up to a puzzle whose layers have continued to stump the greatest scientists of the century ever since. That year, Dutch physicist Kamerlingh Onnes cooled mercury down to -450° Fahrenheit and discovered—to his astonishment—that it could conduct electricity perfectly. And then for the next 50 years, no one could explain why. Einstein spent a lot of time thinking about it. But he never came up with an answer.

Seventy-five years ago, Hungarian-American physicist Leo Szilard wrote a letter to United States President Franklin Roosevelt expressing concern that German scientists would soon unlock the secrets to developing the first atomic bomb. Concerned that his relative anonymity would cause the warning to go unheeded, Szilard persuaded his friend and colleague Albert Einstein to sign the letter. The Einstein-Szilard letter resulted in the establishment of the Manhattan Project, and the United States’ subsequent creation of the world’s first nuclear weapon. But that wasn’t the only letter penned by the pair. Szilard and Einstein actually drafted four missives to the president…

Time is relative. Time is not a phenomenon that arises all on its own in the universe. There is potentially no such thing as time at all, as physics equations suggest. What we call time is an arbitrary division of the cycles we are experiencing based off of the cyclical rate of change that we are experiencing on this level of reality.