The future is essentially unknowable in its specifics. It's innately enigmatic. How will it look like? How's it going to be because in a sense, when we do that, we impose the limitations of our current perspectives. I've been writing more and more about what would it mean in terms of those values that are natural from a unit of awareness. And also behaviors that are natural because, you know, conflicts, injustices, and emotions,. as you were saying earlier, are all natural behaviors of a worldview separating to listen, trust and lens.
Our scientific model of the universe is changing.
From the mechanistic, rational ideas of the 20th century, physics is now understanding that the universe itself is conscious—that we are all expressions of consciousness. Looks like those indigenous teachers were right.
On this episode, Jude Currivan, cosmologist and author of The Story of Gaia, walks us through all of the evidence we have to suggest that the universe is conscious, from the latest Nobel Prize Award in physics to thousands of years of spiritual wisdom. Jude then explains the necessity of a new worldview of unity and wholeness to help mitigate the crises that we are seeing, whether these are human crises or the climate crisis, and become the next stage in this evolution of universal consciousness.
“Our universe, we're now discovering, is innately intelligent, and its innate intelligence is meaningfully informed in a way through the laws of physics and through their relationships to enable it to not just exist, but to evolve from that first moment 13.8 billion years ago—from its initial simplicity to ever greater levels of complexity and diversity.”
Planet: Critical investigates why the world is in crisis—and what to do about it. Support the project with a paid subscription.
© Rachel Donald
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