Magic May Be...
/Magic May Be Nothing More Than Science We Don't Yet Know About
The physics of quantum entanglement is science as mysterious as magic.
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Events beyond explanation are often thought to be magic, or miracle, or some other force outside normality. Scientists with knowledge of quantum physics aren’t inclined to think magic, miracles, mojo, or any other sort of oddness, as supernatural.
In the world of the quantum, nearly anything could happen. What once seemed
supernatural is revealed to be ultra-natural.
The quantum world is the powering sub-structure of what we imagine to be “reality”.
We give less thought to the engine of the quantum than most office workers do to the
basement furnace that heats their office building.
Very few pay attention to cause-and-effect. If you walk into a door and bang your head,
cause-and-effect is obvious. If the door walks over to you and it bangs your head, cause-and-
effect is not at all obvious.
When cause-and-effect isn’t obvious, when strange events seem to have no
connection, when stuff happens and no one knows why - it might be magic. Or it might be
science we don’t yet know about.
The physics of quantum entanglement is science as mysterious as magic.
In the quantum world everything is connected.
Time/Space is irrelevant. Subatomic reality is seamless. Quarks, bosons, and gluons vibrate in constant communion with all other quarks, bosons, and gluons - whether next door or a universe apart. The scientific phrase for this ongoing communication is, Quantum Entanglement.
In Quantum-World, what we think of as paranormal is normal. Moreover, sensate reality is illusionary. Our everyday sense of normality is built upon the deeper reality of quantum entanglement; a cosmic tapestry woven with all things intersecting with all other things.
Quantum entanglement gives reasonability to formerly unreasonable phenomena like telepathy, prophetic visions, hunches, women’s intuition, and the curious way your dog always knows when you’re coming home - even when you don’t.
Mystics, dogs, and children have always known this. They just didn’t have the science of quantum physics to explain it.
Maybe we think too much and feel too little. Maybe I have that all wrong, or maybe I have it right.
Who really knows?
By K. L. Shipley